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Harry Cohn(1891-1958)

  • Producer
  • Additional Crew
  • Production Manager
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Harry Cohn
He was crude, uneducated, foul and, even on his best behavior, abrasive. No major studio executive of the so-called "Golden Age" was more loathed (although at times the dictatorial Samuel Goldwyn and the hard-nosed Jack L. Warner came close) than Harry Cohn.

Born in the middle of 5 children to Joseph Cohn, a Jewish tailor, and Bella, a Polish émigré, Harry was raised on New York's rough lower-class East 88th St., where he followed his older brother Jack Cohn into show business. Harry's life and the origins of Columbia Pictures are closely associated with Jack, whose early career paved the way for Harry's own ambitions, despite the fact that the two brothers fought bitterly and each harbored deep resentment over the other's success. By 19 Jack had left a job with an advertising agency to work for Carl Laemmle's newly formed Independent Motion Picture Company (IMP), rapidly working his way from entry-level job in the processing lab and through various positions where he founded Universal Weekly, one of the first newsreel outfits, for Laemmle. Jack soon found himself in charge of IMP's shorts as an uncredited producer. He was involved in Laemmle's first stab at feature production, Traffic in Souls (1913), which returned a then-whopping $450,000 on a $57,000 negative cost, convincing Uncle Carl to head west and invest in his own studio, Universal City. During this period Jack had convinced Laemmle to hire Joe Brandt, an attorney he'd worked for in advertising. Brandt, who would become the head of Universal's East Coast operations, would later be a key factor in the brothers' success.

Harry had grown up in his brother's shadow, working for much of the first decade of the 20th century as a lowly shipping clerk for a music publishing company. In 1912 he teamed with Harry Ruby at a local nickelodeon, singing duo for $28 per week, with Ruby receiving the biggest slice of the pie. The act would split up within a year and, after a brief stint as a trolley-car fare collector, Harry hit on the idea of applying song plugging to motion pictures. He produced a handful of silent shorts in which popular songs were mimed by actors, inviting the audiences to join in. His relatively modest success at this greased the skids for his brother to recommend him for a job at Universal. At age 27 Harry was working for Laemmle.

By 1919 Jack was itching for a change and wanted to become an independent film producer--he produced a series of shorts called Screen Snapshots, which purported to show stars' lives off-screen. Their popularity encouraged Jack to jump ship and Harry, sensing an opportunity, went with him. With them went Joe Brandt. The three formed CBC Film Sales, which released shorts, mostly terrible--so terrible, in fact, they earned the studio the nickname "Corned Beef and Cabbage Productions" (Harry would explode into a rage whenever he heard this). Desperate to put distance between he and his brother, Harry headed for Hollywood to oversee CBC productions there. By design or opportunity he ended up working out of the old Balshofer Studio on Hollywood Boulevard and gradually created his own studio, renting out the Independent Studios lot on Sunset and Gower. This was the heart of "Poverty Row"--so-called because it was an area filled with the offices of low-budget production companies and fly-by-night producers, who ground out ultra-cheap programmers (mostly westerns) hoping to make a few bucks. Harry was home.

He began producing two-reelers cheaply and nearly everything he sent east made money for CBC. It soon dawned on him that the big money wasn't in shorts but features, and the company scraped $20,000 together and produced More to Be Pitied Than Scorned (1922). Through the then-complex system of exchange releasing and so-called states rights sales, CBC netted $130,000 on the picture and, even more importantly, scored a deal for five additional features. By the end of 1923 CBC had released ten features, none of which lost money--a remarkable event along Gower Gulch. Harry was extremely conscious of his place in Hollywood and took offense at the derision CBC films received. He finally had enough, and on January 10, 1924, the company's name became Columbia Pictures Corporation. The next year the company paid $150,000 for a property at 6070 Sunset Boulevard. The partners made a fateful decision about the same time: unlike most of the other major studios (and this definition certainly didn't include Columbia at the time), they opted to forego theater ownership. This decision would prove extremely wise over the next 3three decades. Under Harry, Columbia rose from the Gower Gulch ash heap. His releases rarely featured A-list stars but consistently made money. Columbia took its first tentative stab at A-list feature production with Swope le cruel (1927) (its first featuring the now-familiar torch lady logo), and even that was made using a faded star, Hobart Bosworth, who agreed to appear in the melodrama for free.

