Samuel Goldwyn

Samuel Goldwyn (born Szmul Gelbfisz), also known as Samuel Goldfish, was a Polish American film producer. He was most well known for being the founding contributor and executive of several motion picture studios in Hollywood. In 1916, Goldwyn partnered with Broadway producers Edgar and Archibald Selwyn, using a combination of both names to call their movie-making enterprise Goldwyn Pictures. Seeing an opportunity, Samuel Gelbfisz then had his name legally changed to Samuel Goldwyn, which he used for the rest of his life. Goldwyn Pictures proved successful but it is their Leo the Lion trademark for which the organization is most famous. On April 10, 1924, Goldwyn Pictures was acquired by Marcus Loew and merged into his Metro Pictures Corporation. Despite the inclusion of his name, Goldwyn had no role in the management or production at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Before the sale and merger of Goldwyn Pictures in April 1924, Goldwyn had established Samuel Goldwyn Productions in 1923 as a production-only operation (with no distribution arm). Their first feature was Potash and Perlmutter, released in September 1923 through First National Pictures. Some of the early productions bear the name Howard Productions, named for Goldwyn's wife Frances Howard. For 35 years, Goldwyn built a reputation in filmmaking and developed an eye for finding the talent for making films. William Wyler directed many of his most celebrated productions, and he hired writers such as Ben Hecht, Sidney Howard, Dorothy Parker, and Lillian Hellman. (According to legend, at a heated story conference Goldwyn scolded someone —in most accounts Mrs. Parker, who recalled he had once been a glove maker— with the retort: “Don't you point that finger at me. I knew it when it had a thimble on it!” During that time, Goldwyn made numerous films and reigned as the most successful independent producer in the US. Many of his films were forgettable; his collaboration with John Ford, however, resulted in Best Picture Oscar nomination for Arrowsmith (1931). William Wyler was responsible for most of Goldwyn's highly lauded films, with Best Picture Oscar nominations for Dodsworth (1936), Dead End (1937), Wuthering Heights (1939), The Little Foxes (1941) and The Best Years of Our Lives (1948). The leading actors in several of Goldwyn films, especially those directed by William Wyler, were also Oscar-nominated for their performances. Throughout the 1930s, Goldwyn released all his films through United Artists, but beginning in 1941, and continuing almost through the end of his career, Goldwyn released his films through RKO Radio Pictures. Goldwyn died at his home in Los Angeles in 1974 from natural causes, at the probable age of 94. He was interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California. In the 1980s, Samuel Goldwyn Studio was sold to Warner Bros. There is a theater named after him in Beverly Hills and he has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1631 Vine Street.

The Best Years of Our Lives

7.8

Wuthering Heights

7.2

The Bishop's Wife

7.0

Guys and Dolls

6.6

Ball of Fire

7.4

The Little Foxes

7.5

Dodsworth

7.1

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty

6.7

Dead End

7.0

The Pride of the Yankees

7.4

The Westerner

7.0

Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ

7.3

Hans Christian Andersen

6.3

The Penalty

6.8

The Hurricane

6.6

A Song Is Born

6.5

These Three

7.2

Wonder Man

6.6

Come and Get It

6.8

Street Scene

6.8

The Ace of Hearts

6.5

Barbary Coast

6.6

Arrowsmith

6.5

The Cowboy and the Lady

6.1

Porgy and Bess

6.1

The North Star

6.1

The Princess and the Pirate

6.7

Bulldog Drummond

6.5

The Wedding Night

6.0

The Real Glory

6.3

Sherlock Holmes

6.1

Arsène Lupin

6.9

Roman Scandals

6.0

The Winning of Barbara Worth

6.6

Edge of Doom

5.9

The Devil to Pay!

6.0

The Dark Angel

6.2

My Foolish Heart

6.7

Condemned!

6.4

Raffles

6.0

Whoopee!

6.5

Stella Dallas

7.1

The Adventures of Marco Polo

6.0

The Kid from Brooklyn

6.2

The Goldwyn Follies

4.7

Cynara

4.8

Enchantment

6.4

Our Very Own

5.7

The Kid from Spain

6.6

The Greeks Had a Word for Them

4.8

They Got Me Covered

5.9

Beloved Enemy

6.1

Woman Chases Man

5.6

They Shall Have Music

6.0

Palmy Days

7.0

Tonight or Never

5.9

Strike Me Pink

6.6

Up in Arms

5.9

Kid Millions

6.5

Splendor

6.3

Jes' Call Me Jim

5.8

What Happened To Rosa?

6.8

Jubilo

5.4

Roseanna McCoy

6.1

I Want You

5.2

Nana

5.0

We Live Again

6.5

The Masquerader

4.8

The Floor Below

5.3

A Tale of Two Worlds

5.5

Polly of the Circus

6.0

The Magic Flame

4.5

One Heavenly Night

5.2

The Unholy Garden

6.0

The World and Its Woman

5.0

Officer 666

7.0

The Awakening

5.0

A Blind Bargain

6.0

The Eternal City

6.0

A Thief in Paradise

6.0

The Night of Love

5.0

The Devil Dancer

5.0

The Cinderella Man

0.0

The Turn of the Wheel

1.0

Hungry Hearts

1.0

Name the Man

0.0

Partners of the Night

0.0

The Truth

0.0

Cupid the Cowpuncher

0.0

The Slim Princess

0.0

Honest Hutch

0.0

Boys Will Be Boys

0.0

Guile of Women

0.0

The Great Lover

0.0

Don't Neglect Your Wife

0.0

Oh Mary Be Careful

0.0

Doubling for Romeo

0.0

Watch Your Step

0.0

Head Over Heels

0.0

His Back Against the Wall

0.0

Mr. Barnes of New York

0.0

Remembrance

0.0

The Christian

0.0

Lost and Found on a South Sea Island

0.0

The Eternal Three

0.0

Unseeing Eyes

0.0

Potash and Perlmutter

0.0

The Day of Faith

0.0

Three Weeks

0.0

Nellie, the Beautiful Cloak Model

0.0

Cytherea

0.0

True As Steel

0.0

In Hollywood with Potash and Perlmutter

0.0

Partners Again

0.0

Two Lovers

0.0

The Rescue

0.0

This Is Heaven

0.0

Fighting Odds

0.0

All Woman

0.0

Peck's Bad Girl

0.0

Laughing Bill Hyde

0.0

A Perfect 36

0.0

The Hell Cat

0.0

The Racing Strain

0.0

A Perfect Lady

0.0

Thirty a Week

0.0

Sis Hopkins

0.0

The Stronger Vow

0.0

Upstairs

0.0

Lord and Lady Algy

0.0

Almost a Husband

0.0

Pinto

0.0

Water, Water, Everywhere

0.0

The Paliser Case

0.0

Brooba

0.0

The Face in the Dark

0.0

The Beloved Traitor

0.0

Slave of Desire

0.0