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IMDbPro

Joseph M. Schenck(1876-1961)

  • Additional Crew
  • Producer
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Joseph M. Schenck
People liked Joseph M. Schenck. Anyone who knew both him and his brother Nicholas Schenck would comment on how different they were. He came to New York in 1893 and, with his younger brother, built a drugstore business. They risked some profits and made more money in amusement parks. Marcus Loew bought one of their parks in 1907, then made the Schencks partners in Consolidated Enterprises, his theater and movie house chain in 1912. The brothers' personalities were quite different; Joe was affable and enjoyed keeping a deal together by finding common ground between business associates that often despised each other. His brother Nick was a cold, driven, hard-nosed businessman who thoroughly enjoyed keeping people on short leashes. In short, people were drawn to Joe and feared Nick.

Joe booked films, which gave him the opportunity to meet movie stars, among them Norma Talmadge, who became his wife in 1916. He was fascinated by Hollywood and wanted to get involved with movie production, whereas Nick was quietly managing Loew's burgeoning theatrical empire. Joe was far more enamored by the Hollywood lifestyle than his brother and wanted to take a much more active role in the production rather than the high finance end of the business. He saw his opportunity in 1917 to produce Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle, Buster Keaton and the later D.W. Griffith films. At this point the brothers' lives took separate paths; Joe left Consolidated while Nick remained and soon became Marcus Loew's #2 man, assisting him in his dream of combining Metro Pictures with Goldwyn Pictures in order to provide the expanding theater chain with a steady flow of quality films (morphing into MGM, after bringing Louis B. Mayer and Irving Thalberg on board in 1924), later ascending to the presidency of Loew's Incorporated's--MGM's parent company--after Marcus Loew's sudden death (quietly becoming the most powerful man in the motion picture industry) in late 1926. Joe became chairman of United Artists (which, somewhat ironically, lacked a theater chain--a factor that would ultimately cripple his brother's studio in the 1950s after the Supreme Court's anti-trust decision required theatrical divestment) in 1924, then its president in 1927.

In 1933 he helped Darryl F. Zanuck establish 20th Century Pictures, which merged with the ailing Fox Film Corp. in 1935, with Schenck as chairman of the renamed 20th Century-Fox. Organized crime had coveted Hollywood from a distance for years, but had been unable to make serious inroads into the area thanks to the brutally effective work of the Los Angeles Police Department's so-called "hat squad," which was tasked with keeping the city Mafia-free. The studio's weak link was through the growing thorns in their collective sides: the unions, whose membership and collectives spanned across state lines. In 1936 Willie Morris Bioff, a Chicago mobster out of the remnants of the Al Capone gang who ran the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees & Moving Picture Machine Operators behind the scenes, told the studios they could avoid strikes (along with the implied work slowdowns and spontaneous theater fires) for $2 million. All agreed to pay, but Schenck made one of the payoffs with a personal check, which came to the attention of U.S. Internal Revenue Service agents. Thanks to the paper trail, Schenck was indicted for income tax evasion. With some applied pressure and soul-searching, Joe testified against Bioff and the titular union president, George E. Browne, in 1941 as part of a plea bargain. In 1946 he began to serve a one-year sentence for tax irregularities and bribery (of the union officials) but was pardoned by President Harry Truman after having served only four months.

After leaving prison he immediately returned to Fox as head of production. Marilyn Monroe became friendly with him in 1947 and was known as one of his "girlfriends", although she said the relationship was platonic. He was helpful in her career in any case, getting her a very small part in Fox's Bagarre pour une blonde (1948) and convincing Harry Cohn at Columbia to give her a contract after Fox dropped her.

AMPAS awarded Schenck a special Oscar for services to the film industry in 1952. In 1953 he co-founded the Magna Corp. with Mike Todd to market the Todd-AO wide-screen system, which was wildly profitable (and remains a technological force in the movie industry to this day). Shortly after he retired in 1957, Schenck had a stroke and never fully recovered.
BornDecember 25, 1876
DiedOctober 22, 1961(84)
BornDecember 25, 1876
DiedOctober 22, 1961(84)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • Awards
    • 2 wins total

Photos1

View Poster

Known for

Buster Keaton in Le Mécano de la 'Général' (1926)
Le Mécano de la 'Général'
8.1
  • Additional Crew
  • 1926
Buster Keaton in Sherlock Junior (1924)
Sherlock Junior
8.1
  • Additional Crew
  • 1924
La croisière du navigator (1924)
La croisière du navigator
7.5
  • Additional Crew
  • 1924
Je suis un vagabond (1933)
Je suis un vagabond
6.9
  • Producer
  • 1933

