Academic Journal

'Use The Songs to Sell Your SHOW!' Sam Goldwyn, The Eddie Cantor Musicals and the development of product-centred marketability.

Bibliographic Details
Title: 'Use The Songs to Sell Your SHOW!' Sam Goldwyn, The Eddie Cantor Musicals and the development of product-centred marketability.
Authors: Selfe, Melanie
Source: Historical Journal of Film, Radio & Television. Dec2020, Vol. 40 Issue 4, p649-682. 34p. 5 Color Photographs, 10 Black and White Photographs.
Abstract: This article advances understanding of Hollywood's relationship to advertising and commerce by demonstrating that deeply embedded product placement is an older practice than current scholarship recognises. Focusing on a series of musical comedies, produced by Samuel Goldwyn and released through United Artists in the early 1930s, it argues that the development of product-centred marketing was shaped by the way different corporate structures affected the ability to control the marketing message, with independent production and non-vertically integrated distribution driving the development of more sophisticated onscreen product integration. Through close analysis of the film texts, their advertising surround and the surviving production documentation, I explore how Goldwyn's approach responded to industrial conditions by making songs the locus for product plugs. I posit that major production numbers, including 'Keep Young and Beautiful', did not merely reflect consumer culture but were explicitly constructed as vehicles to carry embedded advertising. This enabled national and local tie-ups to be structured around strong consumer concepts, but also adapted to suit different exhibition contexts. I address why the dynamics of film history have worked to render these advertising imperatives invisible, and highlight their impact on both Cantor's star performance and the development of Busby Berkeley's directing style. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Subject Terms: *Advertising campaigns, *Advertising media planning, *Sales promotion, Advertising effectiveness
People: Goldwyn, Samuel, 1882-1974
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ISSN: 01439685
DOI: 10.1080/01439685.2020.1730551
Database: Communication & Mass Media Complete
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