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  • Biography
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IMDbPro

Herbert J. Yates(1880-1966)

  • Additional Crew
  • Producer
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Herbert J. Yates
Herbert J. Yates, the cigar-chomping force behind Republic Pictures, spent his early adulthood as a salesman for the American Tobacco Co. (and later, at age 23, for Liggett & Meyers as an account executive). At the beginning of World War I, Yates saw an opportunity to apply his hard-nosed business skills in the burgeoning film processing business, which led him to create Consolidated Film Industries (CFI) in 1922 (a company that is still in existence today, although Republic Pictures ceased operations in 1959).

The 1933 bankruptcy of slapstick producer Mack Sennett presented a unique opportunity for a handful of enterprising (though some would call them cheapskate) producers along Gower Gulch (a section of Gower Street in Hollywood, also called "Poverty Row," where many small, independent producers and production companies had their offices). Sennett, who had fallen on hard times due to a combination of circumstances he was both unable and unwilling to confront, had his own well-equipped studio production facility. Nat Levine, the head of serial specialist Mascot Pictures, had his headquarters in a cramped building above a building contractor's office on Santa Monica Boulevard. He immediately saw an opportunity to go big time and approached Monogram Pictures chiefs Trem Carr and W. Ray Johnston about a joint venture to buy the studio, an offer they declined. Rebuffed but not discouraged, Levine obtained an option for the shuttered facility. At the same time, Yates was entering into film production with his fledgling Republic Pictures, and since both Monogram and Mascot were customers of his film lab (to which they owed a considerable amount of money), he held more influence than Levine in convincing the Monogram executives to join under the wings of the Republic eagle. Neither Monogram nor Mascot had owned much in the way of any real production facilities, instead renting studio space whenever it was needed. When Mascot and Monogram (along with Liberty Pictures, Chesterfield Pictures and Invincible Pictures, three small production companies that Yates basically foreclosed on) merged into Republic, Mascot was killed off and the Monogram name was (temporarily) shelved when production began at Republic in 1935 (beginning with a John Wayne oater, Les Loups du désert (1935), released that August. This "marriage," however, was not one of equals. Carr and Johnston, nominally the studio's chieftains, constantly clashed with Yates, who they felt was a tyrannical Hollywood interloper. One thing became clear, however--Yates was, as Republic's chief stockholder, the financial force of the studio. Levine managed to largely remain out of the fray (he was later bought out by Yates and blew his money on the ponies), and by using many of the same production techniques he had used at Mascot, the new studio's output came to resemble the best of Levine's Mascot product. Republic could also boast of having the best special effects/miniatures department (headed by former Mascot employees Howard Lydecker and his brother Theodore Lydecker) in the industry, a factor that greatly contributed to the quality level of Republic's output. Chafing under Yates' autocratic business style, Carr and Johnston finally departed Republic in 1937 to reform Monogram Pictures. Republic would, for a time, dominate the B-movie industry and often defy expectations by producing several notable A-pictures (Lewis Milestone's Le poney rouge (1949), Orson Welles' Macbeth (1948), John Ford's L'homme tranquille (1952), among others), along with a number of excellent programmers that temporarily blurred Republic's image as a Poverty Row studio. Yates' reign at Republic would last until 1956, when he was ultimately ousted by stockholders who'd grown increasingly dissatisfied with him. Much of the resentment was based on the blatant favoritism Yates showed toward his wife, Vera Ralston, a former ice-skating champ from Czechoslovakia who Yates repeatedly cast in big, expensive vehicles that almost always lost money because of her near total lack of acting skills. Also, Yates refused to license Republic's film library to be shown on television, believing that TV was just a fad, a mistake that cost the company hundreds of thousands of much-needed dollars. He eventually "saw the light" and not only licensed Republic's library for television showing but actually got the studio itself involved in television production. By that time, however, it was too late. With no strong production head and faced with the onslaught of television in an era of declining theater revenue, Republic Pictures' sprawling studio became more valuable as a real estate and film library portfolio than as a functioning production company. The facilities were sold to CBS and became CBS Studio Center, Studio City, CA. Yates died an extremely wealthy man and eventually left Vera Ralston a very rich widow.
BornAugust 24, 1880
DiedFebruary 3, 1966(85)
BornAugust 24, 1880
DiedFebruary 3, 1966(85)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

Known for

L'homme tranquille (1952)
L'homme tranquille
7.7
  • Additional Crew
  • 1952
John Wayne in Iwo Jima (1949)
Iwo Jima
7.0
  • Additional Crew
  • 1949
The Red Menace (1949)
The Red Menace
4.9
  • Producer
  • 1949
Bal Tabarin (1952)
Bal Tabarin
6.7
  • Producer
  • 1952

