Robertson-Cole Corporation
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Film Booking Offices of America (FBO), registered as FBO Pictures Corp., was an American film studio of the
silent era A silent film is a film with no synchronized recorded sound (or more generally, no audible dialogue). Though silent films convey narrative and emotion visually, various plot elements (such as a setting or era) or key lines of dialogue may, wh ...
, a midsize producer and distributor of mostly low-budget films. The business began in 1918 as Robertson-Cole, an Anglo-American import-export company. Robertson-Cole began distributing films in the United States that December and opened a
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production facility in 1920. Late that year, R-C entered into a working relationship with East Coast financier Joseph P. Kennedy. A business reorganization in 1922 led to the company's assumption of the new FBO name. Two years later, the studio contracted with Western leading man Fred Thomson, who within a couple years was one of Hollywood's most popular stars. Thomson was just one of several silent screen cowboys with whom FBO became identified. The studio, whose core market was America's small towns, also put out many romantic melodramas, action pictures, and comedic shorts. Pauline Frederick and
Sessue Hayakawa , known professionally as , was a Japanese actor and a matinée idol. He was a popular star in Hollywood during the silent film era of the 1910s and early 1920s. Hayakawa was the first actor of Asian descent to achieve stardom as a leading man i ...
were the major stars of its R-C period. Subsequently, Evelyn Brent and
Richard Talmadge Richard Talmadge (born Sylvester Alphonse Metz; 3 December 1892 – 25 January 1981) also known as Sylvester Metzetti, Ricardo Metzetti, or Sylvester Ricardo Metzetti, was a German-born actor, stuntman and film director. Early life Born in ...
were FBO's biggest non-Western stars. From 1925 on, adaptations of the works of
Gene Stratton-Porter Gene Stratton-Porter (August 17, 1863 – December 6, 1924), born Geneva Grace Stratton, was an American author, nature photographer, and naturalist from Wabash County, Indiana. In 1917 Stratton-Porter urged legislative support for the conservati ...
were consistently among its top box office attractions. In 1926, Kennedy led an investment group that acquired the company; he relocated to California to run it, with considerable success. Exhibitors cited '' The Keeper of the Bees'', based on a Stratton-Porter novel, as the year's most popular film. In August 1928, using RCA Photophone technology, FBO became the second Hollywood studio to release a feature-length " talkie". Two months later, Kennedy and RCA chief
David Sarnoff David Sarnoff (February 27, 1891 – December 12, 1971) was an American businessman and pioneer of American radio and television. Throughout most of his career, he led the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) in various capacities from shortly afte ...
arranged the merger between FBO and the Keith-Albee-Orpheum theater circuit that created
RKO RKO Radio Pictures Inc., commonly known as RKO Pictures or simply RKO, was an American film production and distribution company, one of the "Big Five" film studios of Hollywood's Golden Age. The business was formed after the Keith-Albee-Orpheu ...
, one of the major studios of Hollywood's
Golden Age The term Golden Age comes from Greek mythology, particularly the ''Works and Days'' of Hesiod, and is part of the description of temporal decline of the state of peoples through five Ages of Man, Ages, Gold being the first and the one during ...
. FBO's assets were folded into the new company, and it was dissolved in early 1929.


