
UNIVERSAL STUDIOS
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Info about this studio:
The studio was founded by German
immigrant Carl Laemmle on June 8, 1912. In 1929, Carl Laemmle Jr.
took over the helm and tried to lift the reputation of the
low-budget company by spending more on production and talent. The
Universal horror classics like Frankenstein, Dracula, and The
Mummy were the result of this move, but they were not financially
successful for the company, and they returned to mass-produced
dreck for some time thereafter. By the late 1930s the Laemmle
family were no longer in control.
In 1952, the studio was acquired by the record company Decca.
Decca later sold the Universal City lot to MCA in 1958, and
merged completely with MCA in 1962. Universal finally began to
prosper, with the leadership of Lew Wasserman. This also marked
Universal's entry into the television programming business; MCA
owned Revue Studios, one of the biggest TV studios in Hollywood,
which at the time produced such hits as Leave It to Beaver,
Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and Wagon Train. The studio was
renamed Universal Television, and made its name producing crime
dramas and action/adventure series, such as the 1960s Dragnet
revival, Adam-12, Emergency!, Columbo, Baretta, Knight Rider,
Quantum Leap, and Law & Order. Another television division,
EMKA, Ltd., owns the rights to a majority of Paramount Pictures'
pre-1950 film library.
Three decades of steady success, with the occasional blockbusters
like Jaws and E.T: The Extra-Terrestrial, seemed to poise the
studio for great future potential. However, the era of huge media
mergers that began in the 1980s and continued in the 1990s put
pressure on the firm. Wasserman sought and shepherded an alliance
with Matsushita Electric (parent of Panasonic and other brands).
The cash infusion was helpful, but the corporate culture of the
Japanese firm did not mesh easily with the headstrong old
Hollywood veterans. Matsushita tired of the battle and sold a
controlling share of the studio to the Seagram company in 1995.
Seagram went on to acquire Polygram and other entertainment
properties in order to build a media empire centered on
Universal, but stock prices never took off the way they expected.
In 1998, Universal's TV studios were spun off to USA Networks,
and renamed Studios USA; in 2002, Universal bought back USA's
cable and studio holdings, thus reinstating the Universal
Television name; Universal retained its pre-1998 TV back catalog
through all of this period.
In June 2000, Universal was acquired by the French company
Vivendi, now Vivendi Universal. During this period, the studio
was under the leadership of Ron Meyer, Stacey Snider, and Barry
Diller.
In October 2003, it was announced that Vivendi would be selling
the majority of Universal's holdings (including the studio and
theme parks) to General Electric, parent of television network
(and longtime Universal Television customer) NBC. The merger
cleared regulatory approval in April 2004, and closed on May 12,
2004. As of the closing, GE owns 80% of the combined NBC
Universal, with the remaining 20% kept by Vivendi; Vivendi will
have the option to sell its share starting in 2006. Vivendi
Universal retained Universal Music Group and StudioCanal; there
were rumors of Universal Music being up for sale during the early
days of the NBC-Universal merger talks, but no solid deal ever
surfaced.
Owner(s):
UKNOWN
Movies from this studio in our database:
JLR WEB DESIGNS 2005