Fate smiled on Harry when former Mack Sennett writer/director Frank Capra became available, and he was able to initially secure Capra's services for $1000 per picture. Capra's importance to the fortunes of Columbia Pictures cannot be overstated and, to be fair to Cohn, he recognized it. With rare exceptions the studio utilized competent journeymen directors like Erle C. Kenton, Malcolm St. Clair or Edward LeSaint, usually assigned to projects starring capable B-level actors hired on a one-shot basis (every so often Columbia would splurge and hire an "A"-list director like Howard Hawks. With each of his features, Capra's significance to Columbia grew, and with each hit Capra was given increasing carte blanche; the congenitally tightfisted Cohn would still fight bitterly with his star director over budgets, but would usually relent to the demands of his productions. Strangely, Columbia's status as a Poverty Row outfit actually helped. The major studios loaned them temperamental stars who demanded pay raises or script approval--since working for a "low-rent" studio like Columbia was considered punishment in the class-conscious world of Hollywood--and Harry enthusiastically assigned them to Capra's pictures, a tactic that usually paid off big. A top actor from MGM or Warners was expected to suffer in the low-budget purgatory of Gower Gulch but usually left eagerly wanting to work for Capra again. One such production, New York - Miami (1934), single-handedly propelled the studio into the ranks of the majors and garnered Columbia its first Oscars (although the studio had been nominated for productions infrequently since 1931). Cohn never looked back; signing directors to contracts was one thing, but hordes of potentially unruly actors was another thing entirely--he held firm to his long-standing belief that contract stars were nothing but trouble, after paying keen interest to Jack L. Warner's battles with James Cagney, Bette Davis and Olivia de Havilland. In 1934 he signed The Three Stooges (who would enjoy a 22-year run at Columbia) and recent German émigré Peter Lorre (Cohn was at a loss on how to utilize him and Lorre would spent most of his time at Columbia being loaned out to other studios) to long-term contracts, but wouldn't begin to build a roster of contract stars in earnest until the late 1930s, beginning with Rosalind Russell, and always he kept their numbers comparatively small (William Holden, Glenn Ford and Rita Hayworth were among the select few in the late 1930s and early 1940s).

The vast majority of Columbia's output remained at the B-level well into the 1950s, but most of its films were profitable. It took Columbia until 1946 to experience its first bona fide blockbuster with Le roman d'Al Jolson (1946), which netted $8 million on a $2-million investment and resulted in a profitable sequel in 1949. Among the major studios only Paramount and Columbia eagerly welcomed the intrusion of television, and Columbia responded by creating a subsidiary, Screen Gems (created by Harry's nephew Ralph Cohn) in the early 1950s. The division would pay off handsomely over the next 20 years.

Harry and his brother Jack continued to fight fiercely over business matters until Jack's death in 1956. Harry himself died of a heart attack in 1958. Despite his undeniable crudeness--the boorish, thuggish, crooked, loudmouthed "Harry Brock" character in Garson Kanin's classic Comment l'esprit vient aux femmes (1950), memorably played by Broderick Crawford, was largely based on Cohn), Harry Cohn's Columbia Pictures never had a negative year during his 30-year-plus reign--a record only approached by Louis B. Mayer, who ruled MGM from 1924 through mid-1951. Columbia began from a far more disadvantaged position than MGM did, though, and it thrived due to Cohn's keen judge of talent and his near-fanatical adherence to early business policies that were originally ridiculed.
BornJuly 23, 1891
DiedFebruary 27, 1958(66)
BornJuly 23, 1891
DiedFebruary 27, 1958(66)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • Awards
    • 1 win total

Photos2

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Known for

Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert in New York - Miami (1934)
New York - Miami
8.1
  • Producer(uncredited)
  • 1934
Ransom
5.5
  • Producer
  • 1928
Vengeance (1930)
Vengeance
4.2
  • Producer
  • 1930
Jack Holt in L'Épave vivante (1928)
L'Épave vivante
6.3
  • Producer
  • 1928

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Producer



  • Le salaire de la violence (1958)
    Le salaire de la violence
    7.0
    • executive producer (uncredited)
    • 1958
  • The Good Shepherd - Screen Test
    Short
    • producer
    • 1956
  • Rita Hayworth and Orson Welles in La Dame de Shanghai (1947)
    La Dame de Shanghai
    7.5
    • executive producer (uncredited)
    • 1947
  • Randolph Scott, Ralph Bellamy, and Frances Dee in Garde-côtes (1939)
    Garde-côtes
    5.8
    • supervising producer (uncredited)
    • 1939
  • Rita Hayworth, Bruce Cabot, Richard Fiske, Marc Lawrence, and Robert Paige in Bureau criminel (1939)
    Bureau criminel
    5.6
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1939
  • Horizons perdus (1937)
    Horizons perdus
    7.6
    • executive producer (uncredited)
    • 1937
  • Bruce Cabot and Marguerite Churchill in La légion de la terreur (1936)
    La légion de la terreur
    5.8
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1936
  • John Boles and Rosalind Russell in L'obsession de Madame Craig (1936)
    L'obsession de Madame Craig
    7.2
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1936
  • Wiley Post in Le rayon diabolique (1935)
    Le rayon diabolique
    5.9
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1935
  • Myrna Loy, Warner Baxter, and Broadway Bill in La course de Broadway Bill (1934)
    La course de Broadway Bill
    6.7
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1934
  • Grace Moore in Une nuit d'amour (1934)
    Une nuit d'amour
    5.6
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1934
  • John Barrymore and Carole Lombard in Train de luxe (1934)
    Train de luxe
    7.2
    • executive producer (uncredited)
    • 1934
  • Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert in New York - Miami (1934)
    New York - Miami
    8.1
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1934
  • Edmund Lowe and Ann Sothern in Un rêve à deux (1933)
    Un rêve à deux
    6.0
    • producer (uncredited)
    • 1933
  • Glenda Farrell, Guy Kibbee, Barry Norton, Jean Parker, May Robson, and Warren William in Grande dame d'un jour (1933)
    Grande dame d'un jour
    7.4
    • executive producer (uncredited)
    • 1933

