kids encyclopedia robot

June Mathis facts for kids

Kids Encyclopedia Facts
Quick facts for kids
June Mathis
June Mathis Who's Who on the Screen.jpg
June Mathis, c.1920
Born
June Beulah Hughes

(1887-01-30)January 30, 1887
Died July 26, 1927(1927-07-26) (aged 40)
Resting place Hollywood Forever Cemetery
Years active 1916–1927
Known for Discovering Rudolph Valentino
Spouse(s)
Sylvano Balboni
(m. 1924)

June Mathis (born June Beulah Hughes, January 30, 1887 – July 26, 1927) was an American screenwriter. Mathis was the first female executive for Metro/MGM and at only 35, she was the highest paid executive in Hollywood. In 1926 she was voted the third most influential woman in Hollywood, behind Mary Pickford and Norma Talmadge. Mathis is best remembered for discovering Rudolph Valentino and writing such films as The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921), and Blood and Sand (1922).

Early life

June Mathis in The Blue Book of the Screen
Photograph published 1923

June Mathis was born June Beulah Hughes in Leadville, Colorado, the only child of Virginia Ruth and Dr. Philip Hughes. Her parents divorced when she was seven and her mother remarried to William D. Mathis, a widower with three children whose name she would eventually adopt as a stage name.

She had been a sickly child and believed she healed herself through her sheer force of will. She believed everything was mental and everyone had certain vibrations, stating, "If you are vibrating in the right place, you will inevitably come in contact with the others who can help you. It's like tuning in on your radio. If you get the right wave-length, you have your station."

Mathis was educated in Salt Lake City and San Francisco. It was while in San Francisco she gained her first stage experience, dancing and doing imitations in vaudeville. At the age of 12 she joined a traveling company and at 17 became an ingenue, performing with Ezra Kendall in The Vinegar Buyer.

Later she appeared in several Broadway shows and toured for four seasons with the female impersonator Julian Eltinge in the widely popular show The Fascinating Widow. Supporting her now twice-widowed mother, she would continue to perform in theatre for the next 13 years.

Career

Screenwriting

Mathis was determined to become a screenwriter and, accompanied with her mother, she moved to New York City, where she studied writing and went to the movies in the evenings. She entered a screenwriting competition; but despite not winning, her entry was so impressive it did bring job offers.

Her first script, House of Tears, would be directed by Edwin Carewe in 1915 and led to a contract in 1918 with Metro studios, later to be merged into MGM. As one of the first screenwriters to include details such as stage directions and physical settings in her work, Mathis saw scenarios as a way to make movies into more of an art form. Much of the standard screenwriting styles can be attributed to her. Mathis later credited her success to a strong concentration on plot and theme: "No story that did not possess a theme has ever really lived.... Occasionally one may make money and perhaps be popular for a time. But in the end it dies."

By 1919 Mathis and her mother had moved to Hollywood. After only a year of screenwriting, she had advanced to the head of Metro's scenario department. She was one of the first heads of any film department and the only female executive at Metro.

During her early years, she had a close association with silent star Alla Nazimova. Their films together can be said to be marked by over-sentimentality; what little praise these films received was due to Nazimova's acting rather the conventional romantic stories.

The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse

In 1921, Richard Rowland, the head of Metro, paid $20,000 and 10% of the gross earning for Vicente Blasco Ibáñez's novel The Four Horseman of the Apocalypse. The epic bestseller had been considered unadaptable by every major studio but Rowland handed the book to Mathis for adaptation and was so impressed with her screenplay that he asked her input on director and star. Mathis had seen Rudolph Valentino in a bit part in Eyes of Youth, and she exerted her influence to cast Valentino. Studio heads resisted hiring an unknown actor for a lead role. Despite her many other accomplishments, this "discovery" would grow to be her best-known act. For the same movie she also insisted the studio hire Rex Ingram as director.

The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse was one of the first films with an anti-war theme. Mathis also injected some early depictions of alternative lifestyles; it featured a scene with German officers coming down the stairs in drag. Of the scene, Mathis later told the Los Angeles Times: "I had the German officers coming down the stairs with women's clothing on. To hundreds of people that meant no more than a masquerade party. To those who have lived and read, and who understand life, that scene stood out as one of the most terrific things in the picture."

