and Fox, Hollywood's other vanguard sound studio, were already financially and technologically aligned with ERPI, a subsidiary of AT&T's Western Electric division.
However, its hopes of joining in the anticipated boom in sound movies faced a major hurdle: Warner Bros. The Radio Corporation of America (RCA) controlled an advanced optical sound-on-film system, Photophone, recently developed by General Electric, RCA's parent company. Its success prompted Hollywood to convert from silent to sound film production en masse. released The Jazz Singer, the first feature-length talking picture. In 1989, this business, with its remaining assets, including the trademarks and remake rights to many classic RKO films, was sold to new owners, who now operate the small independent company RKO Pictures LLC. In 1981, broadcaster RKO General, the corporate heir, revived the studio as a production subsidiary, RKO Pictures Inc. The original RKO Pictures ceased production in 1957 and was effectively dissolved two years later. After years of disarray and decline under his control, the studio was acquired by the General Tire and Rubber Company in 1955. Maverick industrialist Howard Hughes took over RKO in 1948. RKO was also responsible for notable co-productions such as It's a Wonderful Life and Notorious, and it also distributed many celebrated films by animation producer Walt Disney (from 1937 to the mid-1950s) and leading independent producer Samuel Goldwyn. The studio produced two of the most famous films in motion picture history: King Kong and Citizen Kane. The work of producer Val Lewton's low-budget horror unit and RKO's many ventures into the field now known as film noir have been acclaimed, largely after the fact, by film critics and historians. Actors Katharine Hepburn and, later, Robert Mitchum had their first major successes at the studio. RKO has long been renowned for its cycle of musicals starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in the mid-to-late 1930s. By the mid-1940s, the studio was under the control of investor Floyd Odlum. RCA chief David Sarnoff engineered the merger to create a market for the company's sound-on-film technology, RCA Photophone. Kennedy's Film Booking Offices of America (FBO) studio were brought together under the control of the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) in October 1928. The business was formed after the Keith-Albee-Orpheum (KAO) theater chain and Joseph P. (a subsidiary of Radio-Keith-Orpheum, aka: RKO) it was one of the Big Five studios of Hollywood's Golden Age. In its original incarnation, as RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. RKO Pictures was an American film production and distribution company. Radio Corporation of America ( Technicolor SA).