Hollywood Studios Used to Own Their Actors and Actresses

Hollywood Studios Used to Own Their Actors and Actresses

Khalid Elhassan - January 3, 2022

Hollywood Studios Used to Own Their Actors and Actresses
Jane Greer. Wonders in the Dark

28. The Golden Age of Hollywood Was Rife With Abuses

The star system often caused studios and studio executives in classical Hollywood to view performers as their property. To protect their investment in those whom they had groomed through the star system to the heights of fame, the studios signed them to often intrusive exclusive service contracts. Studios owned the commercial rights to their contracted performers’ image and likeness, and they could not work for other studios. To protect the marketable image created by the studios, contracts included morality clauses. Men had to appear as gentlemen, while women were never to leave home without makeup, and had to always dress stylishly and behave like ladies. The studios had absolute control over their performers’ careers, and that often lent itself to abuse. Those who angered their Hollywood masters were often punished with unattractive roles or were loaned out to less prestigious studios.

Women were especially vulnerable. Jane Greer, for example, caught the eye of tycoon Howard Hughes, who sponsored her entry into Hollywood. In exchange, he signed her to a personal contract – and told her he never wanted her to marry anybody. When she went ahead and married a singer, Hughes grew incandescent with jealous rage and shelved her without any film work. She sued and got out of the personal contract, then signed up with RKO Pictures. So Hughes bought RKO, just to wreck her career. The star system got its first check in the late 1940s after the US Supreme Court ruled against the studios in an antitrust case. Television’s arrival also reduced movie audiences, which transformed contracted stars into expensive overhead. So from the 1940s to 1960s, studios gradually ditched long-term contracts, and Hollywood performers became freelancers, part of a large pool from which studios could draw.

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