1929 in film

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List of years in film
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1930
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1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932

The following is an overview of 1929 in film, including significant events, a list of films released and notable births and deaths.

Top-grossing films[]

The top ten 1929 released films by box office gross in North America are as follows:

Highest-grossing films of 1929
Rank Title Studio Box office gross rental
1 The Broadway Melody Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer $2,808,000[1]
2 The Cock-Eyed World Fox Film Corporation $2,700,000[2]
3 Gold Diggers of Broadway Warner Bros. $2,540,000[3]
4 Sunny Side Up Fox Film Corporation $2,190,000[4]
5 On with the Show! Warner Bros. $1,741,000[3]
6 Say It with Songs $1,715,000[3]
7 Rio Rita RKO Radio Pictures $1,700,000[2]
8 Show Boat Universal Pictures $1,643,000[4]
9 The Desert Song Warner Bros. $1,594,000[3]
10 Welcome Danger Paramount Pictures $1,550,000[4]

Events[]

The days of the silent film are numbered. A mad scramble to provide synchronized sound is on.

  • February 1 – The Broadway Melody is released by MGM and becomes the first major musical film of the sound era, sparking a host of imitators as well as a series of Broadway Melody films that will run until 1940.
  • February 18 – The first Academy Awards, or Oscars, are announced for the year ended August 1, 1928.
  • March 3 – William Fox announces that he has taken control of Loews Inc., including its subsidiary Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, buying shares from Marcus Loew's widow and sons and Nicholas Schenck for $50 million. The acquisition eventually falls through.
  • May 16 – The first Academy Awards are distributed at The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel in Los Angeles.
  • May 26 – Fox Grandeur News is shown in Fox Film's new widescreen 70 mm Grandeur film format
  • July 13 – The first all color talkie (in Technicolor), On with the Show, is released by Warner Bros. who lead the way in a new color revolution just as they had ushered in that of the talkies.
  • July 17 – William Fox is badly injured in a car accident which kills his chauffeur.
  • August 3 – The Cock-Eyed World beats every known gross for any box office attraction throughout the world with a reported first week gross of $173,391 at the Roxy Theatre (New York City).[5]
  • August 20 – Hallelujah! is the first Hollywood film to contain an entire black cast.
  • August 22 – First in the Walt Disney Productions' animated short Silly Symphony series, The Skeleton Dance, is released.
  • September – Paramount Pictures acquires 49% of CBS.
  • October 24 – Jean Harlow signs a five-year, $100 per week contract with Howard Hughes.
  • October 30 – Entertainment newspaper Variety report that Wall Street Lays An Egg leading to many prominent showman and film stars losing money on their investments.
  • November – Warner Bros. gain complete control of First National Pictures buying Fox Film's 36% stake for $10 million[6]
  • November 10 – Première of John Grierson's documentary film Drifters about North Sea herring fishermen, made for the Empire Marketing Board, effectively inaugurating the British Documentary Film Movement. (It debuts at the private Film Society in London on a double-bill with the U.K. première of Eisenstein's The Battleship Potemkin.)[7]
  • November 15 – U.K. release of Atlantic, a film about the sinking of the RMS Titanic which is one of the first British sound-on-film movies and, in its simultaneously-shot German-language version, the first to be released in Germany; also the first Titanic movie with sound.
  • December – Anti-trust suits are filed against William Fox and Warner Bros. by the US Department of Justice for Fox's acquisition of Loews and Warners' acquisition of the Stanley Corporation of America and First National.

Academy Awards[]

The 2nd Academy Awards honored the best films released between August 1, 1928, and July 31, 1929. They took place on April 3, 1930, at an awards banquet in the Cocoanut Grove of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles.

Most nominations: In Old Arizona (Fox Film Corporation) – 5

  • Best Picture: The Broadway Melody (MGM)
  • Best Director: Frank LloydThe Divine Lady
  • Best Actor: Warner BaxterIn Old Arizona
  • Best Actress: Mary PickfordCoquette

Most awards – no film won more than 1 award

Note: Prior to 1933, awards were not based on calendar years. Best Picture, Actress and Director went to 1930 films.

Notable films released in 1929[]

United States unless stated otherwise.

