Become a Member
Life

Revealed: the truth about the ‘Jewish’ Hollywood

September 5, 2015 06:46
Power: Cecil B DeMille (centre) setting up a scene on the set of the film The Squaw Man in 1931 (Picture: Getty)

By

Michael Freedland,

Michael Freedland

6 min read

Hollywood is the town of legends. And, unusually for anything to do with legends, they are mostly true. But not always. The almost-true one about the few square miles known as Tinseltown is that, like it or not, for the best part of three quarters of a century it was a place controlled by Jews.

The studios, when there were such things, were Jewish-owned and, as that legend goes, they were not always the nicest people in the world, interested only in profits and not at all in art and good taste.

Two things wrong about that. First, that the studios weren't all Jewish-owned; second, they were far from being ignorant men without artistic sense.

Second point first: Harry Warner, the titular boss of Warner Brothers, may have said - if another legend is true, and it probably is - "I don't want that film good, I want it Tuesday", but Sam Goldwyn wanted every scene to look as though it had been designed by the finest artists around, and the stars' dresses created by men and women who could have been Paris couturiers (if the money had been good enough).