Valentino

June Mathis and Rudolph Valentino
Screenwriter June Mathis on the set of Blood and Sand with star and lifelong friend Rudolph Valentino

The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse was a success, grossing $4,500,000 domestically, thus becoming one of the most commercially successful silent films ever made and launching Valentino into stardom. Even before it was released, Valentino was receiving offers from other studios. Taking Mathis' advice, he remained with Metro to get another solid role or two under his belt.

Mathis and Valentino remained friends after Four Horsemen. The older plain-looking Mathis doted on the talented, beautiful young man. Accounts state that Valentino regarded Mathis in a motherly way, calling her "Little Mother". Nita Naldi, who worked with them on Blood and Sand, said: "She mothered Rudy, and my dear she worshiped him and he worshiped her." "She discovered me, anything I have accomplished I owe to her, to her judgment, to her advice and to her unfailing patience and confidence in me", said Valentino on Mathis in a 1923 interview with Louella Parsons.

Mathis looked after Valentino's welfare during his time at Metro, making sure he gained the best parts and was taken care of. When Valentino showed up on the set for The Conquering Power, another Mathis script with Rex Ingram at the helm, his new-found stardom went to his head, along with resentment at working for the same wage of $350 a week. The friction between him and Ingram, and his need for more money to support mounting debts, led Valentino to sign with Famous Players-Lasky (later known as Paramount Pictures) for $1,000 a week.

Mathis was also one of the people who helped bail Valentino out of jail when he was arrested for bigamy, having married Natacha Rambova without finalizing his divorce to Jean Acker. Though the two were inseparable, their relationship became strained during Valentino's marriage to Rambova. When Mathis submitted a script for The Hooded Falcon, one of Valentino's pet projects, the couple deemed it unacceptable and asked to have it rewritten. Mathis took it as a great insult and broke off all contact with Valentino.

Executive

Mathis' position with Metro was called by the Los Angeles Times, "The Most Responsible Job ever Held by A Woman". She was arguably one of the most powerful women in Hollywood, even said to be almost as powerful as Mary Pickford. Mathis had influence over casting, choice of director and many other aspects of production. Her strength lay in careful preparation of the shooting script along with the director, cutting out waste in production while at the same time sharpening narrative continuity.

After she had spent seven years at Metro, Famous Players-Lasky was able to lure her away with the promise that she could continue to write for her protégé Valentino. When Valentino moved to Goldwyn Pictures, she did as well, this time gaining sovereign control.

Greed

Mathis continued to survive in Hollywood despite being involved in two of the greatest financial fiascoes of the 1920s. When Erich von Stroheim presented Goldwyn Pictures with his masterpiece Greed (1924), following Frank Norris's novel McTeague very closely, it was 42 reels and 10 hours long. Stroheim himself realized the original version was far too long, so he reduced it to 24 reels (6 hours), hoping the film could be screened with intermissions in two successive evenings. But Goldwyn executives demanded further cuts. Stroheim allowed his close friend Rex Ingram to reduce it to 18 reels (4½ hours).

However, in the middle of production, Goldwyn had merged with Metro and Louis B. Mayer Pictures to form Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. MGM took Greed out of Stroheim's hands and gave it to Mathis, with orders to cut it even more, which she assigned to a routine cutter, Joseph W. Farnham. The film was then reduced to 13 reels (2½ hours) long. In the process, many key characters were cut out, resulting in large continuity gaps.

There is speculation on whether Mathis took part in the actual cutting. However, for contractual reasons, her name was listed in the credits as a writer, and it was she who would be blamed for what Stroheim and his fans would call "tampering with his genius". In fact, Mathis had worked with Stroheim before and had been fond of his themes, and thus it is thought unlikely she would butcher his film unnecessarily.

Ben-Hur

For the original production of Ben Hur (1925), Mathis fought the studio over the casting and production for many months. It was her idea to film the $1 million script in Italy; the film would eventually come in just under $4 million. When she arrived the original director Charles Brabin, in his words, refused to let her "interfere". The production troubles were numerous, and due to political troubles engulfing Italy at the time, resulted in disputes and delayed permissions. When the sea battle was filmed near Livorno, Italy, many extras had apparently lied about being able to swim. The first attempt to film the chariot race was on a set in Rome, but there were problems with shadows and the racetrack surface. One of the chariots' wheels came apart and the stuntman driving it was thrown in the air and killed.

