Selig Polyscope Company

Selig Polyscope Company
Industry Entertainment
Founded 1896
Headquarters Los Angeles, United States
Products Motion pictures
Owner William Selig

The Selig Polyscope Company was an American motion picture company founded in 1896 by William Selig in Chicago. Selig Polyscope is noted for establishing Southern California's first permanent movie studio, in the historic Edendale district of Los Angeles. The company produced hundreds of early, widely distributed commercial moving pictures, including the first films starring Tom Mix, Harold Lloyd, Colleen Moore, and Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle. The business gradually became a struggling zoo attraction in East Los Angeles, having ended film production in 1918.[1][2]

History

Surviving hand-tinted still from The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays (1908), based on L. Frank Baum's Oz books
Selig studio in Chicago in 1916

Selig had worked as a magician and minstrel show operator on the west coast of California. Later on in Chicago he attempted to enter the film business using his own photographic equipment, free from patent restrictions imposed through companies controlled by Thomas Edison. In 1896, with help from Union Metal Works and Andrew Schustek, he shot his first film, Tramp and the Dog. He went on to successfully produce local actualities, slapstick comedies, early travelogues and industrial films (a major client was Armour and Company). In 1908 Selig Polyscope was involved in the production of The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays, a touring "multimedia" attempt to bring L. Frank Baum's Oz books to a wider public (which played to full houses but was nonetheless a financial disaster for Baum). By 1909 Selig had studios making short features in Chicago and the Edendale district of Los Angeles. The company also distributed stock film footage and titles from other studios. That year, Roscoe Arbuckle's first movie was a Selig comedy short. The company's early existence was fraught with legal turmoil over disputes with lawyers representing Thomas Edison's interests. In 1909 Selig and several other studio heads settled with Edison by creating an alliance with the inventor. Effectively a cartel, Motion Picture Patents Company dominated the industry for a few years until the Supreme Court (in 1913 and 1915) ruled the firm was an illegal monopoly. In 1910 Selig Polyscope produced a wholly new filmed version of the The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. The company produced the first commercial two-reel film, Damon and Pythias, successfully distributed its pictures in Great Britain and maintained an office in London for several years before World War I. Although Selig Polyscope produced a wide variety of moving pictures, the company was most widely known for its wild animal shorts, historical subjects and early westerns.

Edendale

Attracted by Southern California's mild, dry climate, varied geography for location shooting and isolation from Edison's legal representatives on the east coast, Selig set up his studio in Edendale in 1909 with director Francis Boggs, who began the facility in a rented bungalow and quickly expanded, designing the studio's front entrance after Mission San Gabriel.

Street view of the Selig Polyscope Company studio in Edendale, ca. 1910.

An early production there was The Count of Monte Cristo. Edendale soon became Selig Polyscope's headquarters, but in 1911 Boggs was murdered by a Japanese gardener who also wounded Selig. The company produced hundreds of short features at Edendale, including many early westerns featuring Tom Mix (which were also shot at Las Vegas, New Mexico). Selig Polyscope made dozens of highly successful short movies involving wild animals in exotic settings, including a popular re-creation of an African safari hunt by Teddy Roosevelt. In 1914 Selig made 14 short experimental "talking pictures" with Scottish actor Harry Lauder.[3]

The cliffhanger

In 1913, through a collaborative partnership with the Chicago Tribune, Selig produced The Adventures of Kathlyn, introducing a dramatic serial plot device which came to be known as the cliffhanger. Each chapter's story was simultaneously published in the newspaper. A combination of wild animals, clever dramatic action and Kathlyn Williams' screen presence resulted in significant success. The Tribune’s circulation reportedly increased by 10% and both a dance and cocktail were named after Williams, whose likeness was reportedly sold on over 50,000 postcards.

Selig zoo

Promotional drawing for the planned Selig Zoo Park in east LA, with light rail connections, cars speeding towards the entrance and long lines depicted at the gate. Only a single carousel was ever built and the site struggled as a lightly visited zoo for over a decade.
Asian elephant at the Selig Zoo, ca. 1920
Selig Zoo archway, 1955. LA Times photo
This is Jackie, one of the MGM lion mascots, who lived at Selig zoo, pictured in the opening of MGM's 1939 production of The Wizard of Oz. Selig Polyscope was involved in the production of two earlier versions.

