Sterling Pictures

Sterling Pictures was a film company during the silent film era. . Henry Ginsberg headed it.[1] Phil Rosen directed many of Sterling's films. H. R. Ebenstein was the manager of sales.[2] It released series starring Alma Hanlon and Jean Sothern. It also contracted with Anna Q. Nilsson.[2] Arthur F. Beck was the company's president.[3] He married actress and screenwriter Leah Baird.

Filmography

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gollark: Wars and pandemics *now* affect everyone while historical ones did not.
gollark: I'd say the problems are more problematic now. Due to greater scale and complexity.
gollark: Without technology we would just have been wiped out in some random population bottleneck.
gollark: There are ways to make things continue to work. I don't know if people will actually do them, but still.

References

  1. Quigley, Martin; Monush, Barry (January 1, 1995). "First Century of Film". Quigley Publishing via page 120.
  2. "Motography". October 6, 1918 via Google Books.
  3. "Dramatic Mirror of Motion Pictures and the Stage". Dramatic Mirror Company. October 6, 1918 via Google Books.
  4. Jacobs, Lea (April 2, 2008). "The Decline of Sentiment: American Film in the 1920s". University of California Press via Google Books.
  5. Korst, Lindsay (January 3, 2016). "Red Signals 1927".
  6. Massa, Steve (April 6, 2013). "Lame Brains and Lunatics". BearManor Media via Google Books.
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