Samuel Goldwyn

A Song Is Born The Pride of the Yankees [Collector's Edition] Guys and Dolls [Decades Collection] The Wedding Night The Adventures of Marco Polo The Pride of the Yankees [65th Anniversary Edition] Guys and Dolls [Deluxe Edition] Arrowsmith

AKA: Samuel Goldfish
Born: 08/17/1879 Warsaw, Poland
Decades Active:
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  1890    1900    1910    1920    1930    1940    1950    1960    1970    1980    1990    2000    2010  
Biography: One of the most distinguished of the old Hollywood movie moguls, Samuel Goldwyn probably rose the farthest of them all from the humblest of beginnings. Born Schmuel Gelbfisz in Warsaw, Poland, in 1879 (some sources say 1882), he grew up in a life of dire poverty. At age 16, he left home on foot, headed west, and ended up in England, where he lived for two years. He adopted the name Samuel Goldfish, worked, begged, and perhaps also stole to survive, and then got passage on a ship to Nova Scotia. He headed south to New York, again on foot, in 1898. He arrived without a penny to his name and got a job sweeping floors at a glove company, later becoming a glove maker's apprentice and also attending night school to further his education. Goldfish became a salesman for the company and was good enough to earn a five-figure annual income at the opening of the 20th century, extraordinary for a working man. [Note: Goldwyn's background with the glove company was referred to obliquely in a sight gag in one 1930s Max Fleischer cartoon, in which part of an underwater tableau includes a goldfish with a pushcart selling gloves]. In the process of living a middle-class American life, he developed one special cultural love and fixation -- the movies, which were just becoming a vehicle for serious entertainment. In 1913, Goldfish and his brother-in-law, the vaudeville producer Jesse L. Lasky, went into business together, forming the Jesse Lasky Feature Photoplay Company; their debut release, The Squaw Man (1914), directed by Cecil B. DeMille, was an enormous hit. Their company had a good three years before it merged with Adolph Zukor's Famous Players studio, thus forming the nucleus of what became Paramount Pictures. Soon after, Goldfish went into partnership with Edgar Selwyn in a company called the Goldwyn Pictures Corp., which took its name from the first syllable of Goldfish's name and the last one of Selwyn's -- Samuel Goldfish himself soon adopted Goldwyn as his own legal name.


DVDs that Samuel Goldwyn worked on "behind the scenes"...

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