Sol Lesser

{{Short description|American film producer (1890–1980)}}

{{Use American English|date=May 2021}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2021}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Sol Lesser

| image = Sol Lesser.jpg

| caption = Sol Lesser ca. 1920

| birth_date = {{birth date|1890|2|17}}

| birth_place = Spokane, Washington, U.S.

| death_date = {{death date and age|1980|9|19|1890|2|17}}

| death_place = Hollywood, California, U.S.

| resting_place = Hillside Memorial Park, Culver City, California

| occupation = Film producer

| spouse = Fay Grunauer Lesser (1913–?) (2 children)http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~npmelton/laless.htm {{User-generated source|certain=yes|date=June 2022}}

| children = Julian Lesser (1915–2005){{Cite web|url=http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/latimes/obituary.aspx?page=lifestory&pid=3336754|title=Julian "Bud" Lesser Obituary (2005) Los Angeles Times|website=Legacy.com}}
Marjorie Lesser Fasman

| othername =

| 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 (as with his Buck Jones westerns and his 1938 novelty western The Terror of Tiny Town, all released by Columbia). 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 George O'Brien and Bobby Breen. He also produced serials in 1933 and 1934. Lesser was very successful as an independent producer, later releasing through United Artists. notably with the films Our Town (1940) and the all-star wartime revue Stage Door Canteen (1943).

Tarzan

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 own 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 was produced under this arrangement: Tarzan's Revenge (1938) featuring athletes Glenn Morris and Eleanor Holm. MGM objected to Lesser competing with its own Tarzan series, and Lesser agreed to sell the rights back to MGM.Taliaferro, John. Tarzan Forever: The Life of Edgar Rice Burroughs the Creator of Tarzan, Scribners, 2002, p. 297. When MGM relinquished the rights in 1942, Lesser regained the Tarzan property. 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. Lesser sold the Tarzan rights to producer Sy Weintraub in 1958, and retired.p. 213 Fleming, E.J. Hollywood Death and Scandal Sites: Seventeen Driving Tours with Directions and the Full Story McFarland, 2015, p. 213. "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.

Toward the end of his life he was actively involved in restoring many of his early productions, often in association with film preservationists at Blackhawk Films. Blackhawk reprinted many of Lesser's silent and sound films for the home-movie market.

Sol Lesser died in 1980, and 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

{{multiple image

| align = right

| direction = vertical

| width = 220

| image1=What Women Love (1920) - Ad 1.jpg

| alt1=

| caption1=Ad for What Women Love (1920)

| image2=My-Boy-1921-Poster.jpg

| alt2=

| caption2=Poster for My Boy (1922)

| image3=Ferocious-Pal-1934-LC.jpg

| alt3=

| caption3=Lobby card for Ferocious Pal (1934)

| image4=Hawaii Calls lobby card 2.jpg

| alt4=

| caption4=Lobby card for Hawaii Calls (1938)

| image5=William Holden-Martha Scott in Our Town.jpg

| alt5=

| caption5=William Holden and Martha Scott in Our Town (1940)

| image6=That Uncertain Feeling 2.jpg

| alt6=

| caption6=Merle Oberon and Melvyn Douglas in That Uncertain Feeling (1941)

| image7=Stage-Door-Canteen-Poster.jpg

| alt7=

| caption7=Poster for Stage Door Canteen (1943)

| image8=The Red House (1947) 1.jpg

| alt8=

| caption8=Lon McCallister, Allene Roberts, Edward G. Robinson and Judith Anderson in The Red House (1947)

| image9=

| alt9=

| caption9=Academy Award for Kon-Tiki (1950)

}}

class="wikitable sortable"
Year

! Title

! class="unsortable" | Notes

1920

| What Women Love

| {{cite web |url=http://www.afi.com/members/catalog/SearchResult.aspx?s=&TBL=PN&Type=PP&ID=141244&pName=Sol%20Lesser|title=Sol Lesser |website=AFI Catalog of Feature Films |publisher=American Film Institute |access-date=February 5, 2016 }}

