What does
History Professor Michael Birdwell have in common with actors Dennis
Hopper, Tab Hunter and George Segal?
They all recently participated in a project to create a film documentary
about the lives of Albert, Harry, Jack and Sam Warner — the
Polish immigrant brothers who founded the legendary Warner Bros.
motion picture studio in Hollywood.
A Warner Sisters production, the feature-length film is framed
by the perspective of Cass Warner, the project’s writer/producer/director
and granddaughter of former Warner Bros. president Harry Warner.
She is also the author of Hollywood Be Thy Name: The Warner
Brothers Story (University of Kentucky Press), which is in
its sixth printing.
The film also features Eddie Schmidt as writer/producer. His previous
credits include "This Film is Not Yet Rated" and the Oscar-nominated
"Twist of Faith."
Birdwell was chosen for participation in "The Brothers Warner"
based on his book Celluloid Soldiers, published in 2000
by New York University Press.
“The book offers a historical look at the efforts of Warner
Bros. to make America aware of Nazi activity prior to World War
II,” Birdwell says.
“Warner Bros. was really the only major motion picture studio
to take such a proactive stance against the Nazis, and in my research,
I found that Harry Warner functioned essentially as the behind-the-scenes
social conscience of the studio,” he continues.
Birdwell traveled to Los Angeles recently to be interviewed about
his research, and Schmidt and Warner say his historical knowledge
of the political motivations of Warner Bros. really enhanced the
documentary’s material.
“The studio’s efforts to mobilize the country —
both onscreen and off — were largely led by the personal convictions
of Harry Warner,” Schmidt says.
Warner agrees, saying, “But Harry was a quiet man not prone
to boasting, so Michael’s interview, and his book, helped
paint a fascinating and rounded portrait of my grandfather’s
achievements, as well as the courage of Harry himself.
“Appropriately, the interview was filmed at the home of my
mother Betty Warner (Harry Warner’s daughter), so the whole
thing was a real family affair,” she continues.
Birdwell says, “This is the ninth documentary in which I’ve
been involved, and out of those nine, it’s the biggest film
I’ve been involved with.”
"The Brothers Warner" is in postproduction now and set
for release in 2008, the 85th anniversary of the brothers’
founding of the studio in 1923.
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