Additional Crew



  • Thurston Hall, Scott Kolk, Arthur Loft, and Mary Russell in Extortion (1938)
    Extortion
    5.9
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corp. of Calif. Ltd.
    • 1938
  • Jimmy Durante, Moe Howard, Larry Fine, Walter Connolly, Curly Howard, Gertrude Niesen, Joan Perry, Charles Starrett, and The Three Stooges in Start Cheering (1938)
    Start Cheering
    6.0
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corp. of Calif. Ltd.
    • 1938
  • Sons of the Pioneers and Charles Starrett in Cattle Raiders (1938)
    Cattle Raiders
    4.5
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corporation of California Ltd.
    • 1938
  • Fiddling Around
    Short
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corp. of Calif. Ltd.
    • 1938
  • Moe Howard, Larry Fine, Symona Boniface, and Curly Howard in Termites of 1938 (1938)
    Termites of 1938
    7.4
    Short
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corporation of Cal. Ltd.
    • 1938
  • Rita Hayworth and Charles Quigley in The Shadow (1937)
    The Shadow
    6.4
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corp. of Calif. Ltd.
    • 1937
  • Ruth Coleman and Buck Jones in Headin' East (1937)
    Headin' East
    5.8
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corporation of California, Ltd.
    • 1937
  • Sons of the Pioneers and Charles Starrett in Outlaws of the Prairie (1937)
    Outlaws of the Prairie
    6.3
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corp. of Calif. Ltd.
    • 1937
  • Melvyn Douglas and Grace Moore in Kidnappez-moi, Monsieur! (1937)
    Kidnappez-moi, Monsieur!
    5.9
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corp. of Calif. Ltd.
    • 1937
  • Buck Jones and Helen Twelvetrees in Hollywood Round-Up (1937)
    Hollywood Round-Up
    6.1
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corporation of California, Ltd.
    • 1937
  • Richard Arlen and Fay Wray in Murder in Greenwich Village (1937)
    Murder in Greenwich Village
    6.1
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corporation of Calif. Ltd.
    • 1937
  • Frances Bowling, Andy Clyde, Beatrice Curtis, Ann Doran, Louise Stanley, and Leora Thatcher in Gracie at the Bat (1937)
    Gracie at the Bat
    7.9
    Short
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corp. of Cal. Ltd.
    • 1937
  • Ralph Forbes, Reginald Hincks, and Alice Moore in Woman Against the World (1937)
    Woman Against the World
    5.7
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corp. of Calif. Ltd.
    • 1937
  • Rita Hayworth and Charles Quigley in The Game That Kills (1937)
    The Game That Kills
    5.7
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corp. of Cal. Ltd.
    • 1937
  • Frank Buck and Sasha Siemel in Jungle Menace (1937)
    Jungle Menace
    5.3
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corp.
    • 1937

Production Manager



  • Le tourbillon (1934)
    Le tourbillon
    6.6
    • president: Columbia Pictures Corporation
    • 1934
  • William Fairbanks and Edith Roberts in Speed Mad (1925)
    Speed Mad
    • production manager
    • 1925

Personal details

Edit
  • Born
    • July 23, 1891
    • New York City, New York, USA
  • Died
    • February 27, 1958
    • Phoenix, Arizona, USA(heart attack)
  • Spouses
      Joan PerryJuly 31, 1941 - February 27, 1958 (his death, 4 children)
  • Publicity listings
    • 3 Print Biographies
    • 5 Portrayals
    • 8 Articles

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    It was absolutely no secret that many people loathed Harry Cohn, but Cohn actually enjoyed his reputation of being the most hated man in Hollywood. In February 1958 when he died, the classic comment (usually attributed to Red Skelton) upon seeing the large number of people showing up for Cohn's funeral: "Give the people what they want, and they'll turn out for it!" When a member of the Temple asked the Rabbi to say "one good thing" about the deceased, he paused and said "He's dead".
  • Quotes
    [to actress Joan Perry, when he signed her and Rita Hayworth at the same time in 1935] Hayworth will be a star, and you'll be my wife [he married Perry six years later].
  • Nickname
    • King Cohn

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