Pete Smith (film producer)
Pete Smith | |
---|---|
Born | Peter Schmidt September 4, 1892 New York City, U.S. |
Died | January 12, 1979 Santa Monica, California, U.S. | (aged 86)
Occupation(s) | Producer and narrator of short subjects, Publicist |
Years active | 1931–1955 |
Known for | Pete Smith Specialties |
Spouses | Marjorie Ganss
(m. 1918; died 1957)Anne Dunster (m. 1962–1979) |
Children | 1 |
Awards | Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film (1938, 1941) Academy Honorary Award (1953) |
Peter Schmidt (September 4, 1892 – January 12, 1979[1]), Americanized to Pete Smith, was a film producer based in Hollywood, California. He is best known for the Pete Smith Specialties, a long-running series of general-interest short films, ranging from human-interest stories to sports subjects. Best remembered are the comedies, exaggerating common pet peeves and household problems, with Smith offering pointed commentary in his distinctive, nasal tenor.
Early life and career
[edit]Peter Schmidt was born in 1892, in New York City.[2] He became interested in the theatrical business, working behind the scenes as an aide for a vaudeville performers union, an editor and critic for a trade magazine, and a press agent.[2][3] In 1915, as the new field of motion pictures was transforming show business, Smith became a publicity man for Bosworth, Inc., Oliver Morosco Photoplay Co., Artcraft Pictures Corporation, and Famous Players–Lasky.[4] He was one of the founding members of the Associated Motion Picture Advertisers.[5] By 1925 Smith was the manager of publicity for Louis B. Mayer of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM).[3]
In 1929, producer Jules White and his partner Zion Myers conceived the Dogville Comedies, featuring trained dogs in satires of then-current films (the successful musical The Broadway Melody became The Dogway Melody, for example). Pete Smith was pressed into service to provide some of the comic voices for the soundtracks. This led him into the field of voice-over work, and he narrated some of MGM's sports reels. As a lark, Smith embellished the action by running certain scenes in reverse and adding his own wisecracking comments. Beginning in 1933 MGM offered Goofy Movies, a series of short comedies based on antique silent films. Pete Smith received screen credit in these shorts, which he narrated in florid style. In 1935 Smith introduced the concept of 3-D movies to audiences, by offering explanatory remarks in the "MGM Miniature" Audioscopiks.
Pete Smith Specialties
[edit]Because of Smith's flair for comedy, MGM gave him his own series, Pete Smith Specialties. He produced and narrated dozens of movie short subjects for MGM from the 1935 to 1955.
Most of Smith's movies were one reel in length (9 to 11 minutes). Short subjects were shown before a feature film in movie houses and theaters. The diverse subject matter Smith featured in these shorts were Emily Post-style household hints, insect life seen through a microscope, military training and hardware (during World War II), and dancing lessons. There were even several "series-within-the-series", such as general-knowledge quizzes, professional-football news, and features concerning different kinds of animals (Donkey Baseball and Social Sea Lions). During the war effort, Smith narrated a patriotic short movie for the U.S. Government, The Tree In a Test Tube (1943), filmed in color, featuring Laurel and Hardy in a demonstration of household wood products, with Smith explaining the various exhibits for the viewer.
In October 1943 Melville Danner, owner of a 250-seat theater in Granite, Oklahoma, printed an open letter to MGM, suggesting that Pete Smith should make a short subject about people who behave badly in theaters. Motion Picture Herald gave the suggestion a special headline: "Assignment for Pete Smith."[6] Smith took the suggestion and made Movie Pests (1944), with Dave O'Brien exemplifying the inconsiderate patron who causes problems for everyone around him. The short was so successful that it inspired three sequels: Guest Pests (1945), Bus Pests (1945), and Neighbor Pests (1947).
Dave O'Brien became the primary actor in the Pete Smith Specialties during the 1940s. The hapless O'Brien would personify everyday nuisances: demonstrating pet peeves, tackling hazardous home-improvement projects, and having other problems with which the audience could identify. O'Brien's scenes were silent, compelling O'Brien to express his satisfaction or frustration entirely in visual terms as narrator Smith offered commentary. O'Brien knew the format so well that he also directed many of the short movies, using the name "David Barclay". He staged many of the sight gags himself, taking stupendous falls for the camera.