A[]

  • After the Verdict, directed by Henrik Galeen, starring Olga Chekhova and Warwick Ward – (GB)
  • Alibi, starring Chester Morris and Mae Busch
  • The Alley Cat, directed by Hans Steinhoff – (GB/Germany)
  • The American Prisoner, directed by Thomas Bentley, starring Carl Brisson, Madeleine Carroll (Britain)
  • Ang Mutya Ng Pamilihan, directed by Jose Nepomuceno, starring Juanita Angeles, Paco Zamora - Philippines
  • Applause, directed by Rouben Mamoulian, starring Helen Morgan
  • Arsenal (a.k.a. January Uprising in Kiev in 1918) – (USSR)
  • Asphalt, starring Gustav Fröhlich – (Germany)
  • Atlantic, starring Madeleine Carroll, the first sound film made in Germany and the first sound Titanic movie – (GB)
  • The Awful Truth

B[]

  • Berth Marks, a Laurel and Hardy short produced by Hal Roach
  • Big Business, a Laurel and Hardy short
  • Big Time, starring Lee Tracy and Mae Clarke
  • Blackmail, directed by Alfred Hitchcock – (GB)
  • The Bridge of San Luis Rey, starring Lili Damita
  • Broadway, a musical comedy with Technicolor sequences
  • The Broadway Melody, musical comedy starring Charles King, Anita Page and Bessie Love
  • Bulldog Drummond, starring Ronald Colman

C[]

D[]

  • Dangerous Curves, starring Clara Bow and Richard Arlen
  • Desert Nights, a silent film starring John Gilbert
  • The Desert Song, a musical operetta with Technicolor sequences
  • Desperation, starring Mary Walter - Philippines
  • Devil-May-Care, starring Ramón Novarro – a musical romance with Technicolor sequences
  • Diary of a Lost Girl (Tagebuch einer Verlorenen), directed by G. W. Pabst, starring Louise Brooks – (Germany)
  • Disraeli, starring George Arliss and Joan Bennett
  • Drifters, documentary by John Grierson – (GB)
  • Dynamite, directed by Cecil B. DeMille, starring Conrad Nagel and Kay Johnson

E[]

  • Eternal Love, directed by Ernst Lubitsch starring John Barrymore

F[]

G[]

  • The General Line (Старое), directed by Sergei Eisenstein – (U.S.S.R.)
  • Glorifying the American Girl, a musical comedy with Technicolor sequences
  • Gold Diggers of Broadway, a musical comedy entirely in Technicolor
  • The Great Gabbo, a musical drama with Multicolor sequences

H[]

  • Hallelujah, directed by King Vidor
  • Hardboiled Rose, a part-talkie starring Myrna Loy
  • Hearts in Dixie, starring Clarence Muse and Stepin Fetchit, drama/musical
  • High Treason directed by Maurice Elvey and starring Jameson Thomas and Benita Hume – (GB)
  • His Glorious Night, directed by Lionel Barrymore, starring John Gilbert – Gilbert's first talkie, known as the film that destroyed his career
  • The Hole in the Wall, starring Claudette Colbert, Edward G. Robinson
  • The Hollywood Revue of 1929, a showcase of talent under contract to MGM
  • Hot for Paris, from Fox Film Corporation
  • The Hound of the Baskervilles, directed by Richard Oswald, starring Carlyle Blackwell and Alexander Murski (Germany)

I[]

K[]

  • The Kiss, starring Greta Garbo and Conrad Nagel
  • Kitty, directed by Victor Saville (Britain)
  • A Knight in London, starring Lilian Harvey – (GB/Germany)

L[]

  • The Lady Lies, starring Walter Huston and Claudette Colbert
  • Lady of the Pavements, directed by D. W. Griffith, starring Lupe Vélez and William Boyd
  • Land Without Women, starring Conrad Veidt – (Germany)
  • The Letter
  • The Locked Door, starring Rod La Rocque and Barbara Stanwyck
  • The Love Parade, starring Maurice Chevalier and Jeanette MacDonald
  • Lucky Star, directed by Frank Borzage, starring Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell
  • Ludwig II, King of Bavaria (Ludwig der Zweite, König von Bayern), directed by & starring William Dieterle – (Germany)

M[]

N[]

O[]

P[]

  • Pandora's Box (Die Büchse der Pandora), directed by G. W. Pabst, starring Louise Brooks – (Germany)
  • Paris, a musical comedy with Technicolor sequences
  • Patria Amore, starring Julian Manansala - Philippines
  • Piccadilly, a melodrama starring Anna May Wong and Gilda Gray – (GB)
  • Pointed Heels, starring William Powell, a musical comedy with Technicolor sequence

Q[]

  • Queen Kelly, starring Gloria Swanson (film unfinished because producers balked at releasing a silent film in what was quickly becoming a sound film market)

R[]

  • Rain, directed by Joris Ivens (Netherlands)
  • Redskin, starring Richard Dix, a drama with Technicolor sequences
  • The Rescue, starring Ronald Colman and Lili Damita
  • Resia Boroboedoer, only film of the Nancing Film Corp. – (Dutch East Indies)
  • The Return of the Rat, directed by Graham Cutts and starring Ivor Novello – (GB)
  • The Return of Sherlock Holmes
  • Rio Rita, starring Bebe Daniels – a musical comedy with Technicolor sequences
  • The River, directed by Frank Borzage
  • The Runaway Princess directed by Anthony Asquith and Fritz Wendhausen and starring Mady Christians and Fred Rains (Britain/Germany)