Business history


The R-C years

The company that would become FBO began as Robertson-Cole, an importer, exporter, and motion picture distributor with headquarters in London and New York, founded in 1918 by Englishman Harry F. Robertson and American Rufus S. Cole. The company handled American-made trucks, cars, automobile accessories, and Bell & Howell motion picture equipment; its initial film distribution focus was on the Northern European, South Asian, and Latin American markets. From its U.S. office, R-C Pictures, as it was often branded, started American motion picture distribution late in 1918, purchasing film rights from independent production companies and selling them on to Exhibitors Mutual Distributing, a corporate successor of the
Mutual Film Mutual Film Corporation was an early American film conglomerate that produced some of Charlie Chaplin's greatest comedies. Founded in 1912, it was absorbed by Film Booking Offices of America, which evolved into RKO Pictures. Founding Mutual's ...
studio. In November, R-C contracted to serve as the sole provider to Exhibitors Mutual, and its first acquisitions were released the following month. For its top-of-the-line "product", it purchased the movies of star actor
Sessue Hayakawa , known professionally as , was a Japanese actor and a matinée idol. He was a popular star in Hollywood during the silent film era of the 1910s and early 1920s. Hayakawa was the first actor of Asian descent to achieve stardom as a leading man i ...
, whose films were produced by his own company,
Haworth Pictures Corporation Haworth Pictures Corporation was a film studio established by Japanese actor Sessue Hayakawa in March 1918. Haworth Pictures Corporation was Hollywood’s first Asian-owned production company. Filmography * ''His Birthright'' (1918) * ''The Tem ...
. Other companies also made films expressly for R-C distribution: B.B. Features, Jesse D. Hampton Productions, National Film Corporation, Winsome Stars. To accompany its features, Robertson-Cole also acquired a wide variety of serials and other shorts, from ''Supreme Comedies'' with
Harry Depp Harry Depp (22 February 1883 – 31 March 1957) was an American film actor, silent film pioneer, comedian, agent and real estate investor. He was born 22 February 1883 in St. Louis, Missouri to William Depp and Laura Freund. Between 1916 and 1947 ...
and
Teddy Sampson Nora Sampson (August 8, 1895 – November 24, 1970), known professionally as Teddy Sampson, was an American stage and silent film actress who appeared in at least forty-one motion pictures between 1914 and 1923. Biography Nora Sampson was born i ...
to a biweekly series, ''On the Borderland of Civilization'', filmed by adventurer Martin Johnson. Late in 1919, independent motion picture producer Frank Hall acquired Exhibitors Mutual and integrated it into his new Hallmark Exchanges. In January 1920, Robertson-Cole purchased Hallmark, securing the capacity to directly distribute the films to which it owned rights, including the in-house productions then being planned. In March, the inaugural "convention of the branch managers and field supervisors of the Robertson-Cole Distributing Corporation" was announced. The company currently boasted a slate of twenty-five movies in theaters around the country, with its top films co-branded "Superior Pictures". The first R-C feature productions began to appear, including ''The Third Woman'' that same month, directed by Charles Swickard and starring
Carlyle Blackwell Carlyle Blackwell (January 20, 1884 – June 17, 1955) was an American silent film actor, director and producer. Early years Blackwell was born in Troy, Pennsylvania. He studied at Cornell University before J. Stewart Blackton discovered him an ...
and
Louise Lovely Louise Lovely (born Nellie Louise Carbasse; 28 February 1895 – 18 March 1980) was an Australian film actress of Swiss-Italian descent. She is credited by film historians for being the first Australian actress to have a successful career i ...
, and '' The Wonder Man'', directed by
John G. Adolfi John Gustav Adolfi (February 19, 1888 – May 11, 1933) was an American silent film director, actor, and screenwriter who was involved in more than 100 productions throughout his career. An early acting credit was in the recently restored 1912 fi ...
and starring boxer
Georges Carpentier Georges Carpentier (; 12 January 1894 – 28 October 1975) was a French boxer, actor and World War I pilot. He fought mainly as a light heavyweight and heavyweight in a career lasting from 1908 to 1926. Nicknamed the "Orchid Man", he stood and hi ...
, which had a premiere on May 29 and went into general release in July. With its move into production, Robertson-Cole needed its own filmmaking studio: in June, it acquired a lot around fifteen acres (six hectares) in size in Los Angeles's fortuitously named Colegrove district, then adjacent to but soon to be subsumed by
Hollywood Hollywood usually refers to: * Hollywood, Los Angeles, a neighborhood in California * Hollywood, a metonym for the cinema of the United States Hollywood may also refer to: Places United States * Hollywood District (disambiguation) * Hollywood, ...
. For exterior shoots, the company purchased 460 acres in Santa Monica, to be known as the "R-C Ranch". In September, contracts were signed for the construction on the Colegrove property of an administration building with a massive neoclassical façade and eight stages, each occupying nearly a third of an acre. The first film to shoot at the facility, while it was still being built, was the independent production '' Kismet'' (1920), directed by Louis J. Gasnier. With the West Coast operation up and running, Hayakawa's production company was absorbed into Robertson-Cole. Rufus Cole also entered into a working relationship with Joseph P. Kennedy, father of future U.S. president
John F. Kennedy John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials JFK and the nickname Jack, was an American politician who served as the 35th president of the United States from 1961 until his assassination i ...
and then a broker at the New York banking firm of Hayden, Stone. In December, after lengthy negotiations, Kennedy set up his own wholly owned company, Robertson-Cole Distributing Corporation of New England, to handle the business's films in an area where he had a controlling interest in a regional theater chain (though it was locked out of Massachusetts by the leading exhibitors). In February 1921, the movie heralded as Robertson-Cole's first "official" production came out: ''
The Mistress of Shenstone ''The Mistress of Shenstone'' is a 1921 silent film romance directed by Henry King and starring Pauline Frederick and Roy Stewart based upon the 1910 novel of the same title by Florence L. Barclay. It is a surviving film but in an abridged ve ...
'', directed by Henry King and starring Pauline Frederick, a former headliner with
Famous Players-Lasky Famous Players-Lasky Corporation was an American motion picture and distribution company formed on June 28, 1916, from the merger of Adolph Zukor's Famous Players Film Company—originally formed by Zukor as Famous Players in Famous Plays—and t ...
and
Goldwyn Pictures Goldwyn Pictures Corporation was an American motion picture production company that operated from 1916 to 1924 when it was merged with two other production companies to form the major studio, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was founded on November 19, 1 ...
. At the same time, the business was $5 million in debt from the L.A. studio purchase and draining money—banks were reluctant to issue lines of credit to any but the biggest film companies, and R-C was forced to pay interest rates as high as 18 percent to so-called bonus sharks to access working capital. The company's primary investor, the Graham's of London firm, turned to Kennedy to find a buyer, giving him a seat on the R-C board, paying him a monthly adviser's fee, and promising a sizable commission. Though he failed to arrange the sale Graham's was looking for (and his own offer to buy 25 percent of the business was turned down), Kennedy would become deeply involved with the studio in the coming years.


A new identity

In 1922, Robertson-Cole underwent a major reorganization as the company's founders departed. The flagship U.S. distribution business changed its name to Film Booking Offices of America, a banner under which R-C had released more than a dozen independent productions. The West Coast studio operation continued to make films under the Robertson-Cole name for some time, but FBO ultimately became the primary identity of the business for production as well as distribution. Between May 1922 and October 1923, one of the company's new American investors, Pat Powers, was effectively in command. Powers had previously led his own filmmaking company, part of the multiple mergers that created the large
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studio in 1912. During his time in charge at FBO, his brand was added to many of its films: "P. A. Powers Presents". Among its outside suppliers of the period were Chester Bennett Productions, Hunt Stromberg Productions, and
Tiffany Productions Tiffany Pictures, which also became Tiffany-Stahl Productions for a time, was a Hollywood motion picture studio in operation from 1921 until 1932. It is considered a Poverty Row studio, whose films had lower budgets, lesser-known stars, and overal ...
. In 1923, the studio launched a series of boxing-themed shorts, ''Fighting Blood'', starring FBO newcomer George O'Hara—it was so popular it was often billed above the accompanying feature. O'Hara would become an FBO mainstay, as would Alberta Vaughn, who specialized in shorts: most of her films were two-reelers, a measure of film length indicating a running time of fifteen to twenty-five minutes. (Many feature films of the era were no more than five reels.) H.C.S. Thomson of Graham's, already chairman of the board, became the business's managing director with the departure of Powers. Before leaving the board in 1924, Kennedy put together a major distribution and production deal between FBO and leading Western star Fred Thomson. B. P. Fineman became the studio's production chief that year; Evelyn Brent, his wife, moved over from
Fox Foxes are small to medium-sized, omnivorous mammals belonging to several genera of the family Canidae. They have a flattened skull, upright, triangular ears, a pointed, slightly upturned snout, and a long bushy tail (or ''brush''). Twelve sp ...
to become FBO's top dramatic star.Jewell (1982), p. 8. In April 1925, FBO vice-president Joseph I. Schnitzer signed Thomson to a new contract paying him $6,000 a week—roughly $ in dollars. Behind only the enormously popular Tom Mix, Thomson was now the second-highest paid of all cowboy actors; his horse, Silver King, beloved by audiences, was covered by a $100,000 insurance policy. The deal also gave Thomson his own dedicated production unit at the studio. In December 1925, the '' Exhibitors Herald'' published its first annual list of the biggest box office films of the preceding year (ending November 15) based on a national survey of theater owners. FBO's top five attractions were led by '' A Girl of the Limberlost'', an adaptation of a novel by bestselling author
Gene Stratton-Porter Gene Stratton-Porter (August 17, 1863 – December 6, 1924), born Geneva Grace Stratton, was an American author, nature photographer, and naturalist from Wabash County, Indiana. In 1917 Stratton-Porter urged legislative support for the conservati ...
, who had died the previous December; this was followed by ''
Broken Laws ''Broken Laws'' is a 1924 American silent drama film directed by Roy William Neill, remarkable for the appearance of Dorothy Davenport, who is billed as "Mrs. Wallace Reid".
'', an issue-driven melodrama detailing the dire consequences of not spanking naughty children, and three Fred Thomson " oaters": '' The Bandit's Baby'', '' The Wild Bull's Lair'', and ''
Thundering Hoofs ''Thundering Hoofs'' is a 1942 American Western film directed by Lesley Selander and starring Tim Holt. It was the first of many films Holt made with Selander.Richard Jewell & Vernon Harbin, ''The RKO Story.'' New Rochelle, New York: Arlington ...
''. As a distributor, Film Booking Offices focused on marketing its films to small-town exhibitors and independent theater chains (that is, those not owned by one of the major Hollywood studios). As a production company, it concentrated on low-budget movies, with an emphasis on Westerns, action films, romantic melodramas, and comedy shorts. From its first productions in early 1920 through late 1928, just before it was dissolved in a merger, the company, as either Robertson-Cole Pictures or FBO Pictures, produced more than 400 features. The studio's top-of-the-line movies—"specials", in industry parlance—aimed at major exhibition venues beyond the reach of most FBO films, were sometimes marketed as FBO "Gold Bond" pictures. Between 1924 and 1926, seven of Evelyn Brent's star vehicles as well as two other high-end films were produced under the label of Gothic Pictures or Gothic Productions. With neither the backing of large corporate interests nor the daily money generator of its own theater chain and far from its London owners, the company faced persistent cash-flow difficulties. The significant financial drain of its reliance on short-term, high-interest loans continued.