1921

| One Man in a Million

|

1922

| My Boy

|

1922

| The World's a Stage

|

1922

| Oliver Twist

|

1922

| Trouble

|

1922

| Bing Bang Boom

| {{cite web |url=http://www.afi.com/members/catalog/SearchResult.aspx?s=&Type=PR&ID=6518|title=Sol Lesser Productions, Inc. |website=AFI Catalog of Feature Films |publisher=American Film Institute |access-date=February 5, 2016 }}

1923

| Circus Days

|

1923

| Daddy

|

1923

| The Drug Traffic

|

1924

| Captain January

|

1924

| Helen's Babies

|

1924

| {{sortname|The|Mine with the Iron Door|The Mine with the Iron Door (1924 film)}}

|

1924

| When a Man's a Man

|

1925

| The Re-Creation of Brian Kent

|

1925

| Balto's Race to Nome

|

1930

| The Eyes of the World

|

1932

| South Sea Adventures

|

1932

| With Williamson Beneath the Sea

|

1932

| {{sortname|The|Amazon Head Hunters|nolink=1}}

|

1933

| Jaws of Justice

|

1933

| Matto-Grosso

|

1933

| Thunder Over Mexico

|

1933

| Tarzan the Fearless

| Serial

1933

| {{sortname|The|Return of Chandu}}

| Serial

1934

| Peck's Bad Boy

|

1934

| Ferocious Pal

|

1934

| Fighting to Live

|

1934

| Chandu on the Magic Isle

|

1934

| {{sortname|The|Dude Ranger}}

|

1935

| Hard Rock Harrigan

|

1935

| Thunder Mountain

|

1935

| Whispering Smith Speaks

|

1935

| When a Man's a Man

|

1935

| {{sortname|The|Cowboy Millionaire|The Cowboy Millionaire (1935 film)}}

|

1935

| The Calling of Dan Matthews

|

1936

| Let's Sing Again

|

1936

| Rainbow on the River

|

1936

| O'Malley of the Mounted

|

1937

| {{sortname|The|Californian|The Californian (film)}}

|

1937

| Make a Wish

|

1937

| Western Gold

|

1937

| Roll Along, Cowboy

|

1937

| Secret Valley

|

1937

| It Happened Out West

|

1938

| Breaking the Ice

|

1938

| Hawaii Calls

|

1938

| Rawhide

|

1938

| Tarzan's Revenge

|

1938

| Peck's Bad Boy with the Circus

|

1938

| Panamint's Bad Man

|

1938

| Hawaiian Buckaroo

|

1939

| Fisherman's Wharf

|

1939

| Way Down South

|

1939

| Everything's on Ice

|

1939

| Escape to Paradise

|

1940

| Our Town

|

1941

| That Uncertain Feeling

|

1942

| {{sortname|The|Tuttles of Tahiti}}

|

1943

| Stage Door Canteen

|

1943

| Tarzan's Desert Mystery

|

1943

| Tarzan Triumphs

|

1944

| Three Is a Family

|

1945

| Tarzan and the Amazons

|

1947

| Tarzan and the Leopard Woman

|

1947

| {{sortname|The|Red House|The Red House (film)}}

|

1947

| Tarzan and the Huntress

|

1948

| Tarzan and the Mermaids

|

1949

| Tarzan's Magic Fountain

|

1950

| Tarzan and the Slave Girl

|

1950

| Kon-Tiki

| Academy Award, Best Documentary Feature

1951

| Tarzan's Peril

|

1952

| Tarzan's Savage Fury

|

1952

| Under the Red Sea

|

1952

| Without Warning!

|

1953

| Tarzan and the She-Devil

|

1953

| Vice Squad

|

1953

| {{sortname|The|3D Follies|nolink=1}}

|

1955

| Quest for the Lost City

|

1955

| Tarzan's Hidden Jungle

|

1957

| Man on the Prowl

|

1957

| X the Unknown

|

1958

| Tarzan's Fight for Life

|

1958

| Tarzan and the Trappers

| TV pilot

References

{{reflist|30em}}