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Essanay Studios

The Essanay Film Manufacturing Company was an early American motion picture studio. The studio was founded in 1907 in Chicago, and later developed an additional film lot in Niles Canyon, California. Its various stars included Francis X. Bushman, Gloria Swanson and studio co-owner, actor and director, Broncho Billy Anderson. It is probably best known today for its series of Charlie Chaplin comedies from 1915-1916. In late 1916, it merged distribution with other studios and stopped issuing films in the fall of 1918. According to film historian Steve Massa, Essanay is one of the important early studios, with comedies as a particular strength.[1] Its founders, George Kirke Spoor and Anderson ('S and A'), were subsequently awarded special Academy Awards for pioneering contributions to film.

Essanay Studios

1333-45 W. Argyle St, Chicago, Illinois

1908

March 26, 1996

Leading players and staff[edit]

Essanay produced silent films with such stars (and stars of the future) as George Periolat, Ben Turpin, Wallace Beery, Thomas Meighan, Colleen Moore, Francis X. Bushman, Gloria Swanson, Ann Little, Helen Dunbar, Lester Cuneo, Florence Oberle, Lewis Stone, Virginia Valli, Edward Arnold, Edmund Cobb and Rod La Rocque. The mainstay of the organization, however, was studio co-owner, Anderson, starring in the very popular "Broncho Billy" westerns, and ultimately its biggest star was Charlie Chaplin, who for a time had his own production unit at the studio.[5][6]


Allan Dwan was hired by Essanay Studios as a screenwriter and developed into a famous Hollywood director. Louella Parsons was also a screenwriter for the studio and went on to be a powerful Hollywood gossip columnist.[7] Owners Spoor (in 1948) and Anderson (in 1958) received the Oscars' Academy Honorary Award, for their pioneering efforts with Essanay.[8][9]

Productions[edit]

Essanay's productions include the first American film version of A Christmas Carol (1908) as well as the Western short The James Boys of Missouri (1908), which is notable for being the first biopic about the nineteenth-century American outlaw brothers Jesse and Frank James. The first pie-in-the-face gag on screen is believed to have hit Essanay star Ben Turpin in Mr. Flip (1909). The studio in 1916 also released the first American Sherlock Holmes film. Directed by Arthur Berthelet, it stars William Gillette in the title role. [10] Animated comedies were produced as well by the Chicago company, including installments showcasing the small boy "Dreamy Dud" and his dog "Wag", who in the early 1900s were among the favorite cartoon characters of theater audiences.[11]

Essanay West[edit]

Due to Chicago's seasonal weather patterns and the popularity of westerns, Gilbert Anderson took a part of the company west, first to Colorado. He told The Denver Post in 1909, "Colorado is the finest place in the country for Wild West stuff".[12] The western operations moved to California, but traveled between Northern to Southern California seasonally. This included locations in San Rafael, north of San Francisco, and Santa Barbara.


In 1912 Anderson settled on a location in Niles Canyon in the Bay Area.[13] The next year in the town of Niles, "Essanay built 10 modest cottages for their actors on 2nd Street, between F and G streets, and constructed an unassuming studio nearby."[14] More than 350 films were produced in Niles by Essanay.[15] On 16 February 1916, the Niles lot was closed by George K. Spoor via telegram.[16]

V-L-S-E, Incorporated[edit]

In 1915, the Essanay entered into an agreement, in a last-ditch effort to save the studio, with Vitagraph Studios, Lubin Manufacturing Company, and Selig Polyscope Company to form a film distribution partnership known as V-L-S-E, Incorporated.[21] It was orchestrated by Chicago distributor George Kleine. Only the Vitagraph brand name continued into the 1920s, and was absorbed by Warner Bros. in 1925.

Black Cat films[edit]

In 1916, Essanay arranged a deal with William Kane, who later become the publisher and editor of The Black Cat, to acquire a hundred stories from the magazine to turn into "Black Cat" films, each about half-an-hour long.[22][23][24] The plan was to release one picture a week, starting on December 5, 1916 with "The Egg", a comedy starring Richard Travers and Marguerite Clayton.[24][25] Kane loaned Essanay a set of The Black Cat issues, complete from the first issue through May 1915, and received $1,250 from Essanay for the one hundred stories they selected. Essanay failed to return the magazines to Kane, who sued them for $20,000 compensation for the loss of the magazines,[22] eventually winning his case in the US Supreme Court.[26][27]

Final years[edit]

The Chicago studio continued to produce films until 1918, reaching a total of well over 1,400 Essanay titles during its ten-year history.


George K. Spoor continued to work in the motion picture industry, introducing an unsuccessful 3-D system in 1923,[28] and Spoor-Berggren Natural Vision, a 65 mm widescreen format, in 1930. He died in Chicago in 1953. G. M. Anderson became an independent producer, sponsoring Stan Laurel in a series of silent comedies. Anderson died in Los Angeles in 1971.


The Essanay building in Chicago was later taken over by independent producer Norman Wilding, who made industrial films. Wilding's tenancy was much longer than Essanay's. In the early 1970s, a portion of the studio was offered to Columbia College (Chicago) for a dollar but the offer lapsed without action. Then it was given to a non-profit television corporation which sold it. One tenant was the midwest office of Technicolor. Today the Essanay lot is the home of St. Augustine's College, and its main meeting hall has been named the Charlie Chaplin Auditorium.[29] The facility was named a Chicago Landmark in 1996.[30]

Chicago film industry

Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum

David Kiehn, Broncho Billy and the Essanay Film Company, Farwell Books, 2003.  978-0-9729226-5-4.

ISBN

Essanaystudios.org: Official Essanay Studios landmarks website

—at Essanay Studios West, located in Niles Canyon, East San Francisco Bay Area, California.

Nilesfilmmuseum.org: Niles−Essanay Silent Film Museum

Nilesfilmmuseum.org: "Story of Essanay Studios in Niles"

—detailed history and extensive filmography

History TV: "An animated history of Essanay Studios

- The Silent Film Channel

Essanay Film Archive