Kennedy takes command

While still at the Hayden, Stone investment firm, Kennedy had boasted to a colleague, "Look at that bunch of pants pressers in Hollywood making themselves millionaires. I could take the whole business away from them." In 1925, he set out to do so, forming his own group of investors led by wealthy Boston lawyer Guy Currier,
Filene's Filene's (formally William Filene & Sons Co.) was an American department store chain; it was founded by William Filene in 1881. The success of the original full-line store in Boston, Massachusetts, was supplemented by the foundation of its off-p ...
department store owner Louis Kirstein, and
Union Stockyards The Union Stock Yard & Transit Co., or The Yards, was the meatpacking district in Chicago for more than a century, starting in 1865. The district was operated by a group of railroad companies that acquired marshland and turned it into a central ...
and
Armour and Company Armour & Company was an American company and was one of the five leading firms in the meat packing industry. It was founded in Chicago, in 1867, by the Armour brothers led by Philip Danforth Armour. By 1880, the company had become Chicago's most ...
owner
Frederick H. Prince Frederick Henry Prince (November 30, 1860 – February 2, 1953) was an American stockbroker, investment banking, investment banker and financier. Early life Prince was born in Winchester, Massachusetts on November 30, 1860, the son of Frede ...
. In August 1925, Kennedy traveled to England with an offer to buy a controlling stake in Film Booking Offices for $1 million. The bid was initially rejected—Graham's had poured $7 million into the company—but in February 1926, FBO's owners decided to take the money. In short order, Kennedy moved his family from Massachusetts to New York City to focus on running his new business. He swiftly addressed the company's perennial cash-flow problems, arranging lines of credit and issuing stock in a business division he established, the Cinema Credit Corporation. By March, he was traveling to Hollywood, where one of his first steps was to cut loose the various independent producers resident at the studio. The president of the
Motion Picture Producers and Distributors Association The Motion Picture Association (MPA) is an American trade association representing the five major film studios of the United States, as well as the video streaming service Netflix. Founded in 1922 as the Motion Picture Producers and Distribu ...
, Will Hays, was delighted by the new face on the scene; in his eyes, Kennedy signified both a desirable image for the industry and Wall Street's faith in its prospects. Hays—the movie industry's future censor in chief—heralded Kennedy as "exceedingly American" (historian
Cari Beauchamp Cari Beauchamp (born 1951, Berkeley, California) is an American author, historian, journalist, and documentary filmmaker. She authored the biography ''Without Lying Down: Frances Marion and the Power of Women in Hollywood'', which was subsequent ...
explains the connotation: "not Jewish", in contrast to most of the studio heads), while celebrating Kennedy's "background of lofty and conservative financial connections, an atmosphere of much home and family life and all those fireside virtues of which the public never hears in the current news from Hollywood." Studio chief Fineman departed around the time of Kennedy's purchase to work at the larger
First National Pictures First National Pictures was an American motion picture production and distribution company. It was founded in 1917 as First National Exhibitors' Circuit, Inc., an association of independent theatre owners in the United States, and became the count ...
. The new owner appointed Edwin King to replace him, but took a personal hand in guiding the company creatively as well as financially. His brand, "Joseph P. Kennedy Presents", would proceed to appear on over a hundred films. Kennedy soon brought stability to FBO, making it one of the most reliably profitable outfits in the minor leagues of the Hollywood studio system. The focus was on films with Main Street appeal and minimal costs. "We are trying", he declared, "to be the Woolworth and Ford of the motion picture industry rather than the
Tiffany Tiffany may refer to: People * Tiffany (given name), list of people with this name * Tiffany (surname), list of people with this surname Known mononymously as "Tiffany": * Tiffany Darwish, (born 1971), an American singer, songwriter, actress kn ...
." Westerns remained the studio's backbone, along with various action pictures and romantic scenarios; as Kennedy put it, "Melodrama is our meat." Gene Stratton-Porter, then, was the gravy: according to the 1926 ''Exhibitors Herald'' survey, '' The Keeper of the Bees'', for which shooting was completed while the novel was still being serialized in ''
McCall's ''McCall's'' was a monthly American women's magazine, published by the McCall Corporation, that enjoyed great popularity through much of the 20th century, peaking at a readership of 8.4 million in the early 1960s. It was established as a small-for ...
'', was the number one picture in the entire country that year. The remainder of FBO's top five comprised, once again, three Fred Thomson pictures, along with another Stratton-Porter adaptation. During this period, the average production cost of FBO features was around $50,000, and few were budgeted at anything more than $75,000. By comparison, in 1927–28 the average cost at Fox was $190,000; at
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc., also known as Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures and abbreviated as MGM, is an American film, television production, distribution and media company owned by amazon (company), Amazon through MGM Holdings, founded o ...
, $275,000. In a broad economization move, in 1927, FBO ended the long-term contracts with writers that were an industry standard, shifting story assignments to a freelance basis. One major expense Kennedy didn't spare: with the powerful
United Artists United Artists Corporation (UA), currently doing business as United Artists Digital Studios, is an American digital production company. Founded in 1919 by D. W. Griffith, Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, and Douglas Fairbanks, the studi ...
and
Paramount Paramount (from the word ''paramount'' meaning "above all others") may refer to: Entertainment and music companies * Paramount Global, also known simply as Paramount, an American mass media company formerly known as ViacomCBS. The following busin ...
studios circling Fred Thomson, Kennedy kept him at FBO for $15,000 a week (assigning the contract to a newly created corporation, Fred Thomson Productions, "for tax purposes"). The actor now had the second-highest straight salary in the entire industry, surpassed only by Tom Mix again, whose new arrangement with Fox paid $17,500. Thomson's were among those few FBO films budgeted at or above $75,000, but they could be relied on to gross in the quarter-million-dollar range. And Kennedy found an angle to make himself even more money. Under the new contract, Kennedy struck a deal in early 1927 with Paramount for the major studio to produce and distribute a series of four Thomson "super westerns". Kennedy participated in the films' financing, recouping his stake plus $100,000 in profits each; Paramount covered Thomson's weekly salary; and the actor's production unit stayed on the FBO lot. Given the lag time between production and exhibition, of the four Thomson features that reached theaters in 1927, three were FBO releases. For the twelve-month period ending November 15, 1927, theater owners judged FBO's top three films to all be Gene Stratton-Porter adaptations, with two Thomson oaters following.


