Any assessment of Hollywood movie making must begin with some discussion of sound
enhancement to film. The Jazz Singer is legendary as the first sound film. It was
made in 1927 and introduced Al Jolson, a New York vaudeville and stage performer.
The film created a tremendous demand for sound by the public when it was released
in 1929 and the studios heard that demand!
Sound with film had a thirty year history prior to The Jazz Singer. There were many
pioneers in the field in the early days. Each had a name for his technique.
Beginning as early as 1889, W.K.L. Dickson made a synchronization of word and picture
using his kinetograph, the first such an attempt in America or elsewhere.
The Edison Company attempted and succeeded in making a crude version of Mother Goose
in 1912. The nickelodeons, from 1908 onward, used sound to enliven their presentations.
After World War I, sound took on a new life. Synchronization, sound to film, done by
Lee DeForrest, another pioneer, solved some of the problems of amplification. Bell
Telephone's research lab, Western Electric, developed and sold a sound-on-film disc
process called "Vitaphone" in 1925. A year later, Bell Telephone offered their system
to Warner Brothers, who saw the potential and bought the patent. From a small
operation, Warner Brothers Studio, within three years, expanded enough to be included
in fierce competition with Loew,'s Zukor's and First National, all film and
distribution companies. Will Hayes, guardian of movie morals, was the first to
appear in a sound film with a welcome address to theater patrons in 1926. This
venture was followed by others; a concert by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra
plus stars from opera, concert and music hall performers.
William Fox was another ambitious and visionary producer who stepped into the
competition. His system was called "Movietone". It was he who developed the first
filmed newsreels. In spite of these attempts, it was the aforementioned The
Jazz Singer that set the stage for movie making with sound, such a vital and
enriching component to the medium.
The new technique necessitated the process of installing sound equipment in the
entire chain of theaters, a costly and time consuming process for each distributor.
Sound also affected the actors and directors. Foreign stars, whose accents were
not acceptable, rendered them dispensable. Americans whose voices didn't match
their screen personas were also liabilities. Diction coaches were hired but most
of the players were simply not able to overcome their vocal problems. With the
advent of sound came dialogue writers, screenwriters and playwrights. Many felt
the movies were in danger of becoming imitations of the stage. That was not to be.