The Pete Smith Specialties earned 14 Academy Award nominations and two Best Live Action Short Film Academy Awards.[7] At the 26th Academy Awards, Smith was awarded an Academy Honorary Award "for his witty and pungent observations on the American scene in his series of Pete Smith Specialties."[8]
Smith announced his retirement in 1954. The MGM unit that produced the Pete Smith Specialties was terminated the next year, a casualty of short movies' decreasing popularity at the time.[9] The final film in the series was a tribute to Dave O'Brien, featuring a collection of his spectacular stunts and pratfalls. The reel was appropriately titled The Fall Guy (1955).
Personal life
[edit]Smith, under his birth name Peter J. Schmidt, married Marjorie Ganss on February 6, 1919, in Manhattan. They had one son, Douglas Mosely Schmidt (1919–1984), who later became a technician for RKO.[10] Smith and Ganss remained married until her death in 1957. Smith's second marriage was to his secretary, Anne Dunster, whom he married in Las Vegas in October 1962.[11]
Later years and death
[edit]Smith spent his later years in poor health at a convalescent home in Santa Monica, California.[2] On January 12, 1979, he committed suicide by leaping off the building's roof.[12] He was survived by his second wife, Anne, and his son Douglas.[13]
For his contribution to the movie industry, Smith received a star symbol on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 1621 Vine Street.[1]
Selected filmography
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1931 | Fishermen's Paradise | Narrator | Producer |
1931 | Whippet Racing | Narrator | Producer |
1931 | Wild and Woolly | Narrator | Producer |
1932 | Color Scales | Narrator | Producer |
1932 | Desert Regatta | Narrator | Producer |
1932 | Trout Fishing | Narrator | Producer |
1932 | Microscopic Mysteries | Narrator | Producer |
1932 | Swing High | Narrator | Producer |
1932 | Fast Life | Race Announcer | Appeared as himself |
1932 | Snow Birds | Explanatory Remarks | |
1933 | Goofy-Movies Number One | Narrator | |
1933 | Menu | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, Novelty |
1933 | Handlebars | Narrator | Producer |
1933 | Fine Feathers | Narrator | Producer |
1934 | Goofy Movies (Parts 1 - 9) | Narrator | 10 part series released February through December in 1934, with only the first 9 narrated by Smith. |
1934 | Roping Wild Bears | Narrator | |
1934 | Vital Victuals | Narrator | Producer |
1934 | Strikes and Spares | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, Novelty |
1934 | Pro Football | Narrator | |
1935 | Donkey Baseball | Producer and writer. Does not narrate | |
1935 | La Fiesta de Santa Barbara | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Color) |
1935 | Audioscopiks | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, Novelty |
1935 | Water Sports | Narrator | |
1935 | Trained Hoofs | Narrator | |
1936 | Wanted – A Master | Narrator/Voice of Dog | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1936 | Killer-Dog | Narrator | Producer |
1936 | Harnessed Rhythm | Narrator | |
1936 | Bar-Rac's Night Out | Narrator | Producer |
1937 | The Grand Bounce | Narrator | |
1937 | Candid Cameramaniacs | Narrator | Producer |
1937 | Penny Wisdom | Narrator | Producer Won: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, Color |
1937 | Pigskin Champions | Narrator | Producer |
1937 | Romance of Radium | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1938 | Football Thrills of 1937 | Narrator | Producer, director |
1938 | Three on a Rope | Narrator | |
1938 | Fisticuffs | Narrator | Features Max Baer |
1938 | Hot on Ice | Narrator | Producer |
1939 | Football Thrills of 1938 | Narrator | Producer, director |
1939 | Radio Hams | Narrator | Producer |
1939 | Let's Talk Turkey | Narrator | |