MGM inherited the production when it took over control of Goldwyn studios; with the film over budget and getting out of control, the studio halted production and relocated the shoot from Italy to California, under the supervision of Irving Thalberg. All of Brabin's footage was reviewed and considered unusable, and MGM would fire Mathis, Brabin, and stars George Walsh and Gertrude Olmstead; Replacing them with director Fred Niblo, screenwriters Bess Meredyth and Carey Wilson, and stars Ramon Novarro and May McAvoy.

After her return, First National hired her as editorial director. She also scripted several successful Colleen Moore pictures including Sally, The Desert Flower, and Irene. Mathis remained at First National for two years, but left over limitations and signed with United Artists; with her husband she made one picture for them, The Masked Woman. The Magic Flame (1927) would be her last picture, and one of her best, due in part to Ronald Colman's performance and Henry King's direction.

Personal life

A short woman with untamed brown hair and a love of Parisian fashion, she was also one of the first "writer-directors" and laid the groundwork for the later development of screenwriters becoming producers. A spiritualist with mystical bents, her scripts featured many heroes with a Christ-like demeanor. A believer in reincarnation, she always wore an opal ring when she wrote, convinced it brought her ideas.

Mathis had been romantically linked to George Walsh and Rex Ingram; however, she returned from Italy engaged to an Italian cinematographer named Silvano Balboni. The couple married on December 20, 1924, at the Mission of St. Cecilia, in Riverside, California.

Death

After Valentino's marriage to Rambova ended in 1925, the two reconciled at the premiere of Son of the Sheik when Valentino spotted Mathis with friends. When Valentino unexpectedly died in August 1926, Mathis offered up what she thought would be a temporary solution; she lent him her spot in the family crypt she had purchased in Hollywood Memorial Cemetery (now called the Hollywood Forever Cemetery). However, when Mathis herself died the following year, the arrangement became permanent.

On July 26, 1927, during the third act of the Broadway show The Squall at the 48th Street Theatre while accompanied by her 84-year-old grandmother Emily Hawkes, Mathis suffered a fatal heart attack. Her last words were reportedly, "Mother, I'm dying!"

Her ashes were returned to California: instead of "evicting" Valentino, Mathis' husband, Sylvano Balboni, moved Valentino to the crypt beside hers, sold the remaining crypt to Valentino's family and returned to Italy. Mathis and Valentino repose side by side to this day.