S[]

T[]

  • The Taming of the Shrew, starring Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks
  • This Thing Called Love, starring Edmund Lowe and Constance Bennett, a musical romance with Technicolor sequences; considered lost
  • The Three Kings, directed by Hans Steinhoff, starring Henry Edwards, Evelyn Holt (Britain/Germany)
  • The Three Passions, directed by Rex Ingram – (GB)
  • Thunder, directed by William Nigh, starring Lon Chaney and Phyllis Haver
  • Thunderbolt, directed by Josef von Sternberg, starring George Bancroft and Fay Wray
  • A Throw of Dice – (Germany/GB/India)
  • The Trespasser, directed by Edmund Goulding, starring Gloria Swanson and Robert Ames
  • Turksib – (USSR)

V[]

W[]

Serials[]

Short film series[]

  • Buster Keaton (1917–1941)
  • Our Gang (19221944)
  • Laurel and Hardy (1921–1943)

Animated short film series[]

  • Felix the Cat (19191936)
  • Aesop's Film Fables (19211933)
  • Krazy Kat (19251940)
  • Oswald the Lucky Rabbit
    • Homeless Homer
    • Yanky Clippers
    • Hen Fruit
    • Sick Cylinders
    • Hold ‘em Ozzie
    • The Suicide Sheik
    • Alpine Antics
    • The Lumberjack
    • The Fishing Fool
    • Stage Stunts
    • Stripes and Stars
    • The Wicked West
    • Ice Man's Luck
    • Nuts and Jolts
    • Jungle Jingles
    • Weary Willies
    • Saucy Sausages
  • Inkwell Imps (1927–1929)
  • Mickey Mouse
    • The Opry House
    • When The Cat's Away
    • The Barnyard Battle
    • The Plow Boy
    • The Karnival Kid
    • Mickey's Follies
    • Mickey's Choo-Choo
    • The Jazz Fool
    • Wild Waves
    • Jungle Rhythm
    • The Haunted House
  • Silly Symphonies
    • The Skeleton Dance
    • El Terrible Toreador
    • Springtime
    • Hell's Bells
    • The Merry Dwarfs
  • Screen Songs (1929–1938)
  • Talkartoons (1929–1932)

Births[]

  • January 1 – Haruo Nakajima, Japanese actor (died 2017)[8]
  • January 3 – Sergio Leone, Italian director, producer and screenwriter (died 1989)[9]
  • January 7 – Terry Moore, American actress[10]
  • January 8 – Saeed Jaffrey, Indian-born actor (died 2015)[11]
  • January 9 – Ulu Grosbard, Belgian-American theatre and film director and film producer (died 2012)
  • January 20 - Arte Johnson, American actor (died 2019)
  • January 31 – Jean Simmons, English-American actress (died 2010)
  • February 4 - Jerry Adler, American actor
  • February 8 - Claude Rich, French actor (died 2017)
  • February 10 – Jerry Goldsmith, American composer (died 2004)
  • February 14
    • Roman Kłosowski, Polish actor (died 2018)
    • Allan Miller, American actor and director
    • Vic Morrow, American actor (died 1982)
  • February 22
    • James Hong, American actor, voice actor, producer and director of Chinese descent
    • Rebecca Schull, American actress
  • March 11 - Timothy Carey, American actor (died 1994)
  • March 13 - Peter Breck, American actor (died 2012)
  • March 23 - Mark Rydell, American actor, director and producer
  • March 24 - Pat Renella, American actor (died 2012)
  • April 1 – Jane Powell, American actress, singer and dancer (died 2021)[12]
  • April 5 – Nigel Hawthorne, English actor (died 2001)[13]
  • April 10
    • Liz Sheridan, American actress
    • Max von Sydow, Swedish actor (died 2020)
  • April 28 – Bhanu Athaiya, Indian costume designer (died 2020)
  • May 2 – Eddie Garcia, Filipino actor (died 2019)
  • May 4 – Audrey Hepburn, British actress (died 1993)
  • May 5 – Ilene Woods, American actress and singer (died 2010)
  • May 25 - Ann Robinson, American former actress
  • May 28 - Shane Rimmer, Canadian actor (died 2019)
  • May 31 – Menahem Golan, Israeli director and producer (died 2014)
  • June 3 - Chuck Barris, American game show host (died 2017)
  • June 8 - Gastone Moschin, Italian actor (died 2017)
  • June 20 - Bonnie Bartlett, American actress
  • June 23 - Claude Goretta, Swiss producer and director (died 2019)
  • July 5 – Katherine Helmond, American actress (died 2019)
  • July 21
    • Asta Vihandi, Estonian opera singer, actress, and dancer (died 1993)
    • John Woodvine, English actor
  • July 31 - Don Murray (actor), American actor
  • August 21 - John McMartin, American actor died (died 2016)
  • August 23 - Vera Miles, retired American actress
  • September 2 – Hal Ashby, American director (died 1988)
  • September 4 - Nina Urgant, Russian actress (died 2021)
  • September 5 – Bob Newhart, American actor and comedian
  • September 20
    • Kurt Kren, Austrian experimental director (died 1998)
    • Vittorio Taviani, Italian director (died 2018)
  • September 21 - Elsa Raven, American character actress (died 2020)
  • September 22 - Maria Charles, English actress, director and comedian
  • September 25 - Barbara Walters, American broadcast journalist and television personality
  • October 2 - Moses Gunn, American actor (died 1993)
  • October 14 – Norbert Gastell, German voice actor (died 2015)
  • October 15 - Witold Sobociński, Polish actor (died 2018)
  • October 16 - Fernanda Montenegro, Brazilian actress
  • October 24 - Clifford Rose, English actor (died 2021)
  • October 28
    • Jack Hedley, British actor (died 2021)
    • Joan Plowright, English actress
  • November 6 - June Squibb, American actress
  • November 12
    • Etchika Choureau, French actress
    • Grace Kelly, American-Monégasque actress (died 1982)[14]
  • November 15 – Ed Asner, American actor (died 2021)
  • November 20 - Jerry Hardin, American actor
  • November 21 - Niall Tóibín, Irish actor and comedian (died 2019)
  • November 28 - Berry Gordy, American producer
  • December 1 – David Doyle, American actor (died 1997)
  • December 6 – Alain Tanner, Swiss film director
  • December 9 – John Cassavetes, American actor, director (died 1989)
  • December 13 – Christopher Plummer, Canadian actor (died 2021)

