'My voice is clear as a bell in every scene!' How big tobacco bought the big screenIt was the golden age of Hollywood, a time when movies defined who we were and what we did. But it was also the golden age of tobacco sponsorship, a time when tobacco companies paid stars thousands of dollars - as well as a year's supply of cigarettes - to promote their products on and off-screen. A new report shows just how lucrative the tie-up was for some of the biggest stars of the era. In 1937-8, actors including Gary Cooper, Joan Crawford, Clark Gable gable Triangular section formed by a roof with two slopes, extending from the eaves to the ridge where the two slopes meet. It may be miniaturized over a dormer window or entranceway. and Spencer Tracy, were each paid $10,000 (the equivalent to $146,000, or £80,000, in today's money) by American Tobacco to promote its Lucky Strike brand. That year, the cigarette company paid film stars $218,750 - more than $3m at today's prices. The report, published in the journal Tobacco Control, says almost 200 stars, including two-thirds of the top box-office actors of the late 1930s and 1940s, were contracted to tobacco companies. The relationship between cigarettes and the movies, started with the advent of the talkies. In 1927, Al Jolson, star of The Jazz Singer, pitched for Lucky Strike and his studio, Warner Bros BROS Brothers BROS Benefits and Retirement Operations Section (King County, Washington) BROS Barnes and Richmond Operatic Society (London, UK) . "Talking pictures Noun 1. talking picture - a movie with synchronized speech and singing talkie motion picture, motion-picture show, movie, moving picture, moving-picture show, pic, film, picture show, flick, picture - a form of entertainment that enacts a story by sound and demand a clear voice," the star was quoted as saying in a newspaper advert lauding the "toasting" process used in Lucky Strikes. "Toasting kills off all the irritants, so my voice is clear as a bell in every scene. Folks, let me tell you, the good old flavour (jargon) flavour - (US: flavor) 1. Variety, type, kind. "DDT commands come in two flavors." "These lights come in two flavors, big red ones and small green ones." See vanilla. 2. The attribute that causes something to be flavourful. of Luckies is as sweet and soothing sooth·ing adj. Tending to soothe. sooth ing·ly adv.sooth as the best 'Mammy' song ever written." That campaign was the subject of an inquiry by the Federal Trade Commission that concluded that American Tobacco's advertising was misleading. But others followed suit. The same year, director King Vidor said: "It is wonderful to find a cigarette that relaxes your nerves, and at the same time insures you against throat irritation irritation /ir·ri·ta·tion/ (ir?i-ta´shun) 1. the act of stimulating. 2. a state of overexcitation and undue sensitivity.ir´ritative ir·ri·ta·tion n. 1. - a condition from which film directors are bound to suffer." The promotion of cigarettes as sophisticated and healthy was a task that might have been created for the acting profession. In 1937, Carole Lombard was paid to say: "In making Swing High, Swing Low there was an unusual strain on my throat ... I could smoke Luckies all day without throat irritation. Most others on the set also prefer them." The notion of Luckies as the tobacco of choice among film stars was one that American worked hard to create. "It's always easy for me to get a Lucky from Joan Crawford or Clark Gable," Myrna Loy Myrna Loy (August 2 1905 – December 14 1993) was an American motion picture actress. Perhaps her most famous role was as Nora Charles, wife of detective Nick Charles (William Powell), in The Thin Man series. wrote in a signed testimonial in 1937, "or even from most of the newcomers to the studio." By the 1940s, the tobacco companies were sponsoring radio shows featuring the stars relaxing on set and talking about subjects as diverse as their new film and their favourite brand. "You know Lauren, that cigarette I gave you is a Lucky Strike," Jack Benny told Lauren Bacall, the guest on his radio show in the first week of 1947, during the filming of To Have and Have Not To Have and Have Not is a 1937 novel by Ernest Hemingway about Harry Morgan, a fishing boat captain who runs contraband between Cuba and Florida. The novel depicts Harry as an essentially good man who is forced into blackmarket activity by economic forces beyond his control. . "I know, and it's my favourite brand, too," replies Bacall. "They're so round ... so firm ... so fully packed ... so free and easy on the draw." Advertisers worked to ensure smoking was integral to film-making, and that smoke in a film was seen as evidence of artistic endeavour. The truth, argues the report, is that the relationship was created by commercial convenience. "The legacy of cross-promotion during the golden age of Hollywood ... continues to be used to rationalise Verb 1. rationalise - structure and run according to rational or scientific principles in order to achieve desired results; "We rationalized the factory's production and raised profits" rationalize smoking as integral to the art of film-making. Evidence suggests that this integration was a commercial collaboration 'signed, sealed and delivered' by the tobacco companies, major studios and many of the era's best-remembered stars." By the early 1950s the tobacco industry switched its attention to TV. But by 1980, smoking on screen was making a comeback Comeback Australian breed of wool sheep, bred by crossing Merino with Corriedale, Polwarth or Zenith sheep; wool is 21 to 25 microns. It is a registered breed, but the term is more commonly used in the sense of a type of sheep produced by crossbreeding a crossbred Merino back to Merino. , despite increased knowledge of the dangers to health. The controversy over smoking on screen continues today, but the report dismisses opponents of efforts to give films that include smoking an "R" or 18 rating. "The presumption A conclusion made as to the existence or nonexistence of a fact that must be drawn from other evidence that is admitted and proven to be true. A Rule of Law. If certain facts are established, a judge or jury must assume another fact that the law recognizes as a logical ," says the report, "is that mainstream motion pictures are an art form into which social agendas should not intrude intrude, v to move a tooth apically. . The pattern of close cooperation between the film and tobacco industries ... suggests instead that the motion picture industry was always ready to cater to the tobacco industry's commercial agenda."
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