Louis Weiss (producer)

Adolph, Louis and Max Weiss
Born December 21, 1890
New York
Died December 14, 1963
Los Angeles
Occupation film and television producer
Years active 1920–1958
Spouse(s) Ethel Weiss
Children Adrian (b 1919), Peggy (b 1921)

Louis Weiss (December 21, 1890 – December 14, 1963, Los Angeles) together with the Weiss Brothers' was a low-budget independent producer of film serials such as Frank Buck's Jungle Menace (1937).

Early life

Louis Weiss was born in New York City and left school after third grade (elementary school), according to the 1940 US Census.

Early films

The company produced a series of short films between 1926-28 featuring the comic character Winnie Winkle. Ethelyn Gibson played Winnie in all of them. This is Weary Winnie from 1927.

The brothers Adolph, Louis and Max Weiss entered film production in the early 1920s with money earned from a New York lamp-and-fixture store, phonograph sales and ownership of a theater that developed into a small chain. Operating under such monikers as Superior Talking Films, Stage and Screen Productions, Weiss Brothes Artclass Pictures, Exploitation Pictures, Consolidated Pictures and International Pictures Corporation, the brothers produced a variety of low-budget films.

Most were never reviewed or copyrighted, apparently deliberately avoiding press attention. The only record of their existence is found in an occasional release chart, a few advertisements and surviving prints. Though most Poverty Row producers averaged a six-reel length, or about 60 minutes, Weiss continually tried to pare that down to five reels, lasting just over 50 minutes.[1]

A successful early Weiss film was The Revenge of Tarzan (1920). By the time Louis Weiss came to produce Jungle Menace for Columbia Pictures, he had had considerable experience making silent jungle films, as well as Westerns with plenty of action.

Jungle Menace

Original poster for Jungle Menace (1937)

Unlike Universal Studios, in the early 1930s Columbia could not offer exhibitors a complete package including serials and newsreels. However, with the disappearance of such independent serial producers as Mascot Pictures Corporation and smaller companies, Columbia decided in 1937 to enter the serial field with Jungle Menace, competing primarily with Universal and Republic Pictures. Columbia was already a mainstay of the Saturday-afternoon audience through its westerns, and the steady profitability of these films may have convinced studio boss Harry Cohn to expand Columbia's participation in this market to include serials.

To produce Jungle Menace, Columbia contracted with Louis Weiss and hired Frank Buck for his first dramatic starring role. Jungle Menace was very successful, attracting more than the typical number of juvenile audiences for its 15 weekly chapters. Exhibitors were immediately convinced that Columbia was a viable entry into the serial field, where it would remain active through the mid-'50s and the death of the form.[2]

Louis Weiss went on to produce more successful serials, both for theaters and television. He was the father of producer Adrian Weiss, who worked with him on Jungle Menace.

References

  1. Tino Balio. Grand Design: Hollywood as a Modern Business Enterprise, 1930–1939 (History of the American Cinema, No. 5), University of California Press (January 29, 1996) p. 327
  2. Brian Taves. Studio Metamorphosis. Columbia's Emergence from Poverty Row. In Frank Capra. (Culture and the Moving Image by Robert Sklar. Temple University Press) (March 30, 1998) p 248

Bibliography

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