A history of the Hollywood film industry as a modern system of
labor, this book reveals an important untold story of an
influential twentieth-century workplace. Ronny Regev argues that
the Hollywood studio system institutionalized creative labor by
systemizing and standardizing the work of actors, directors,
writers, and cinematographers, meshing artistic sensibilities with
the efficiency-minded rationale of industrial capitalism. The
employees of the studios emerged as a new class: they were wage
laborers with enormous salaries, artists subjected to budgets and
supervision, stars bound by contracts. As such, these
workers--people like Clark Gable, Katharine Hepburn, and Anita
Loos--were the outliers in the American workforce, an extraordinary
working class.
Through extensive use of oral histories, personal correspondence,
studio archives, and the papers of leading Hollywood luminaries as
well as their less-known contemporaries, Regev demonstrates that,
as part of their contribution to popular culture, Hollywood studios
such as Paramount, Warner Bros., and MGM cultivated a new form of
labor, one that made work seem like fantasy.