 By: Edward Lorusso
Talking pictures didn't arrive
overnight. Before “talkies” swept Hollywood and doomed
silent films, Thomas Edison and others had been experimenting with
adding sound to silent films. And although film history preaches
that Don Juan (1926) was the first film to have a synchronized
track of orchestral music and sound effects and that The Jazz
Singer (1927) was the first “talkie,” neither statement
is entirely true. Many short films during the 1920s boasted sound,
usually musical numbers that crudely (in a technical sense) featured
everything from opera to jazz.
But
once Jolson electrified audiences with his songs and snappy patter
(and pulled in more than $2M in box-office receipts), the transition
from silent films to talkies was meteoric. Warners released an astonishing
ten all-talking pictures in 1928. Due to the varying resources of
the movie studios and varying degrees of enthusiasm for sound films
by theater owners (you must remember that the movie theaters had
to be wired to show the new talkies), there was a period in the
late 1920s when silents, talkies, and part-talkies all co-existed.
Astonishingly, by the end of 1929, virtually all films were talkies.
According to a published collection
of lectures given by filmmakers at UCLA in 1929, Introduction
to the Photoplay: A Contemporary Account of the Transition to Sound,
by the end of 1929, the 680 films produced in Hollywood that year
broke down into the following categories:
•
335 talkies
• 175 silents
• 75 silents with music and sound effects
• 95 goat gland films
Goat gland? Many silent films
that were finished but unreleased or in production when The
Jazz Singer became a mega-hit were revamped by a process known
as a “goat gland job.” “Goat gland” rudely
referred to an already completed silent film to which one or more
talking sequences or musical numbers were added in an attempt to
make the film more marketable to talkie-crazed filmgoers. The term
was derived from the bogus treatment for male impotence devised
by the infamous Dr. John R. Brinkley. It thankfully vanished from
the movie lexicon 80 years ago.
Brinkley began performing his
dubious operations in 1918; he claimed he could restore or enhance
male “virility” by implanting portions of goat testicles
in the scrotums of male patients—at a cost of $750. He hired
a press agent, advertised in newspapers, and used direct mail to
promote his procedure, which he claimed to have performed on more
than 16,000 men. Brinkley was the talk of Hollywood, especially
when rumors began to circulate about his actor clients. Then came
radio.
Brinkley
was praised by the Los Angeles Times. When he toured radio station
KHJ, owned by the newspaper, he decided that radio could be a great
sales tool. In 1923 he opened radio station KFKB (which stood for
''Kansas First, Kansas Best'') using a 1 kW transmitter; it was
the first radio station in Kansas. Typical of early radio, it featured
live performances by locals, but more importantly it featured medical
talks by Brinkley, including the "Medical Question Box"
from which Brinkley would read listeners’ medical complaints
and suggest treatments over the airwaves. He also got a kickback
for the patent medicines he prescribed.
In 1928 Brinkley’s business
came to the attention of Dr. Morris Fishbein, executive secretary
of the American Medical Association, who disliked Brinkley as an
"advertising doctor." The Kansas City Star, which owned
a competing radio station, ran an unfavorable series of reports
on him. In 1930 his medical license was revoked by the Kansas State
Medical Board, and the Federal Radio Commission refused to renew
his station's broadcasting license. He sued the commission, and
the case Brinkley v. FRC became a landmark case in broadcast law.
Brinkley lost.
Both Brinkley and goat gland
films were gone by 1930. The goat gland film was gone for 2 reasons:
the studios were all producing “100% all talking pictures”
and the backlog of silent films had either been released as silent
films, released as “goat gland” films, or simply destroyed.
Many unreleased silent films were destroyed after they were totally
remade as talkies.*
*For example, MGM’s
1928 silent version of Marianne, starring Marion Davies, Oscar Shaw,
and Robert Ames was remade as a talkie and recast with Davies, Lawrence
Gray, and Cliff Edwards, with Benny Rubin added for extra comedy
and songs. Davies’ starring talkie film debuted in 1929.
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