Sound enters the picture

The advent of
sound film A sound film is a motion picture with synchronized sound, or sound technologically coupled to image, as opposed to a silent film. The first known public exhibition of projected sound films took place in Paris in 1900, but decades passed before ...
would drastically alter the studio's course: Negotiations that began in late 1927 with the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) on a deal for sound conversion led to RCA purchasing a major interest in FBO in January 1928. Four months later, as part of a strategy conceived with RCA head
David Sarnoff David Sarnoff (February 27, 1891 – December 12, 1971) was an American businessman and pioneer of American radio and television. Throughout most of his career, he led the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) in various capacities from shortly afte ...
, Kennedy acquired control of Keith-Albee-Orpheum (KAO), a vaudeville exhibition chain owning approximately one hundred theaters across the United States, affiliated with many more, and with two small studios under its control: Pathé Exchange and
Producers Distributing Corporation Producers Distributing Corporation was a short-lived Hollywood film distribution company, organized in 1924 and dissolved in March 1927. In its brief heyday, film director Cecil B. DeMille was its primary shareholder and major talent. Corporat ...
,
Cecil B. DeMille Cecil Blount DeMille (; August 12, 1881January 21, 1959) was an American film director, producer and actor. Between 1914 and 1958, he made 70 features, both silent and sound films. He is acknowledged as a founding father of the American cinem ...
's former boutique outlet. FBO's '' The Perfect Crime'', starring Clive Brook and Irene Rich, opened on August 4, 1928, at the Rivoli
movie palace A movie palace (or picture palace in the United Kingdom) is any of the large, elaborately decorated movie theaters built between the 1910s and the 1940s. The late 1920s saw the peak of the movie palace, with hundreds opening every year between 192 ...
in Manhattan's Theater District. The first film directed by admired cinematographer Bert Glennon, it was also the first feature-length " talkie" to appear from a studio other than
Warner Bros. Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. (commonly known as Warner Bros. or abbreviated as WB) is an American film and entertainment studio headquartered at the Warner Bros. Studios complex in Burbank, California, and a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Di ...
since the epochal premiere of Warners' '' The Jazz Singer'' ten months before. ''The Perfect Crime'' had been shot silently in anticipation of a silent release. Using the RCA Photophone sound-on-film system, dialogue and "mystery sound effects" were dubbed in afterward. Savaging it as a "jabberwocky of inane incidents", the ''
New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''the Times'', ''NYT'', or the Gray Lady) is a daily newspaper based in New York City with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to comprise a declining 840,000 paid print subscribers, and a growing 6 million paid d ...
'' review concluded, "What it is all about can be called only an open question. A guess at the solution, however, would be that FBO had a mystery story, and in an effort to keep up with the times had synchronized it.... The synchronization is faulty in many, many places, and several vocal selections are added in curious out-of-the-way scenes." A trade paper report described the studio's plans to add "synchronized music, sound effects and dialogue" to five other silently shot films. On August 22, Kennedy signed a contract with RCA for live Photophone recording; more importantly, he also tendered the company an option to buy his governing share of FBO. Two months later, RCA had acquired controlling stock interests in both the studio and KAO. On October 23, 1928, RCA announced it was merging Film Booking Offices and Keith-Albee-Orpheum to form the new motion picture business Radio-Keith-Orpheum (RKO), with Sarnoff as chairman. Kennedy, who retained Pathé, was paid $150,000 for arranging the merger on top of the millions of dollars in profit he made from selling off his stock. Joseph I. Schnitzer, ranking FBO vice-president, was elevated to president of the new company's production arm, replacing Kennedy. William LeBaron, the last FBO production chief, retained his position after the merger, but the new studio, dedicated to full sound production, cut ties with FBO's roster of silent screen performers. In its final year of operation, of FBO's top five box office films according to theater owners, three were again Gene Stratton-Porter adaptations, including ''The Keeper of the Bees'', first released in October 1925 and making its fourth appearance in the annual balloting; the others were the Austrian import ''
Moon of Israel ''The Moon of Israel'' (german: Die Sklavenkönigin, or "The Queen of the Slaves") is a 1924 Austrian epic film. It was directed by Mihaly Kertész (later Michael Curtiz). The script was written by Ladislaus Vajda, based on H. Rider Haggard's ...
'' and '' The Great Mail Robbery''. During the transitional period, the first RKO feature release, ''
Syncopation In music, syncopation is a variety of rhythms played together to make a piece of music, making part or all of a tune or piece of music off-beat. More simply, syncopation is "a disturbance or interruption of the regular flow of rhythm": a "place ...
'' in March 1929, was packaged to exhibitors with two FBO low-budget "
programmers A computer programmer, sometimes referred to as a software developer, a software engineer, a programmer or a coder, is a person who creates computer programs — often for larger computer software. A programmer is someone who writes/creates ...
". Movies that Film Booking Offices had either produced or arranged to distribute were released under the FBO banner through the end of the year. The last official FBO production to reach American theaters was '' Pals of the Prairie'', directed by Louis King and starring
Buzz Barton Buzz Barton (1913–1980) was an American film actor.Munden p.37 He is predominantly known for his roles as a child actor in a number of silent westerns made by the FBO studios during the 1920s. Following the introduction of sound, he mainly pla ...
and Frank Rice, released July 7, 1929.


