Jack L. Warner

Date of Birth
2 August 1892, London, Ontario, Canada

Date of Death
9 September 1978, Los Angeles, California, USA (pulmonary edema and a heart inflammation)

Sam Warner


Date of Birth
10 August 1887, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

Date of Death
5 October 1927, Los Angeles, California, USA (cerebral hemorrhage)

Birth Name
Samuel Eichelbaum


American motion-picture studio that introduced the first genuine talking picture (1927). The company was founded by four brothers, Harry, Albert, Samuel, and Jack Warner, who were the sons of Benjamin Eichelbaum, an immigrant Polish cobbler and peddler. The brothers began their careers showing moving pictures in Ohio and Pennsylvania on a traveling basis. Beginning in 1903 they started acquiring movie theatres, and they then moved into film distribution. In about 1913 they began producing their own films, and in 1917 they shifted their production headquarters to Hollywood, Calif. They established Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc., in 1923. The oldest of the brothers, Harry (b. Dec. 12, 1881, Poland—d. July 25, 1958, Hollywood, Calif., U.S.), was the president of the company and ran its headquarters in New York City, while Albert (b. July 23, 1884, Poland—d. Nov. 26, 1967, Miami Beach, Fla., U.S.) was its treasurer and head of sales and distribution. Sam (1888–1927) and Jack (b. Aug. 2, 1892, London, Ont., Can.—d. Sept. 9, 1978, Los Angeles, Calif., U.S.) managed the studio in Hollywood.
When the company ran into financial difficulties in the mid-1920s, Sam Warner persuaded his brothers to collaborate in developing a patent on a process (Vitaphone) that made the “talkies” possible. The studio's Don Juan (1926) opened with a completely synchronized musical sound track, and The Jazz Singer (1927) had both synchronized music and dialogue. (Sam died only 24 hours before the latter's premiere.) Warner Brothers then made Lights of New York (1928), the first full-length all-talking film, and On with the Show (1929), the first all-talking colour film. The enormous financial success of these early sound films enabled Warner Brothers to become a major motion-picture studio. By the 1930s Warner Brothers was producing about 100 motion pictures a year and controlled 360 theatres in the United States and more than 400 abroad.

Warner Brothers became known for its tightly budgeted, technically competent entertainment films. In the early 1930s the company started the craze for gangster films with Little Caesar (1930), The Public Enemy (1931), and Scarface (1932), and throughout the '30s it presented films featuring such stars as James Cagney and Edward G. Robinson in gangster roles. In the '30s Warner Brothers also presented Busby Berkeley's musical extravaganzas, many swashbuckling and adventure films starring Errol Flynn, and dramas featuring such stars as Paul Muni, Bette Davis, Humphrey Bogart, and John Garfield. Among the studio's best-known films of the 1940s and '50s were The Maltese Falcon (1941), Casablanca (1942), Watch on the Rhine (1943), and A Streetcar Named Desire (1951). The studio's later box-office successes included My Fair Lady (1964), Bonnie and Clyde (1967), The Exorcist (1973), The Color Purple (1985), and The Fugitive (1993).

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