Filmography

Film credits of June Mathis
Year Title Credit Studio/Distributor Ref(s)
1916 The Dawn of Love Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1916 God's Half Acre Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1916 Her Great Price Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1916 The Sunbeam Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1916 The Upstart Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1916 The Purple Lady Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1917 The Call of Her People Scenario Columbia Pictures
1917 Threads of Fate Scenario Columbia Pictures
1917 A Wife by Proxy Scenario Columbia Pictures
1917 Draft 258 Scenario MGM
1917 Somewhere in America Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1917 His Father's Son Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1917 The Jury of Fate Adaptation MGM
1917 The Barricade (1917 film) Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1917 The Power of Decision Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1917 Red, White and Blue Blood Scenario MGM
1917 A Magdalene of the Hills Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1917 The Millionaire's Double Story Rolfe Photoplays
1917 Miss Robinson Crusoe Story Rolfe Photoplays
1917 The Voice of Conscience Scenario MGM
1917 The Trail of the Shadow Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1917 The Beautiful Lie Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1917 Lady Barnacle Scenario MGM
1917 Blue Jeans Adaptation MGM
1917 Aladdin's Other Lamp Scenario Rolfe Photoplays
1918 Toys of Fate Scenario Screen Classics Inc.
1918 The House of Gold Scenario MGM
1918 His Bonded Wife Scenario MGM
1918 The Legion of Death Screenplay and story MGM
1918 The Silent Woman Scenario MGM
1918 Social Quicksands Scenario MGM
1918 A Successful Adventure Story MGM
1918 Sylvia on a Spree Scenario MGM
1918 To Hell with the Kaiser! Scenario Screen Classics, Inc.
1918 The Winding Trail Story MGM
1918 The Winning of Beatrice Scenario MGM
1918 The Brass Check Scenario MGM
1918 The Claim Scenario MGM
1918 Daybreak Adaptation MGM
1918 Eye for Eye Adaptation Nazimova Productions, Inc.
1918 The Eyes of Mystery Adaptation MGM
1918 Five Thousand an Hour Scenario MGM
1918 The House of Myrth Scenario MGM
1918 Gay and Festive Claverhouse Adaptation MGM
1918 Kildare of Storm Scenario MGM
1918 A Man's World Scenario MGM
1918 Secret Strings Scenario MGM
1918 Social Hypocrites Scenario MGM
1918 The Trail to Yesterday Scenario MGM
1918 With Neatness and Dispatch Scenario MGM
1919 Almost Married Scenario MGM
1919 Johnny-on-the-Spot Scenario MGM
1919 The Great Victory Scenario Screen Classics Inc.
1919 The Parisian Tigress Story MGM
1919 Some Bride Scenario MGM
1919 The Amateur Adventuress Scenario MGM
1919 The Brat Scenario Nazimova Productions, Inc.
1919 Blind Man's Eyes Scenario MGM
1919 The Divorcee Scenario MGM
1919 The Island of Intrigue Scenario MGM
1919 Out of the Fog Scenario MGM
1919 Fair and Warmer Scenario Screen Classics Inc.
1919 Lombardi, Ltd. Scenario Screen Classics Inc.
1919 The Man Who Stayed at Home Scenario Screen Classics Inc.
1919 The Microbe Scenario MGM
1919 The Red Lantern Scenario Nazimova Productions, Inc.
1919 Satan Junior Adaptation MGM
1919 The Way of the Strong Scenario MGM
1920 Hearts Are Trumps Scenario MGM
1920 Old Lady 31 Scenario Screen Classics Inc.
1920 The Right of Way Scenario Screen Classics Inc.
1920 The Price of Redemption Scenario MGM
1920 Polly With a Past Scenario MGM
1920 The Walk-Offs Scenario Screen Classics Inc.
1920 The Willow Tree Scenario Screen Classics Inc.
1920 Parlor, Bedroom and Bath Scenario MGM
1920 The Saphead Scenario MGM
1921 Camille Scenario Nazimova Productions, Inc.
1921 The Conquering Power Adaptation MGM
1921 The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse Screenwriter MGM
1921 The Hole in the Wall Adaptation MGM
1921 The Idle Rich Adaptation MGM
1921 The Man Who Scenario MGM
1921 A Trip to Paradise Scenario MGM
1922 Blood and Sand Screenwriter Famous Players-Lasky
1922 The Golden Gift Story MGM
1922 Hate Adaptation MGM
1922 Kisses Scenario MGM
1922 Turn to the Right Scenario MGM
1922 The Young Rajah Scenario MGM
1923 The Day of Faith Adaptation Goldwyn Pictures
1923 In the Palace of the King Adaptation Goldwyn Pictures
1923 The Spanish Dancer Adaptation Paramount Pictures
1923 Three Wise Fools Screenwriter Goldwyn Pictures
1924 Name the Man Editorial direction Goldwyn Pictures
1924 Three Weeks Editorial direction Goldwyn Pictures
1924 Wild Oranges Editorial direction Goldwyn Pictures
1925 Greed Adaptation and dialogue MGM
Note: Premiered December 4, 1924, but not released until January 26, 1925
1925 Ben-Hur Adaptation MGM
1925 Classified Scenario Corinne Griffith Productions
1925 The Desert Flower Scenario First National Pictures
1925 The Marriage Whirl Editorial direction Corinne Griffith Productions
1925 Sally Scenario First National Pictures
1925 We Moderns Writer First National Pictures
1925 What Fools Men Editorial direction First National Pictures
1926 Irene Editorial direction, continuity First National Pictures
1926 The Far Cry Editorial direction First National Pictures
1926 The Girl from Montmartre Editorial direction First National Pictures
1926 The Greater Glory Scenario First National Pictures
1926 Her Second Chance Editorial director First National Pictures
1926 An Affair of the Follies Scenario Al Rockett Productions
1927 The Magic Flame Continuity Goldwyn Pictures
1927 The Masked Woman Scenario First National Pictures

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: June Mathis para niños

kids search engine
June Mathis Facts for Kids. Kiddle Encyclopedia.