Deaths[]

  • January 5 – Marc McDermott, Australian actor (born 1881)
  • February 18
    • Hardee Kirkland, American stage and screen actor (born 1868)
    • William Russell, American actor (born 1884)
  • February 24 – Frank Keenan, American actor (born 1858)
  • May 9 – Fred C. Truesdell, stage & film actor (born 1870)
  • May 12 – Charles Swickard, German-American director and actor (born 1861)
  • July 2 – Gladys Brockwell, American actress (born 1894)
  • July 3 – Dustin Farnum, American stage & silent screen star (born 1874)
  • July 6 – Cliff Bowes, American comedian (born 1894)
  • August 2 – Mae Costello, American actress (born 1882)
  • September 2 – Paul Leni, German film and art director (born 1885)
  • October 3 – Jeanne Eagels, American actress (born 1890)
  • October 31 – Norman Trevor, actor, Olympic athlete (born 1877)
  • November 2 – Leo D. Maloney, actor and director (born 1888)
  • November 24 – Raymond Hitchcock, American actor (born 1865)

Film debuts[]

Lobby card of Berth Marks.

References[]

  1. ^ The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles, California: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
  2. ^ a b Finler, Joel Waldo (2003). The Hollywood Story. Wallflower Press. pp. 356–357. ISBN 978-1-903364-66-6.
  3. ^ a b c d Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger. See Appendix 1, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, (1995) 15:sup1, 1-31 p 7 DOI: 10.1080/01439689508604551
  4. ^ a b c "All-Time Film Rental Champs". Variety. October 15, 1990. p. M150.
  5. ^ "Fox's World High, $173,391". Variety. August 14, 1929. p. 9. Retrieved June 22, 2018.
  6. ^ "Fox Sells F.N. Holdings to Warners". The Film Daily. November 4, 1929. p. 1.
  7. ^ Sexton, Jamie. "Drifters (1929)". screenonline. BFI. Retrieved 2011-03-07.
  8. ^ Donald F. Glut (1999). Carbon Dates: A Day by Day Almanac of Paleo Anniversaries and Dino Events. McFarland. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-7864-0592-3.
  9. ^ Gaetana Marrone (2007). Encyclopedia of Italian Literary Studies: A-J. Taylor & Francis. p. 1015. ISBN 978-1-57958-390-3.
  10. ^ Cleveland Amory (1959). International Celebrity Register. Celebrity Register. p. 529.
  11. ^ "Saeed Jaffrey, actor – obituary". The Telegraph. 16 November 2015. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  12. ^ Kristine Helen Burns (2002). Women and Music in America Since 1900: An Encyclopedia. Greenwood Press. p. 538. ISBN 978-1-57356-309-3.
  13. ^ Kathleen Riley (27 April 2005). Nigel Hawthorne on Stage. Univ of Hertfordshire Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-902806-31-0.
  14. ^ "Grace Kelly | American actress and princess of Monaco". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
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