1939 | Poetry of Nature | Narrator | |
1939 | Take a Cue | Narrator | |
1939 | Weather Wizards | Narrator | Producer |
1940 | Spots Before Your Eyes | Narrator | Producer |
1940 | Quicker'n a Wink | Narrator | Producer Won: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1941 | Aeronutics | Narrator | Producer |
1941 | Third Dimensional Murder | Narrator | Producer |
1941 | Army Champions | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1941 | Lions on the Loose | Narrator | Producer |
1941 | How to Hold Your Husband | Narrator | |
1942 | Acro-Batty | Narrator | Producer, writer |
1942 | Marines in the Making | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1942 | Calling All Pa's | Narrator | |
1942 | Victory Quiz | Narrator | Quiz about military names. Starring in one skit a young and uncredited Alan Hale Jr. on KP duty |
1943 | First Aid | Narrator | |
1943 | Seeing Hands | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1943 | The Tree in a Test Tube | Interlocutor (voice) | |
1944 | Movie Pests | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1944 | Football Thrills of 1944 | Narrator | Producer, director |
1945 | Hollywood Scout | Narrator | Producer |
1945 | Bus Pests | Narrator | Producer |
1946 | Treasures From Trash | Narrator | Producer |
1946 | Gettin' Glamour | Narrator | Producer |
1946 | Playing by Ear | Narrator | Producer |
1946 | Fala at Hyde Park | Narrator | Producer |
1946 | I Love My Husband, But! | Narrator | Producer |
1946 | Sure Cures | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1946 | Studio Visit | Narrator | Producer - Pete Smith Specialty |
1947 | Now You See It | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1947 | I Love My Wife, But! | Narrator | Producer |
1947 | What D'ya Know? | Narrator | Producer |
1947 | Have You Ever Wondered? | Narrator | Producer |
1948 | I Love My Mother-in-Law But... | Narrator | Producer |
1948 | Bowling Tricks With Andy Varipapa | Narrator | Producer |
1948 | You Can't Win | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1948 | Just Suppose | Narrator | Producer |
1948 | Ice Aces | Narrator | |
1948 | Let's Cogitate | Narrator | Producer |
1949 | How Come? | Narrator | Producer |
1949 | Water Trix | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1949 | Did'ja Know? Have You Ever Wondered #3 | Narrator | Producer |
1950 | Wrong Way Butch | Narrator | Producer Nominated: Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel |
1950 | A Wife's Life | Narrator | Producer |
1950 | Curious Contests | Narrator | Producer |
1951 | Bargain Madness | Narrator | Producer |
1951 | Bandage Bait | Narrator | Producer |
1951 | Fishing Feats | Narrator | Producer |
1952 | Gymnastic Rhythm | Narrator | Producer |
1952 | I Love Children, But! | Narrator | Producer |
1953 | The Postman | Narrator | Producer |
1953 | Things We Can Do Without | Narrator | Producer |
1954 | Do Someone a Favor! | Narrator | Producer |
1954 | The Camera Caught It | Narrator | Producer |
1954 | Rough Riding | Narrator | Producer (Color) |
1954 | Fish Tales | Narrator | Producer (Color) |
1955 | The Man Around the House | Narrator | Producer |
1955 | Animals in Action | Narrator | Producer |
1955 | Fall Guy | Narrator | Producer |
Home media availability
[edit]Pete Smith’s short films are included as extras on DVDs of many classic Warner Home Video films of the era. These include:
- Menu - Morning Glory (1933)
- Goofy Movies, #1 - Midnight Mary (1933)
- Goofy Movies, #2 - Manhattan Melodrama (1934)
- Goofy Movies, #3 - Evelyn Prentice (1934)
- Goofy Movies, #4 - Sadie McKee (1934)
- Penny Wisdom - The Prisoner of Zenda (1937)
- Romance of Radium - Madame Curie (1943)
- Quicker 'n a Wink - Go West (1940)
- Wedding Bills - Strike Up the Band (1940)