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Additional Crew



  • Jean Muir and Michael Whalen in White Fang (1936)
    White Fang
    6.3
    • presenter
    • 1936
  • Don Ameche and Jean Hersholt in Le Chant des cloches (1936)
    Le Chant des cloches
    6.2
    • presenter
    • 1936
  • Claudette Colbert, Ronald Colman, and Victor McLaglen in Sous deux drapeaux (1936)
    Sous deux drapeaux
    6.4
    • presenter
    • 1936
  • Leo Carrillo, George Raft, and Rosalind Russell in C'était inévitable (1936)
    C'était inévitable
    6.1
    • presenter
    • 1936
  • Warner Baxter in Je n'ai pas tué Lincoln (1936)
    Je n'ai pas tué Lincoln
    7.2
    • presenter
    • 1936
  • Mona Barrie, Warner Baxter, Alice Faye, and Jack Oakie in Le Roi du burlesque (1936)
    Le Roi du burlesque
    6.2
    • presenter
    • 1936
  • Cesar Romero, Edward Brophy, and Bruce Cabot in Pas de pitié pour les kidnappeurs (1935)
    Pas de pitié pour les kidnappeurs
    7.0
    • presenter
    • 1935
  • Ronald Colman in L'homme qui fait sauter la banque (1935)
    L'homme qui fait sauter la banque
    6.4
    • presenter
    • 1935
  • Votez pour moi (1935)
    Votez pour moi
    6.3
    • presenter
    • 1935
  • Le roman d'un chanteur (1935)
    Le roman d'un chanteur
    6.3
    • presenter (uncredited)
    • 1935
  • Clark Gable, Loretta Young, and Buck in L'appel de la forêt (1935)
    L'appel de la forêt
    6.8
    • presenter
    • 1935
  • George Arliss in Cardinal Richelieu (1935)
    Cardinal Richelieu
    6.3
    • presenter
    • 1935
  • Le Kangourou de Mickey (1935)
    Le Kangourou de Mickey
    6.1
    Short
    • presenter
    • 1935
  • Charles Laughton and Fredric March in Les Misérables (1935)
    Les Misérables
    7.6
    • presenter
    • 1935
  • Le premier amour (1933)
    Les Joyeux Mécaniciens
    7.1
    Short
    • presenter
    • 1935

Producer



  • Laurence Olivier and Elisabeth Bergner in Comme il vous plaira (1936)
    Comme il vous plaira
    5.8
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1936
  • Claudette Colbert, Ronald Colman, and Victor McLaglen in Sous deux drapeaux (1936)
    Sous deux drapeaux
    6.4
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1936
  • Maurice Chevalier and Natalie Paley in L'homme des Folies Bergère (1935)
    L'homme des Folies Bergère
    6.3
    • producer
    • 1935
  • George Arliss in Cardinal Richelieu (1935)
    Cardinal Richelieu
    6.3
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1935
  • Loretta Young in Born to Be Bad (1934)
    Born to Be Bad
    6.1
    • executive producer (uncredited)
    • 1934
  • George Arliss, Frank Albertson, and Charlotte Henry in The Last Gentleman (1934)
    The Last Gentleman
    7.1
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1934
  • George Bancroft in La boule rouge (1933)
    La boule rouge
    6.7
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1933
  • Je suis un vagabond (1933)
    Je suis un vagabond
    6.9
    • executive producer
    • 1933
  • Joan Crawford in Pluie (1932)
    Pluie
    6.9
    • executive producer (uncredited)
    • 1932
  • À la conquête de la lune (1930)
    À la conquête de la lune
    5.4
    • executive producer
    • 1930
  • Una Merkel and Chester Morris in The Bat Whispers (1930)
    The Bat Whispers
    6.3
    • producer
    • 1930
  • Norma Talmadge in Les Amours d'une courtisane (1930)
    Les Amours d'une courtisane
    5.5
    • producer
    • 1930
  • John Garrick and Jeanette MacDonald in The Lottery Bride (1930)
    The Lottery Bride
    5.1
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1930
  • Walter Huston in La révolte des esclaves (1930)
    La révolte des esclaves
    5.7
    • executive producer (uncredited)
    • 1930
  • Dolores Del Río and Edmund Lowe in The Bad One (1930)
    The Bad One
    6.0
    • producer
    • 1930

Personal details

Edit
  • Alternative names
    • Joe Schenck
  • Height
    • 1.75 m
  • Born
    • December 25, 1876
    • Rybinsk, Yaroslavl Governorate, Russian Empire [now Yaroslavl Oblast, Russia]
  • Died
    • October 22, 1961
    • Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA(effects of a stroke)
  • Spouse
    • Norma TalmadgeOctober 20, 1916 - April 4, 1934 (divorced)
  • Relatives
    • Nicholas M. Schenck(Sibling)
  • Publicity listings
    • 6 Portrayals
    • 31 Articles

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    One of the 36 founders of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS)
  • Quotes
    [in 1928, as president of United Artists] Talkies are just a fad.

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