Jaxon Film Corporation
Jaxon Film Corporation was a comedy film production company during the silent film era. It was located in Jacksonville, Florida and later Providence, Rhode Island. In 1916, 1917, and 1918 the company released at least 78 comedy shorts. They were marketed as Jaxon Comedies. Billy Ruge was one of the actors who appeared in the company's films as well as Walter Stull, Bobby Burns, and Kate Price. The studio's performers were "poached" from the Vim Comedy Company.[1] The studio released the 12 part serial A Daughter of Uncle Sam in 1918 directed by James C. Morton.
The company was established by Frank A. Tichenor who eventually closed down Jacksonville productions relocating production efforts to Providence, Rhode Island.[2] In 1917 the Providence studio caught fire and had to be rebuilt.[3]
Filmography
- Week-End Shopping (1916)
- The Spy (1917)
- Ambition (1917)
- A Bargain at $ 37.50 (1917)
- Monkey, Maid, Man (1917)
- Strife (1917)
- How it Happened (film) (1917)[4]
- A Triple Entente (1917)[4]
- The Inspector's Wife (1918)
- Double Cross (1918)
- Smashing the Plot (1918)
- The Rich Slave (1920)
References
- Film Censorship in America: A State-by-State History – Page 160 https://books.google.com/books?isbn=1476630127
- Miller, Blair (12 April 2019). "Almost Hollywood: The Forgotten Story of Jacksonville, Florida". Rowman & Littlefield – via Google Books.
- "Motography". 12 April 2019 – via Google Books.
- "Jaxon Film Corporation". BFI.