Cinematic legacy

A large majority of FBO/Robertson-Cole pictures, produced during the silent era and the transitional period of the conversion to sound cinema, are considered to be
lost film A lost film is a feature or short film that no longer exists in any studio archive, private collection, public archive or the U.S. Library of Congress. Conditions During most of the 20th century, U.S. copyright law required at least one copy o ...
s, with no copies known to exist. Much of FBO's cinematic legacy thus endures only in still images, other publicity materials, and written accounts. All told, just 30 percent of American silent feature films have been preserved (25 percent more or less complete, plus another 5 percent in incomplete versions). The overall survival rate of features produced by R-C/FBO is similar: of 449 movies identified by the National Film Preservation Board as R-C/FBO productions, 125 are known to survive in some form—28 percent, though with only two (0.4 percent) in a legacy studio archive. The losses, moreover, were not equally distributed, and one of FBO's most successful franchises has disappeared entirely: not even a fragmentary print of any of the six Gene Stratton-Porter films put out by the studio has been found. Due to its zeal for cost cutting, FBO was reputed to be especially meticulous in the execution of a practice then common among distributors: rounding up its release prints at the end of a picture's run and melting them down to recover the
silver Silver is a chemical element with the Symbol (chemistry), symbol Ag (from the Latin ', derived from the Proto-Indo-European wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/h₂erǵ-, ''h₂erǵ'': "shiny" or "white") and atomic number 47. A soft, whi ...
in the
film emulsion Photographic emulsion is a light-sensitive colloid used in film-based photography. Most commonly, in silver-gelatin photography, it consists of silver halide crystals dispersed in gelatin. The emulsion is usually coated onto a substrate of glas ...
. As for FBO's biggest star, among America's biggest at the time, of the twenty films Fred Thomson made for the studio, for years just a single one was known to remain intact in a US archive: ''Thundering Hoofs''. About three reels' worth of the five-reel ''
Galloping Gallagher ''Galloping Gallagher'' is a 1924 American silent Western film directed by Albert S. Rogell and starring Fred Thomson, Hazel Keener, and Frank Hagney. The film was originally five reels A reel is an object around which a length of another ...
'' (1924) were also known to survive. In 1982, film scholar Bruce Firestone wrote that "the disappearance, through loss or destruction, of virtually all of his films asturned Thomson into one of the least-known cowboys in the history of American movies." According to the Library of Congress's American Silent Feature Film Database, to this tiny corpus may now be added complete prints of ''
The Dangerous Coward ''The Dangerous Coward'' is a 1924 American silent Western sports film directed by Albert S. Rogell and starring Fred Thomson, Hazel Keener and Frank Hagney. Cast * Fred Thomson as Bob Trent ''aka'' The Lightning Kid * Hazel Keener as Hazel M ...
'' (1924) and '' A Regular Scout'' (1926) at the
George Eastman House The George Eastman Museum, also referred to as ''George Eastman House, International Museum of Photography and Film'', the world's oldest museum dedicated to photography and one of the world's oldest film archives, opened to the public in 1949 in ...
. Seven more Thomson features are held by archives abroad.


