Sol Lesser Explained

Sol Lesser
Birth Date:17 February 1890
Birth Place:Spokane, Washington, U.S.
Death Place:Hollywood, California, U.S.
Resting Place:Hillside Memorial Park, Culver City, California
Occupation:Film producer
Spouse:Fay Grunauer Lesser (1913–?) (2 children)[1]
Children:Julian Lesser (1915–2005)[2]
Marjorie Lesser Fasman
Yearsactive:1913–1958

Sol Lesser (February 17, 1890 – September 19, 1980) was an American film producer. He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960 and was awarded the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award in 1961.

Biography

In 1913, while living in San Francisco, Sol Lesser learned that the authorities were about to clean out the Barbary Coast district, a raucous area of gambling houses, saloons and brothels. He grabbed a camera and a friend, future Hollywood cameraman Hal Mohr, and roamed the area, especially the parts that were best-known before the area was shut down. (The Barbary Coast was not actually closed down until 1917.) This film is now considered a lost film.

The resulting film was The Last Night of the Barbary Coast, an early example of an exploitation film that was sold directly to movie theater owners by Lesser. With the profits from the film, he bought several theaters, and soon owned a cinema chain.

Sol Lesser signed Jackie Coogan to a movie contract in 1922, establishing both as major Hollywood names. The Coogan-Lesser hits included Oliver Twist and Peck's Bad Boy. Lesser made a successful transition to sound films, with his own Principal Pictures company; he would either distribute his productions himself under the Principal name, or arrange for a major studio to release them under their own trademarks. In 1933, Lesser produced Thunder Over Mexico a compilation film made from Eisenstein's Que Viva Mexico! with the permission of Upton Sinclair, who had commissioned the Soviet film maker, and his wife.

His productions usually had higher budgets than the usual independent features; Lesser was able to produce entire series with name stars like Bela Lugosi, George O'Brien, and Bobby Breen.

In 1933 Lesser succeeded in buying screen rights to Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan character. A Tarzan the Fearless serial with screen newcomer Buster Crabbe resulted, but Burroughs, deciding to make his own Tarzan films, refused to renegotiate with Lesser. Burroughs's movie enterprises were short-lived, and the rights passed to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Burroughs sold Lesser options on all his Tarzan novels for seven years with Lesser producing one Tarzan film a year for 20th Century Fox. Only one Tarzan film Tarzan's Revenge featuring athletes Glenn Morris and Eleanor Holm was produced; Lesser sold the rights back to MGM.[3] He returned to the Tarzan property in 1943, after MGM relinquished the rights. Lesser's new Tarzan films were produced for RKO and starred Johnny Weissmuller and later Lex Barker and Gordon Scott, and Lesser devoted himself to these jungle adventures for the rest of his career.

Later films include Our Town (1940) and the all-star wartime revue Stage Door Canteen (1943) that featured a cameo by Johnny Weissmuller. Toward the end of his life he was actively involved in restoring many of his early productions.

Lesser retired in 1958, selling the Tarzan rights to producer Sy Weintraub.[4] "I had reached the age that one either finishes on top or far below. I decided I would end on top, and I was satisfied," he said.

Lesser was buried at Hillside Memorial Park in Culver City, California.

Accolades

Sol Lesser was the recipient of The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award in 1960. He has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Filmography

YearTitleNotes
1920What Women Love[5]
1921One Man in a Million
1922My Boy
1922The World's a Stage
1922Oliver Twist
1922Trouble
1922Bing Bang Boom[6]
1923Circus Days
1923Daddy
1923The Drug Traffic
1924Captain January
1924Helen's Babies
1924
1924When a Man's a Man
1925The Re-Creation of Brian Kent
1925Balto's Race to Nome
1930The Eyes of the World
1932South Sea Adventures
1932With Williamson Beneath the Sea
1932
1933Jaws of Justice
1933Matto-Grosso
1933Thunder Over Mexico
1933Tarzan the FearlessSerial
1933Serial
1934Peck's Bad Boy
1934Ferocious Pal
1934Fighting to Live
1934Chandu on the Magic Isle
1934
1935Hard Rock Harrigan
1935Thunder Mountain
1935Whispering Smith Speaks
1935When a Man's a Man
1935
1935The Calling of Dan Matthews
1936Let's Sing Again
1936Rainbow on the River
1936O'Malley of the Mounted
1937
1937Make a Wish
1937Western Gold
1937Roll Along, Cowboy
1937Secret Valley
1937It Happened Out West
1938Breaking the Ice
1938Hawaii Calls
1938Rawhide
1938Tarzan's Revenge
1938Peck's Bad Boy with the Circus
1938Panamint's Bad Man
1938Hawaiian Buckaroo
1939Fisherman's Wharf
1939Way Down South
1939Everything's on Ice
1939Escape to Paradise
1940Our Town
1941That Uncertain Feeling
1942
1943Stage Door Canteen
1943Tarzan's Desert Mystery
1943Tarzan Triumphs
1944Three Is a Family
1945Tarzan and the Amazons
1947Tarzan and the Leopard Woman
1947
1947Tarzan and the Huntress
1948Tarzan and the Mermaids
1949Tarzan's Magic Fountain
1950Tarzan and the Slave Girl
1950Kon-TikiAcademy Award, Best Documentary Feature
1951Tarzan's Peril
1952Tarzan's Savage Fury
1952Under the Red Sea
1952Without Warning!
1953Tarzan and the She-Devil
1953Vice Squad
1953
1955Quest for the Lost City
1955Tarzan's Hidden Jungle
1957Man on the Prowl
1957X the Unknown
1958Tarzan's Fight for Life
1958Tarzan and the TrappersTV pilot

Notes and References

  1. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~npmelton/laless.htm
  2. Web site: Julian "Bud" Lesser Obituary (2005) Los Angeles Times. Legacy.com.
  3. p. 297 Taliaferro, John Tarzan Forever: The Life of Edgar Rice Burroughs the Creator of Tarzan Scribner Book Company 15 January 2002
  4. p. 213 Fleming, E.J. Hollywood Death and Scandal Sites: Seventeen Driving Tours with Directions and the Full Stor yMcFarland; Second edition 30 September 2015
  5. Web site: Sol Lesser . . . February 5, 2016 .
  6. Web site: Sol Lesser Productions, Inc. . AFI Catalog of Feature Films . American Film Institute . February 5, 2016 .