Sat May 12, 2012 11:14 pm
After seeing this poster for Don Juan's Three Nights, I looked up information on the movie. According to IMDb, Henry Hobart Productions was the production company for this movie and two other silent movies distributed by First National Pictures.
1926 Don Juan's Three Nights
1927 The Crystal Cup
1927 No Place to Go
The next movie Hobart produced, Sailors' Wives (1928), was a First National picture. No more Henry Hobart productions. When Warner Bros. took over First National in September 1928, Hobart seems to have been given the heave-ho. He managed to land at RKO in 1929, which kept him very busy as a producer and associate producer through 1931, when he falls off the IMDb database after the movie High Stakes. That August 18, 1931 release was also the final movie for Mae Murray.
Hobart died in 1951. His wife, actress Olive Tell, also died in 1951. An IMDb mini-biography states she died of heart failure on June 8, 1951. Wikipedia indicates the actress died in Bellevue Hospital from a fractured skull suffered at her residence in the Dryden Hotel at 150 East 39 Street, NYC. When I first read the cause of death, heartless person that I am, I could only think of that Henny Youngman joke where the guy describes how his three wives died. [“My first wife died from eating poison mushrooms. Strangely enough, my second wife also died of eating poison mushrooms.” Henny then asks what was the cause of death for the guy’s third wife. He answers, “Fractured skull. She wouldn’t eat the. . .” I know, I wrote the joke wrong.]
The record seems to show that Henry Hobart arrived in Hollywood like a ball of fire. Even after he lost his independent studio nameplate, he continued to produce “A” movies for First National utilizing the studio’s top stars and directors. He married Hollywood actress Olive Tell and the future looked bright for him. In the space of 5 years, with help from the Depression, Hobart’s Hollywood career was over.
I wonder if there is a back story to the timing of Olive Tell’s death.