Headliners and celebrity casting

Sessue Hayakawa , known professionally as , was a Japanese actor and a matinée idol. He was a popular star in Hollywood during the silent film era of the 1910s and early 1920s. Hayakawa was the first actor of Asian descent to achieve stardom as a leading man i ...
, the first star of any magnitude associated with the Robertson-Cole brand, made a total of twenty films released by the studio, from ''A Heart in Pawn'' in March 1919 to ''The Vermilion Pencil'' in March 1922. Hayakawa was regarded as one of the finest screen performers of his time, but as anti-Japanese sentiment grew on the West Coast, R-C terminated its relationship with the Chiba Prefecture, Chiba-born actor. Two months after ''The Vermilion Pencil'' opened, he sued the studio for breach of contract. Pauline Frederick, celebrated for her performance in the September 1920
Goldwyn Pictures Goldwyn Pictures Corporation was an American motion picture production company that operated from 1916 to 1924 when it was merged with two other production companies to form the major studio, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was founded on November 19, 1 ...
tear-jerker ''Madame X (1920 film), Madame X'', immediately cashed in with a top-tier contract from Robertson-Cole, for whom she starred in more than half a dozen melodramas, beginning with ''A Slave of Vanity'' just two months later. She was said to have been paid an extravagant $7,000 or $7,500 a week under her R-C deal. Early in her career, ZaSu Pitts acted in six R-C releases—''Better Times (film), Better Times'' (1919) gave Pitts her first ever top billing—from the King_Vidor#Brentwood Film Corporation and the "Preachment" films, 1918–1919, Brentwood Film Corporation, founded by a group of doctors. In the years after the studio's rebranding, Evelyn Brent and
Richard Talmadge Richard Talmadge (born Sylvester Alphonse Metz; 3 December 1892 – 25 January 1981) also known as Sylvester Metzetti, Ricardo Metzetti, or Sylvester Ricardo Metzetti, was a German-born actor, stuntman and film director. Early life Born in ...
were FBO's most prominent non-Western headliners. Brent made a specialty of melodramatic pictures with a crime angle, often billed as "crook melodramas"—in ''Midnight Molly'' (1925), she played an ambitious politician's faithless wife and her look-alike, a high-end cat burglar. Talmadge, a stunt designer and double for major stars including Douglas Fairbanks and Harold Lloyd, took the lead in action pictures for FBO—"stunt dramas" such as ''Stepping Lively'' (1924) and ''Tearing Through'' (1925). He appeared in eighteen FBO releases, more than half of them produced by his own company. Talmadge's last film for the studio was released in June 1926. By August, Brent was on her way to starring roles at Paramount. In October, Talmadge was judged to have been FBO's biggest non-Western draw of the year; in the first annual ''Exhibitors Herald'' theater owners' poll of top box office names, he placed thirtieth out of sixty. Beginning in late 1924, Maurice Bennett Flynn, Maurice "Lefty" Flynn starred in over a dozen action-filled "comedy dramas" released by FBO, all produced and directed by Harry Garson. Signing a new contract in 1925, the former Yale Bulldogs football, Yale Halfback (American football), halfback demonstrated his range by playing a "fast riding motorcycle copper" in a May release, a "battling policeman" in September, and Breckenrdige Gamble, a bored millionaire turned international secret agent, in October. Ralph Lewis (actor), Ralph Lewis, a prolific character actor who had appeared in several D. W. Griffith films, including ''The Birth of a Nation'' and ''Intolerance (film), Intolerance'', was top billed in at least eight FBO releases between 1922 and 1928. George O'Hara headlined multiple features as well as short series. Warner Baxter and Joe E. Brown were among the other popular FBO players. Anna Q. Nilsson starred in two of the studio's more notable productions, as did Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Pauline Frederick returned in 1926 for the title role in ''Her Honor, the Governor''. In FBO's waning months, former Fox Film Corporation, Fox star Olive Borden played the lead in three films. Boris Karloff appeared in six FBO pictures between 1925 and 1927; in two of his earliest major roles, he performed opposite Evelyn Brent in the action-oriented ''Forbidden Cargo'' and ''Lady Robinhood'' (both 1925). In its pre-Kennedy years, the studio did not hesitate to take advantage of scandal sheet–worthy events. After the death of celebrated actor Wallace Reid, brought on by morphine addiction, his widow, Dorothy Davenport, signed on as producer and star of a cinematic examination of the sins of substance abuse: ''Human Wreckage'', released by FBO in June 1923, five months after Reid's death, in which Davenport (billed as Mrs. Wallace Reid) plays the wife of a noble attorney turned dope fiend. A few months later, the studio featured a celebrity of a very different sort: magician Harry Houdini, directing and starring in his last feature film, ''Haldane of the Secret Service''. In November 1924, FBO put out Davenport's next "social problem" picture, ''Broken Laws''. Here Davenport (again billed as Mrs. Wallace Reid) plays the overindulgent mother of an unruly boy destined, as a reckless teen, to commit a terrible misdeed. According to a trade journal—perhaps echoing publicity copy—the tale was "a reminder that the foundation of all law and order lies in that greatest of American institutions—the home." When the biggest movie star in the world, Rudolph Valentino, split from his wife, Natacha Rambova, she was swiftly enlisted by the studio to costar with Clive Brook in the sensitively titled ''When Love Grows Cold'' (1926). Under Kennedy's control, the studio focused on marketing its roster of films as suitable for the "average American" and the entire family: "We can't make pictures and label them 'For Children,' or 'For Women' or 'For Stout People' or 'For Thin Ones.' We must make pictures that have appeal to all." Though Kennedy ended the scandal-sheet specials, FBO still found occasion for celebrity casting: ''One Minute to Play'' (1926), directed by Sam Wood, marked the film debut of football great Red Grange, "Red" Grange. Tennis stars Suzanne Lenglen and Mary Browne were signed for a series of "Racquet Girls" pictures that never made it to screen.


Western and canine stars

Central to the FBO identity were Westerns and the studio's major cowboy star, Fred Thomson. In both 1926 and 1927, he ranked number two among male performers in the ''Exhibitors Herald'' poll, right behind Tom Mix. When one of Thomson's "oaters", ''The Two-Gun Man'' (1926), made it to New York's Strand Theatre (Manhattan), Warners' Theatre, the growing studio's Times Square showcase, it demonstrated that a Western, even one without Mix, could draw audiences to a first run (film), first-run house in the most cosmopolitan of markets. Along with trusty Silver King, Thomson brought in millions to FBO, and Kennedy personally made almost half a million dollars from the "super western" loanout to Paramount. But when Kennedy learned early in 1928 that Mix, whose decade-old Fox contract was expiring, might become available, he used his control of Fred Thomson Productions, the supposed tax shelter, to freeze Thomson out of motion pictures entirely. That December, Thomson died—the immediate cause of death was tetanus; his widow, screenwriter Frances Marion, said that he had lost his will to live. Among Western stars under long-term contract, FBO's next most important—though by a distance—was Tom Tyler, who finished twenty-third among men in the 1927 exhibitors' poll. According to a hyperbolic June 1927 report in ''The Moving Picture World, Moving Picture World'': "With Tom Tyler rapidly taking the place recently vacated by Fred Thomson [for the Paramount sojourn from which he would never return], F.B.O.'s program of western pictures is taking a place second to none in the industry. Tyler has made rapid strides during his two years with F.B.O. and with his horse 'Flash' and dog, 'Beans,' has become one of the leading favorites on the screen." Tyler's appeal was also enhanced by his human costars—Frankie Darro (tied for fifty-fourth in the poll) as his young sidekick on over two dozen occasions and starlets such as Doris Hill, Nora Lane, Sharon Lynn, and in ''Born to Battle (1926 film), Born to Battle'' (1926), a twenty-five-year-old Jean Arthur. As 1928 began, Tyler was the most popular actor actually working at FBO, but Kennedy wanted the big gun. He bided his time as Tom Mix toured the Orpheum vaudeville theaters with a live show—boosting Kennedy's new exhibition interests—and legal machinations ensured Thomson's exile. Finally, Mix was signed to a six-film deal and began shooting in July. He ultimately made five pictures for the studio (two released after it had ceased to exist), and stayed near the top of the exhibitors' poll, his 112 votes good enough for second among the men, if well behind the 171 of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, MGM's Lon Chaney (no other FBO regular made it into double digits). But the spread of the talkies was swiftly making the silent sagebrush superstar less of a sure thing. ''Variety (magazine), Variety'' derided Mix's last FBO film, ''The Big Diamond Robbery'', released in May 1929, as "cowboy burlesque". His brief tenure at the studio was marked by salary grievances—he was now making only $10,000 a week—and dismay at FBO's inferior production values, from its worndown sets to the cut-rate film stock it used. Subsequently asked about his experience working with Kennedy, Mix described him as a "tight-assed, money-crazy son-of-a-bitch." In addition to these major draws, there was also Harry Carey (actor), Harry Carey; a top star for Universal in the second half of the 1910s, he was still a bankable name when he made several FBO Westerns in 1922–23. The other cowboy stars of FBO included Bob Custer (tied for thirty-seventh in the 1927 poll), Bob Steele (actor), Bob Steele (tied for sixty-sixth with, among others, Silver King), and teenager
Buzz Barton Buzz Barton (1913–1980) was an American film actor.Munden p.37 He is predominantly known for his roles as a child actor in a number of silent westerns made by the FBO studios during the 1920s. Following the introduction of sound, he mainly pla ...
. One of the studio's most reliable Western headliners was a dog: Ranger (all alone at sixty-fifth among male performers). Beans had featured roles in a number of Tom Tyler/Frankie Darro Westerns. The fabled Strongheart starred in FBO's Jack London adaptation ''White Fang (1925 film), White Fang'' (1925). For a small role in the melodrama ''My Dad'' (1922), a three-year-old German Shepherd, Alsatian who would become one of the greatest canine stars of all time was singled out by the New York Daily News, New York ''Daily News'': "Rin-Tin-Tin...runs off with most of the histrionic honors. The dog stages one of the most realistic and blood curdling fights we have seen recently."