By 1913 Selig had gathered a large collection of animals for his films and spent substantial funds acquiring and developing 32 acres (130,000 m2) of land in Lincoln Heights northeast of downtown Los Angeles, where he opened a large public zoo. In 1917 Selig sold the Edendale facility to producer William Fox and moved his movie studio to the zoo in east Los Angeles. Meanwhile, World War I cut severely into the substantial revenues Selig Polyscope had been garnering in Europe and the company shunned profitable movie industry trends, which had shifted towards dramatic (and more costly) full length feature films. Selig Polyscope became insolvent and ceased operations in 1918. Mix signed with Fox back at Edendale and went on to even greater success as a matinée cowboy star. Movie studios rented animals and staged many shoots at the Selig zoo (sometimes later claiming they had been filmed in Africa). The First Tarzan movie (1918) was filmed there. In 1920 Louis B. Mayer rented his first studio space for Mayer Pictures at the site. Selig planned to develop it into a major tourist attraction, amusement park and popular resort named Selig Zoo Park with a Ferris wheel, carousels, mechanical rides, an enormous swimming pool with a sandy beach and a wave making machine, hotel, theatre, cinema, restaurants and thousands of daily visitors (more than 30 years before Disneyland). Only a single carousel was built. Selig Polyscope's extensive collection of props and furnishings were auctioned off at the zoo in 1923.

Selig finally sold the zoo following a flood during the Great Depression. Some of the animals were donated to Los Angeles County, forming a substantial addition to Griffith Park Zoo. The property was used as a jalopy racetrack during the 1940s and early 1950s. In 1955 the site was described as "an inactive amusement park."[4]

Throughout its history, names appearing on the zoo gate included:

Selig Zoo and Studio
Selig Zoo
Selig Jungle Zoo
Luna Park Zoo
California Zoological Gardens
Zoopark
Lincoln Amusement Park

The carousel survived on the site until 1976 when it was destroyed by fire. The former Selig zoo's arched front gate with its lavish animal sculptures was a crumbling landmark in Lincoln Heights for many decades. By 2003 the sculptures were reportedly being restored for installation at the Los Angeles Zoo and in 2007 tennis courts were on the site.

Most films lost

The potential of movies as long term sources of revenue was unknown to early movie industry executives. Films were made quickly, sent into distribution channels and mostly forgotten soon after their first runs. Surviving prints were wontedly stored haphazardly, if at all. Early film stock was chemically volatile and many prints were lost in fires or decomposed to goo in storage. Some were recycled for their silver content or simply thrown away to save space. Out of Selig Polyscope's hundreds of films, only a few copies and scattered photographic elements are known to survive.

Partial filmography

Flier for Lost in the Arctic, 1911
Poster for Wamba Child of The Jungle, 1913. Exotic animals were a staple of Selig Productions
  • The Tramp and the Dog (1896)
  • Soldiers at Play (1898)
  • Chicago Police Parade (1901)
  • Dewey Parade (1901)
  • Gans-McGovern Fight (1901)
  • Fun at the Glenwood Springs Pool (1902)
  • A Hot Time on a Bathing Beach (1903)
  • Business Rivalry (1903)
  • Chicago Fire Run (1903)
  • Chicago Firecats on Parade (1903)
  • The Girl in Blue (1903)
  • Trip Around The Union Loop (1903)
  • View of State Street (1903)
  • Humpty Dumptry (1904)
  • The Tramp Dog (1904)
  • The Grafter (1907)
  • The Count of Monte Cristo (1908)
  • Damon and Pythias (1908)
  • The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays (1908)
  • Hunting Big Game in Africa (1909)
  • The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1910) (survives)
  • The Sergeant (1910) (survives)
  • Lost in the Arctic (1911)
  • Life on the Border (1911) (partial section survives)
  • The Coming of Columbus (1911)
  • Brotherhood of Man (1912)
  • Kings of the Forest (1912)
  • War Time Romance (1912)
  • The Adventures of Kathlyn (1913)
  • Arabia, the Equine Detective (1913)
  • The Sheriff of Yavapai County (1913)
  • Wamba A Child of the Jungle (1913)
  • The Spoilers (1914) (survives)
  • A Black Sheep (1915)
  • House of a Thousand Candles (1915)
  • The Man from Texas (1915)
  • The Crisis (1916)
  • The Garden of Allah (1916)
  • The City of Purple Dreams (1918)
  • Little Orphant Annie (1918) (not to be confused with the comic strip Little Orphan Annie)

See also

References

  1. Lincolnheightsla.com
  2. Los Angeles Times
  3. SilentEra entry
  4. Los Angeles Times, "Know your city", 2 December 1955, retrieved 9 April 2008
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