Hunt Stromberg (July 12, 1894 - August 23, 1968) was a film producer during Hollywood's Golden Age.[1] In a prolific 30-year career beginning in 1921, Stromberg produced, wrote and directed some of Hollywood's most profitable and enduring movies, including such classics as The Thin Man series, the Nelson Eddy/Jeanette MacDonald operettas, The Women, and The Great Ziegfeld, which won the Academy Award for Best Picture of 1936.
Early career
Hunt Stromberg was born in Louisville, Kentucky in 1894. Leaving a career as a newspaper reporter and sports writer for the St. Louis Times,[2] [3] he followed an advertising friend into the motion picture industry prior to World War I, becoming publicity director for the Goldwyn Pictures Corporation in New York.[4]
In 1918 the company sent Stromberg to California, where he developed an interest in filmmaking;[3] by 1919 he had become the personal representative of industry pioneer Thomas H. Ince,[4] and by 1921 he had written, produced and directed his first movie. He promptly resigned from Ince's staff to form Hunt Stromberg Productions.[3]
Independent producer
From his first independent movie, The Foolish Age (1921), Stromberg quickly made his mark by turning out independent, low budget movies [4] in increasing quantity and quality.
In 1922 Stromberg interested Bull Montana (a popular matinee idol) in a long-term contract to star in short comedies, and hired comedy director Mal St. Clair, who had worked with Mack Sennett and Buster Keaton. When Sid Grauman saw a rough cut of the resulting A Ladies' Man (1922), he immediately booked the movie to premiere at his Million Dollar Theater in Los Angeles on April 30, 1922[3]. Stromberg continued his string of successes with Breaking into Society (1923), which he wrote, produced and directed.
Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer
Stromberg joined newly formed Metro–Goldwyn–Mayer (later renamed MGM) in 1925[4] to become one of its key executives, listed as one of the studio's Big Four with Louis B. Mayer, Irving Thalberg and Harry Rapf - later with Thalberg, David O. Selznick and Walter Wanger[3].
He was the first production supervisor to get a “produced by” credit on-screen[4], well deserved considering his achievements. He produced:
as well as such prestige milestones as Academy Award winning The Great Ziegfeld, Marie-Antoinette, The Women and Pride and Prejudice. (see "Selected filmography" bellow). [3][4] At the hight of his career MGM was producing 52 movies a year, or an average of one film a week, staying in the black despite the great Depression[2].
Stromberg was one of the top ranked money makers of Hollywood, with a salary to match: US $8,000 a week, guaranteed. In 1937 he was included in management's inner circle and received an additional 1.5% of Lowe's profits. The Treasury Department listed Stromberg as one of the ten highest paid executives in the United States.[3]
But there were substantial changes in those years. Thalberg died in 1936, while Selznick and Wanger left MGM in 1937, leaving Meyer in sole, hands-on control. There are conflicting interpretations of what caused the rift,[3] [4], but by the end of 1941 it was over: after 18 years Stromberg walked away from a contract worth millions, and Meyer let him go on February 10, 1942.
Independent again
Confounding industry expectations, Stromberg launched his own independent production company in 1943 with the smash hit Lady of Burlesque, starring Barbara Stanwyck, which grossed $1.85 million.[3]
"Hunt Stromberg was the first producer added to the Society of Independent Motion Picture Producers [SIMPP] in 1942 after the group had been formed by Charlie Chaplin, Walt Disney, Samuel Goldwyn, Alexander Korda, Mary Pickford, David O. Selznick, Walter Wanger, and Orson Welles."[3]
His subsequent films were not as successful and he finally retired in 1951, in the same year his wife, Katherine Kerwin, died. An avid horseman and a shrewd businessman, Stromberg was independently wealthy by this time as well as a founding investor in Santa Anita Park and Hollywood Park Racetracks.[2][5]
He passed away on August 23, 1968. He was survived by his son Hunt Stromberg, Jr., a successful producer director in his own right. [5][6]
Selected filmography
As producer
As director or screenwriter
References
External links