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Additional Crew



  • L'Homme de Lisbonne (1956)
    L'Homme de Lisbonne
    5.9
    • presenter
    • 1956
  • Guet-apens chez les Sioux (1956)
    Guet-apens chez les Sioux
    6.0
    • presenter
    • 1956
  • Yvonne De Carlo, Alan Badel, Valentina Cortese, and Rita Gam in Feu magique (1956)
    Feu magique
    5.9
    • presenter
    • 1956
  • Macdonald Carey, Skip Homeier, and Patricia Medina in L'inconnu du ranch (1956)
    L'inconnu du ranch
    6.7
    • presenter
    • 1956
  • Barbara Stanwyck, Scott Brady, Mary Murphy, and Barry Sullivan in La horde sauvage (1956)
    La horde sauvage
    5.9
    • presenter
    • 1956
  • Walter Brennan, Steve Cochran, Richard Eyer, Sherry Jackson, and Ann Sheridan in Come Next Spring (1956)
    Come Next Spring
    7.1
    • presenter
    • 1956
  • Yvonne De Carlo, Howard Duff, and Zachary Scott in La femme du hasard (1955)
    La femme du hasard
    5.7
    • presenter
    • 1955
  • Mickey Rooney in Whisky, miracles et revolver (1955)
    Whisky, miracles et revolver
    6.0
    • presenter
    • 1955
  • Ray Milland and Mary Murphy in Un homme traqué (1955)
    Un homme traqué
    6.4
    • presenter
    • 1955
  • Sterling Hayden, Anna Maria Alberghetti, Cheryl Callaway, Ben Cooper, and Virginia Grey in Quand le clairon sonnera (1955)
    Quand le clairon sonnera
    6.3
    • presenter
    • 1955
  • Judy Canova in Lay That Rifle Down (1955)
    Lay That Rifle Down
    5.7
    • presenter
    • 1955
  • Rod Cameron, Jack Kelly, and Gale Robbins in Double Jeopardy (1955)
    Double Jeopardy
    6.2
    • presenter
    • 1955
  • Lee J. Cobb, Mona Freeman, and John Payne in Colorado Saloon (1955)
    Colorado Saloon
    6.3
    • presenter
    • 1955
  • Rod Cameron, Faith Domergue, and John Payne in Le Passage de Santa Fé (1955)
    Le Passage de Santa Fé
    5.9
    • presenter
    • 1955
  • Sterling Hayden and Alexis Smith in Pavillon de combat (1955)
    Pavillon de combat
    6.2
    • presenter
    • 1955

Producer



  • Anna Maria Alberghetti, Ben Cooper, Jim Davis, and Joseph Kane in Bagarre à Apache Wells (1957)
    Bagarre à Apache Wells
    5.9
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1957
  • Sterling Hayden, Anna Maria Alberghetti, Cheryl Callaway, Ben Cooper, and Virginia Grey in Quand le clairon sonnera (1955)
    Quand le clairon sonnera
    6.3
    • executive producer (uncredited)
    • 1955
  • Rod Cameron and Katy Jurado in Les rebelles de San Antone (1953)
    Les rebelles de San Antone
    6.1
    • presents
    • 1953
  • Bal Tabarin (1952)
    Bal Tabarin
    6.7
    • producer
    • 1952
  • The Red Menace (1949)
    The Red Menace
    4.9
    • executive producer
    • 1949
  • Bruce Cabot, Andy Devine, Bill Elliott, and Lorna Gray in La légion des braves (1948)
    La légion des braves
    6.5
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1948
  • Ralph Byrd, Bruce Cabot, Tommy Ryan, and June Storey in Petit Mickey (1939)
    Petit Mickey
    6.2
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1939
  • Bruce Cabot and Tommy Ryan in L'apprenti gangster (1938)
    L'apprenti gangster
    5.3
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1938
  • Over and Back (1915)
    Over and Back
    Short
    • producer
    • 1915
  • Shocking Stockings
    Short
    • producer
    • 1915
  • Edward Dillon and Fay Tincher in Faithful to the Finish (1915)
    Faithful to the Finish
    Short
    • producer
    • 1915
  • Max Davidson, Edward Dillon, and Fay Tincher in The Fatal Finger Prints (1915)
    The Fatal Finger Prints
    Short
    • producer
    • 1915
  • Fay Tincher in Father Love (1915)
    Father Love
    Short
    • producer
    • 1915
  • Fay Tincher in The Deacon's Whiskers (1915)
    The Deacon's Whiskers
    Short
    • producer
    • 1915

Personal details

Edit
  • Height
    • 1.63 m
  • Born
    • August 24, 1880
    • Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
  • Died
    • February 3, 1966
    • Sherman Oaks, California, USA(undisclosed)
  • Spouses
      Vera RalstonMarch 1952 - February 3, 1966 (his death)
  • Publicity listings
    • 1 Biographical Movie
    • 8 Articles

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    When he was deposed as head of production at Republic Pictures in the 1950s, it was largely due his penchant for casting Czech skating star Vera Ralston (who was his mistress and later his wife) in lavishly budgeted projects which, even when co-starring the studio's biggest box office attraction John Wayne, almost always lost money.
  • Quotes
    [to actor Don 'Red' Barry, after receiving complaints from a director about Barry's troublesome on-set behavior] I picked you up when you were driving a truck, and I can put you back driving a truck.

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