Notable films and filmmakers

Kennedy had no illusions about his studio's place in the realm of cinematic art. A journalist once complimented him on FBO's recent output: "You have had some good pictures this year." Kennedy jocularly inquired, "What the hell ''were'' they?" From the pre-Kennedy era, RKO historian Betty Lasky identifies the Dorothy Davenport "problem" picture ''
Broken Laws ''Broken Laws'' is a 1924 American silent drama film directed by Roy William Neill, remarkable for the appearance of Dorothy Davenport, who is billed as "Mrs. Wallace Reid".
'' (1924), directed by Roy William Neill, as a rare "unforgettable picture of the higher caliber" put out by FBO. Reviews at the time called it "absorbing" and "vastly entertaining". Among the studio's action movies, one standout production was a 1927 Tarzan picture. Author Edgar Rice Burroughs declared, "If you want to see the personification of Tarzan of the Apes as I visualize him, see the film ''Tarzan and the Golden Lion (film), Tarzan and the Golden Lion'' with Mr. James Pierce."Quoted in Fenton (2002), p. 107. The ''Film Daily'' reviewer wrote that the movie "has a rather new order of thrills and atmosphere that might prove distinctly attractive." Two of the studio's most impressive releases were foreign productions. In 1927, FBO picked up for U.S. distribution an acclaimed Austrian biblical spectacular made three years earlier: ''Die Sklavenkönigin'' (''The Slave Queen'', aka ''Moon of Israel'') had already won its director, Michael Kertész, a job with Warner Bros. In Hollywood, he would make such hits as ''The Adventures of Robin Hood'' (1938) and ''Casablanca (film), Casablanca'' (1942) under the name Michael Curtiz. ''The Charge of the Gauchos, Una Nueva y gloriosa nación'' (1928), the most successful film in the history of Argentine silent cinema, was shot in Hollywood and distributed in the United States by FBO as ''The Charge of the Gauchos''. One of its two cinematography, cinematographers was Nicholas Musuraca, who established his career at Film Booking Offices. With RKO, Musuraca would become one of Hollywood's most respected cinematographers. At the age of twenty-five, King Vidor insisted on casting then little-known ZaSu Pitts as the lead in ''Better Times''; he directed two more of her R-C/Brentwood films, both starring his wife, Florence Vidor. Louis J. Gasnier, responsible for the blockbuster 1914 serial ''The Perils of Pauline (1914 serial), The Perils of Pauline'', directed several films for the company—from ''Good Women'' (1921) to ''The Call of Home'' (1922)—during its Robertson-Cole days. The best-known director to work regularly under the FBO brand was Ralph Ince, younger brother of celebrated filmmaker Thomas H. Ince. Pulling double duty on occasion, Ralph Ince starred in five of the sixteen films he made for the studio between 1925 and 1928. One production in which he served in both capacities was particularly well received: ''Chicago After Midnight'' (1928) was described by the ''New York Times'' as an "unusually well-acted and adroitly directed underworld story". After ''
The Mistress of Shenstone ''The Mistress of Shenstone'' is a 1921 silent film romance directed by Henry King and starring Pauline Frederick and Roy Stewart based upon the 1910 novel of the same title by Florence L. Barclay. It is a surviving film but in an abridged ve ...
'', Henry King directed two more R-C films with Pauline Frederick, also in 1921: ''Salvage (1921 film), Salvage'' and ''The Sting of the Lash''. Tod Browning directed two Gothic Pictures specials in 1924 starring Evelyn Brent: ''The Dangerous Flirt'' and ''Silk Stocking Sal''. In 1921 and 1922 alone, William Seiter directed eight R-C/FBO releases, some produced directly for the studio, others independently; in 1924 he made two additional FBO releases for Palmer Photoplay, both featuring Madge Bellamy. Between 1922 and 1926, Emory Johnson produced and directed eight films for FBO. Historian William K. Everson has pointed to Seiter and Johnson as two of the overlooked directorial talents of the silent era. Author and naturalist
Gene Stratton-Porter Gene Stratton-Porter (August 17, 1863 – December 6, 1924), born Geneva Grace Stratton, was an American author, nature photographer, and naturalist from Wabash County, Indiana. In 1917 Stratton-Porter urged legislative support for the conservati ...
set up her own production company to film screen adaptations of her work, a perhaps unprecedented venture for a writer. FBO handled four releases from Gene Stratton-Porter Productions—'' A Girl of the Limberlost'' (1924), '' The Keeper of the Bees'' (1925), ''Laddie (1926 film), Laddie'' (1926), and ''The Magic Garden (1927 film), The Magic Garden'' (1927)—and was itself producer of record for ''The Harvester (1927 film), The Harvester'' (1927) and ''Freckles'' (1928). All six were directed by Stratton-Porter's son-in-law, James Leo Meehan. All six were hits. All are considered lost. In-house, Frances Marion, who would win two writing Academy Award, Oscars in the 1930s, created the stories for seven of the FBO pictures starring her husband, Fred Thomson—for these brawny cowboy tales, such as ''Ridin' the Wind'' (1925) and ''The Tough Guy (1926 film), The Tough Guy'' (1926), she used the pseudonym Frank M. Clifton (the "patronymic" was Thomson's middle name). Film editing, Editor Pandro S. Berman, son of a major FBO stockholder, cut his first film for the studio at the age of twenty-one; in the 1930s, he would earn renown as an RKO producer and production chief. Famed RKO costume designer Walter Plunkett was also an FBO graduate.


