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๐ŸปCalifornia History Unit 10 Review

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10.3 Hollywood and the rise of the entertainment industry

๐ŸปCalifornia History
Unit 10 Review

10.3 Hollywood and the rise of the entertainment industry

Written by the Fiveable Content Team โ€ข Last updated September 2025
Written by the Fiveable Content Team โ€ข Last updated September 2025
๐ŸปCalifornia History
Unit & Topic Study Guides

Hollywood's rise in the 1920s transformed California into the global film capital. From the first LA studio in 1911, major players like Paramount and MGM flocked to the state, drawn by its perfect filming conditions and cheap labor.

The big studios dominated every aspect of filmmaking, from production to distribution. They shaped American culture, influencing fashion, values, and social attitudes. Hollywood's reach extended globally, exporting American culture and dominating international markets.

The Rise of Hollywood and the Entertainment Industry

Development of Hollywood film industry

  • Early film industry established in California in 1911 with the first movie studio in Los Angeles
  • Abundant sunshine, diverse landscapes (beaches, mountains, deserts), and inexpensive labor made California an ideal location for filming
  • Major studios (Paramount, MGM, Warner Bros.) relocated from New York to Hollywood in the 1910s and 1920s, establishing a vertically integrated studio system that controlled production, distribution, and exhibition

Role of movie studios

  • Oligopoly of major studios dominated the film industry, controlling all aspects of filmmaking and distribution
  • Owned theater chains for exclusive screenings of their films, ensuring maximum profits
  • Implemented the studio system with long-term contracts for actors, directors, and other talent, often typecasting actors in specific roles or genres
  • Exerted strict control over the creative process and content of films to maintain a consistent brand image and appeal to mass audiences

Hollywood's cultural influence

  • Shaped American cultural values and norms by promoting consumerism, materialism, and glamorous lifestyles through product placement and depictions of wealth and fame
  • Influenced fashion trends, hairstyles, and beauty standards, with moviegoers emulating the styles of popular actors and actresses
  • Reflected and shaped social attitudes towards race, gender, and sexuality, often reinforcing stereotypes and traditional roles
  • Exported American culture and values to international audiences through the global distribution of Hollywood films, dominating foreign markets and influencing filmmaking practices worldwide

Experiences in 1920s Hollywood

  • Actors faced strict control by studios through long-term contracts, limiting their creative freedom and ability to choose roles
  • Typecasting pigeonholed actors into specific genres or character types (romantic lead, villain, comic relief), making it difficult to break out of established roles
  • Pressure to maintain a public image consistent with their on-screen persona, blurring the lines between their professional and personal lives
  • Directors and creative professionals navigated the tension between artistic vision and studio control, balancing innovation with the need to produce commercially successful films
  • Other industry professionals (writers, technicians) worked within the hierarchical structure of the studio system, facing long hours and demanding schedules but benefiting from steady employment and opportunities for skill development