Hollywood (1980 TV series)

Hollywood

Thames Video Collection VHS 1 of 13
Genre Documentary
Written by Kevin Brownlow
David Gill
Directed by Kevin Brownlow
David Gill
Narrated by James Mason
Theme music composer Carl Davis
Composer(s) Carl Davis
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of episodes 13
Production
Producer(s) Kevin Brownlow
David Gill
Editor(s) Dan Carter
Trevor Waite
Oscar Webb
Running time c.50 mins (ex. commercials)
Production company(s) Thames Television
Distributor FremantleMedia
Release
Original network ITV
Original release January 8, 1980 (1980-01-08) – April 1, 1980 (1980-04-01)

Hollywood (also known as Hollywood: A Celebration of the American Silent Film) is a 1980 documentary series produced by Thames Television which explored the establishment and development of the Hollywood studios and its impact on 1920s culture.

Synopsis

The series consists of thirteen fifty-minute episodes, with each episode dealing with a specific aspect of Hollywood history. The actor James Mason, an enthusiast of the period, supplied the narration; a lilting score was contributed by Carl Davis.

Technical quality was an important aspect of the production. Silent films had often been screened on television from poor-quality copies running at an inaccurate speed, usually accompanied by honky tonk piano music. Hollywood used silent film clips sourced from the best available material, shown at their original running speed and with an orchestral score, giving viewers a chance to see what they originally looked and sounded like.

The producers filmed the recollections of many of the period's surviving participants, and illustrated their interviews with scenes from their various films, as well as production still photographs, and historical photographs of the Los Angeles environs. Some of these interviews are notable for being among the only filmed interviews given by their subjects.

Among the notable people who contributed interviews were:

Actress Colleen Moore, who was interviewed for the series

ActorsMary Astor, Eleanor Boardman, Louise Brooks, Olive Carey, Iron Eyes Cody, Jackie Coogan, Dolores Costello, Viola Dana, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Janet Gaynor, Leatrice Joy, Lillian Gish, Bessie Love, Ben Lyon, Marion Mack, Tim McCoy, Colleen Moore, Charles 'Buddy' Rogers, Gloria Swanson, Blanche Sweet, John Wayne (in one of his last interviews), and Lois Wilson.

DirectorsDorothy Arzner (in her last interview), Clarence Brown, Karl Brown, Frank Capra, George Cukor, Allan Dwan, Byron Haskin, Henry Hathaway, Henry King, Lewis Milestone, Hal Roach, Albert S. Rogell, King Vidor, and William Wyler.

Also interviewed were choreographer Agnes de Mille, writer Anita Loos, writer Adela Rogers St. Johns, press agent/writer Cedric Belfrage, organist Gaylord Carter, cinematographers George J. Folsey, Lee Garmes and Paul Ivano, writer Jesse L. Lasky, Jr., special effects artist A. Arnold Gillespie, Lord Mountbatten, agent Paul Kohner, producer/writer Samuel Marx, editors William Hornbeck and Grant Whytock, property man "Lefty" Hough, stuntmen Bob Rose, Yakima Canutt, Paul Malvern, and Harvey Parry, Rudolph Valentino's brother, Alberto Valentino and English set designer Laurence Irving.

The series generated a new interest in the re-broadcast of silent films in the UK and elsewhere, and led to Thames producing several further series under the imprint of Thames Silents.

Episode list

Films featured in Hollywood

This list, according to the IMDB, is said to be complete. Not included in the list are behind the scenes footage, costume and makeup tests, or other production material.

Merchandise and home video

Tie-in products at the time of the first British transmission were a book written by Brownlow, Gill and John Kobal, a soundtrack LP featuring Carl Davis's music, a 7" single of the main theme, a pictoral newspaper-style publication featuring many of the stills used in the production and several posters bearing the Hollywood logo, licensed from various picture libraries.

In North America, the series was released in 1990 by HBO Video on VHS and laserdisc. Attempts to release the series on DVD in the United Kingdom in 2006 were met with legal entanglements of copyright issues and clip clearances, due to the overwhelming number of participants and film clips involved in the series; it was briefly available in a few online stores in the UK before being quickly pulled.

External links

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