Short subjects and animation

Both George O'Hara's and Alberta Vaughn's initial short series for FBO—each directed by Malcolm St. Clair (filmmaker), Malcolm St. Clair—were hits, so in the second half of 1924 the studio made a bid at teaming them in the twelve-part ''The Go-Getters'', spoofing popular films and classic stories with chapters such ''A Kick for Cinderella''. It was so successful that they were reunited the next year for a similar twelve-parter, ''The Pacemakers'', with episodes such as ''Merton of the Goofies'' (''Merton of the Movies (1924 film), Merton of the Movies'') and ''Madam Sans Gin'' (''Madame Sans-Gêne (1925 film), Madame Sans-Gêne''). Vaughn had solo top billing in the comedic series ''The Adventures of Mazie'' (1925–26) and the baseball-themed serial ''Fighting Hearts'' (1926). In May 1928, with the Keith-Albee-Orpheum theater chain under his control, Joseph Kennedy announced a forthcoming slate with not only more than the usual number of (relatively) high-budget films but a "Mammoth Program of Short Features". No less than four different series came from independent producer Larry Darmour, including the second twelve chapters of ''Mickey McGuire (film series), Mickey McGuire'', starring seven-year-old Mickey Rooney. Amedee J. Van Beuren, Amedee Van Beuren provided Walter Futter's ''Curiosities'', a ''Ripley's Believe It or Not!, Ripley's''-inspired "Movie Side Show" of "freaks and queer odds and ends from all corners of the world". Of particular historical interest are two independently produced series of slapstick comedies released by the studio: Between 1924 and 1927, Joe Rock provided FBO with a substantial annual slate of short film, two-reelers (twenty-six per year as of their last contract); twelve of those from 1924–25 starred Stan Laurel, before his famous partnership with Oliver Hardy. ''West of Hot Dog'' (1924), according to historian Simon Louvish, contains "one of [Laurel]'s finest gags," involving a level of cinematic technique that bears comparison to Buster Keaton's classic ''Sherlock Jr.'' In 1926–27, the company released more than a dozen shorts by innovative comedian/animator Charles Bowers, whose work imaginatively mixed live action and three-dimensional model animation. FBO also distributed the output of significant creators of purely animated films. Between 1924 and 1926, FBO released the work of John Randolph Bray's cartoon studio, including the ''Dinky Doodle'' series created by Walter Lantz. In 1925–26, the studio put out twenty-six cartoons by animator Bill Nolan (animator), William Nolan based on George Herriman's now famed ''Krazy Kat'' newspaper comic strip, licensed by the wife-husband distribution team of Margaret J. Winkler, Margaret Winkler and Charles B. Mintz, Charles Mintz. While the Winkler–Mintz operation took ''Krazy Kat'' away from FBO the following season for a Paramount contract, they struck a deal with the studio for another series, one that, like Bowers's shorts, involved both animation and a live performer: the ''Alice Comedies'', of which FBO would release over two dozen, were created by two young animators, Ub Iwerks and Walt Disney.Barrier (2008), pp. 51–53; Crafton (1993), p. 285; Langer (1995), p. 259 n. 39;


Notes


Sources

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''Edgar Rice Burroughs and Tarzan: A Biography of the Author and His Creation''. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. *Finkielman, Jorge (2004). ''The Film Industry in Argentina: An Illustrated Cultural History''. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. *Finler, Joel W. (1988). ''The Hollywood Story''. New York: Crown. *Firestone, Bruce M. (2010 [1982]). "Fred Thomson," in ''American Classic Screen Profiles'', ed. John C. Tibbetts and James M. Welsh. Lanham, MD: Firestone Press, p. 73–77. *Fleming, E. J. (2007). ''Wallace Reid: The Life and Death of a Hollywood Idol''. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. *Foote, Lisle (2014). ''Buster Keaton's Crew: The Team Behind His Silent Films''. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. *Freese, Gene Scott (2014). ''Hollywood Stunt Performers, 1910s–1970s: A Biographical Dictionary'', 2nd ed. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. *Gates, Philippa (2019). ''Criminalization/Assimilation: Chinese/Americans and Chinatowns in Classical Hollywood Film''. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. *Goodwin, Doris Kearns (1987). ''The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys: An American Saga''. New York: Simon & Schuster. *''Heritage Vintage Movie Poster Signature Auction #603''. Dallas: Heritage Vintage Movie Posters, 2004a. *''Heritage Vintage Movie Poster Signature Auction #607''. Dallas: Heritage Vintage Movie Posters, 2004b. *''Heritage Vintage Movie Poster Signature Auction #624''. Dallas: Heritage Vintage Movie Posters, 2005. *Jackson, Kenneth T., Karen Markoe, and Arnie Markoe (1998). ''The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, vol. 1: 1981–1985''. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. *Jensen, Richard D. (2005). ''The Amazing Tom Mix: The Most Famous Cowboy of the Movies''. Lincoln, NE: iUniverse. *Jewell, Richard B. (2012). ''RKO Radio Pictures: A Titan Is Born''. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. *Jewell, Richard B., with Vernon Harbin (1982). ''The RKO Story''. 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External links


The Silent Films of FBO Pictures
comprehensive listing of silent features produced by FBO/Robertson-Cole and released between 1925 and 1929 (showing how many were considered lost as of 2003)

lists FBO sound productions released in 1928 (but does not clearly indicate the several holdover FBO sound productions distributed by RKO in 1929)
Joseph P. Kennedy Personal Papers Biographical/Historical Note
includes a summary of Kennedy's FBO dealings
''The Two-Gun Man'' (1926)—The Surviving Reel
nine-and-a-half minutes' worth of Fred Thomson and Silver King's fifteenth film for FBO {{DEFAULTSORT:Film Booking Offices Of America 1918 establishments in New York (state) 1919 establishments in New York (state) 1929 disestablishments in New York (state) American companies established in 1918 American companies established in 1919 Mass media companies established in 1918 Mass media companies established in 1919 Mass media companies disestablished in 1929 1928 mergers and acquisitions Defunct American film studios Film distributors of the United States Film production companies of the United States History of film Companies based in New York City Defunct companies based in New York (state) Defunct mass media companies of the United States