- Flicker Memories - The Big Store (1941)
- How to Hold Your Husband - Back - Babes on Broadway (1941)
- Marines in the Making - Random Harvest (1942)
- Studio Visit - Cabin in the Sky (1943)
- Hollywood Daredevils - Girl Crazy (1943)
- Fala - The President's Dog - Lassie Come Home (1943)
- Seeing Hands - DuBarry Was a Lady (1943)
- Movie Pests - Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1944)
- Football Thrills of 1944 - Blu-Ray release of Anchors Aweigh (1945)
- Hollywood Scout - The Clock (1945)
- Sure Cures - Easy to Wed (1946)
- I Love My Husband, But! - Without Reservations (1946)
- Now You See It - This Time for Keeps (1947)
- Fala at Hyde Park - Hills of Home (1948)
- You Can't Win! - The Pirate (1948)
- Let's Cogitate! - Battleground (1949)
- Those Good Old Days - Madame Bovary (1949)
- Water Trix - Neptune's Daughter (1949)
- Sports Oddities - That Midnight Kiss (1949)
- Pest Control - The Stratton Story (1949)
- Crashing the Movies - Two Weeks with Love (1950)
- Did'ja Know? - Summer Stock (1950)
- Wrong Way Butch - Nancy Goes to Rio (1950)
- Curious Contests - Pagan Love Song (1950)
- Musiquiz - The Belle of New York (1952)
- Reducing - Million Dollar Mermaid (1952)
- This is a Living? - Dangerous When Wet (1953)
- Things We Can Do Without - The Naked Spur (1953)
- Ain't It Aggravatin'? - The Long, Long Trailer (1954)
- Out for Fun - Executive Suite (1954)
- The Fall Guy - Hit the Deck (1955)
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Pete Smith". Hollywood Walk of Fame. Retrieved 2012-01-30.
- ^ a b c "Pete Smith". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-01-30.
- ^ a b "Specialty producer dies at 86". The Leader-Post. January 16, 1979. p. 25. Retrieved January 13, 2013.
- ^ "Moving Picture World Jul-Aug 1918". Moving Picture World. Chalmers Publishing Company. 1918. p. 392. Retrieved 2024-08-11.
Peter began his business career as a stenographer in 1907, and admits that he was glad to get six dollars for a week's toil.
Cite error: The named reference "Schidigger-A000" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page). - ^ "Movie Ad Men in Association". The Fourth Estate. August 5, 1916. Retrieved 2012-08-10.
- ^ "Premiere Wows Granite". Motion Picture Herald: 12. July 8, 1944.
- ^ Zone, Ray (2007). Stereoscopic Cinema & the Origins of 3-D Film, 1838–1952. University Press of Kentucky. p. 147. ISBN 978-0-813-12461-2.
- ^ Maltin, Leonard (1972). The Great Movie Shorts. Crown Publishers. p. 145.
- ^ Doherty, Thomas Patrick (2013). Hollywood's Censor: Joseph I. Breen and the Production Code Administration. Columbia University Press. pp. 1864–1865. ISBN 978-0-231-51284-8.
- ^ "Following In Their Parents' Footsteps". The Sydney Morning Herald. July 6, 1937. p. 9. Retrieved January 13, 2013.
- ^ "Pete Smith Weds His Secretary". Daytona Beach Morning Journal. October 22, 1962. p. 1. Retrieved January 13, 2013.
- ^ "Pete Smith". Toledo Blade via Google. Associated Press. January 14, 1979. Retrieved 2012-01-30.
- ^ "Leap From Roof Kills Former Filmmaker". Daytona Beach Morning Journal. January 14, 1979. p. 4B.
External links
[edit]- Pete Smith at IMDb
- Pete Smith at the TCM Movie Database
- 1892 births
- 1979 suicides
- 20th-century American male actors
- Academy Honorary Award recipients
- Film producers from California
- American public relations people
- American male screenwriters
- American male voice actors
- Male actors from New York City
- Male actors from Santa Monica, California
- Suicides by jumping in California
- Writers from Santa Monica, California
- Film directors from New York City
- Film directors from California
- Screenwriters from California
- Screenwriters from New York (state)
- Film producers from New York (state)
- 20th-century American male writers
- 20th-century American screenwriters
- 1979 deaths