(Photo courtesy of Rita Chotiner) (c) Susann Gilbert 2011

Keeping fans of Alice Calhoun updated on the progress of the upcoming biography

Alice In Hollywoodland: The Life and Times of Silent Screen Actress Alice Calhoun by Susann Gilbert

Thursday, February 25, 2010

The Birth of Hollywood

Today, the name “Hollywood” signifies that magical place where, for the price of a ticket or twenty-four hour rental, fantasies become seemingly real and we can pack up our troubles and let life’s harsh realities slip away for an hour or two. But in the early days of movies, that state of mind was referred to as “The Shadowlands.” The suburb of Hollywoodland (the “land” was later dropped) had not yet been developed, so the world-famous hilltop sign with the giant letters in Los Angeles county didn’t exist until later in the 1920’s.

Most of the early motion picture studios were located on the east coast of the United States. By 1920, however, the move was on to the west coast for various reasons. Fair weather and varied terrain were highly desirable reasons to relocate the studios in California; but there was also another important influence: money.

A leading innovator of motion picture film inventions was Thomas Edison, and his laboratories were located on the east coast in New Jersey. The further away from Edison’s Menlo Park, New Jersey headquarters meant the more difficult it would be to have to pay royalties for copyright use of Edison’s inventions. While the modern age of as we recognize it was starting - with telephones, packaged foods, airplanes, motor cars and such becoming an ordinary part of life - most communication was still via telegraph and rail, so a lawsuit filed against a party located 3,000 miles away was much more difficult to pursue. The studios knew that and exploited the distance for their onw profits.

But California was hardly the only place where motion picture studios were popping up on every corner, and films were being churned out and potential stars were being groomed to emote and dance. Before World War I, there were huge numbers of movies made all over Europe, and in Russia and Asia, too. For the most part, they were considered to be superior to those produced in the United States. These reasons included exciting avant-garde cinematography techniques, sophisticated plot treatments, and exotic and talented actors.

What made America suddenly become the leader in motion pictures was that not only the first, but also the second World War were fought overseas, and not on U.S. soil. These were insurmountable setbacks to the foreign film business. So California gained more than a decade total in steadily growing and developing as the world leader of the movie industry, while all the others rebuilt and recovered. Almost seventy years later, no other nation has come close to overtaking Los Angeles, California as the motion picture capital of the world.

Thus, the one-two-three punch of temperate climate, dirty business practices, and two overseas wars combined to favor the west coast as the universally-recognized heart of entertainment that is Hollywood. U.S.A.