Patrick Montgomery

Patrick Montgomery
Born September 13, 1949 (1949-09-13)
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Nationality American
Alma mater University of Notre Dame
Occupation Film and Photo Archivist
Known for The Man You Loved to Hate, The Compleat Beatles

Patrick Montgomery is an American documentary producer/director and film and photo archivist. He has specialized in making films using archival materials, most notably The Man You Loved to Hate (1979) about the legendary actor/director Erich Von Stroheim and The Compleat Beatles (1982) a two hour documentary about the rise and fall of the world's most famous rock group. He also founded and ran Archive Films/Archive Photos, the largest independent commercial film and photo archive in the U.S. until its acquisition by The Image Bank, a division of Eastman Kodak, in 1997.

Early life and education

Patrick Montgomery was born in Cincinnati, Ohio on September 13, 1949. He graduated from St Xavier High School in 1967 and received a Bachelor of Finance degree from the University of Notre Dame in 1971.

Career

Cincinnati

Montgomery began his career in 1972 as a marketing executive at Audio Visual Enterprises, Inc, a firm founded by former Cincinnati Symphony General Manager Lloyd Haldeman to distribute opera and ballet films for home viewing on videodisc.[1][2]

New York – Killiam Shows and Film Production

Montgomery moved to New York in 1974 and landed a job with Killiam Shows, Inc., a company founded in the early 1950s by Paul Killiam to acquire, restore and distribute American silent films and produce television programs about them.[3][4] While with Killiam he was involved in the restoration and distribution of many classic films, including F.W. Murnau’s Sunrise (1927) and It (1927) starring Clara Bow.[5] He was also a founding member of the Non-Theatrical Film Distributors Association in 1974. His first film as a producer/director (with Luciano Martenengo) was George Melies: Cinema Magician (1978), produced for Blackhawk Films,[6] followed by The Man You Loved To Hate (1979), a co-production with the BBC and Norddeutscher Rundfunk.[7][8][9] In his New York Times review, Vincent Canby called the The Man You Loved To Hate “cinema history of both entertaining and high order.”[7]

In 1979, Montgomery formed Archive Film Productions, Inc. In 1980 he produced the documentary John Schelsinger Directs the Tales of Hoffmann for the newly formed Bravo Channel and in 1981 served as the line producer for an independent feature film called New York Beat, starring a then unknown Jean Michel Basquiat, which was eventually released in 2000 as Downtown 81.[10][11] In 1982, he directed and produced The Compleat Beatles with Delilah Films, which was distributed by MGM/UA Home Video.[12][13][14] and released theatrically by Teleculture, Inc in 1984. The Compleat Beatles was one of the first original productions to be awarded Platinum status by the RIAA for sales of over $2 million in the nascent home video market. This was followed by Rock and Roll: The Early Days (1984) and British Rock: The First Wave (1985), both released by RCA/Columbia Home Video.[15] In 1985 he served as Archival Consultant on eighteen documentaries produced for Pepsi’s A Walk Thru Rock touring show, and in the same capacity on the NBC Network tribute Looney Tunes 50th Anniversary (1986).[16] In 1987 he produced the TV special We’ll Be Right Back about classic television commercials for Nickelodeon, and in 1989 produced Creepy Classics, an original video release for Hallmark Cards about classic horror films. From 1993 to 1995 he served as Executive Producer on a number of programs for A & E's Biography series, including films about Bing Crosby,[17] Sid Caesar,[18] Sammy Davis Jr,[19] Humphrey Bogart,[20] and Milton Berle.[21][22][23]

Archive Films & Archive Photos

In the mid 1980s, Montgomery turned his focus from making documentaries to building an archival stock footage library called Archive Films. By the early 1990s the company had become the largest in the U.S. with its headquarters in New York City and satellite offices in London, Paris, Stockholm, Cologne, Amsterdam, Milan and Tokyo.[24][25][26] He then began to branch out into archival stock photos and acquired the photo agencies Frederick Lewis, Inc and Pictorial Parade, Inc and several other photo collections to form Archive Photos.[27] In addition to its own collections, Archive Photos also represented Reuters, The New York Times, The George Eastman House and others for archival photo licensing.[28][29][30][31][32][33]

In 1997 he sold his company, Archive Holdings, Inc, which by then had grown to 120 employees in the New York office, to The Image Bank, then a division of Eastman Kodak, and continued to run the company until 1999, also serving on The Image Bank’s executive committee.[34][35][36]

Archive Farms Inc

In 2007, Montgomery formed Archive Farms Inc, to manage the archival film and photo collections he had acquired or assembled since selling to The Image Bank, most notably, The Travel Film Archive, which owns the collections of several important travelogue film makers including Burton Holmes,[37] Andre de la Varre, and James Fitzpatrick,[34] and The Bert Morgan Archive, which he acquired from the heirs of high society photographer Bert Morgan in 2009.[38][39][40] The company also represents The Caribbean Photo Archive and The History of Photography Archive, two private collections of 19th century photography assembled by Montgomery over a ten-year period.[41][42] Working from these collections Montgomery has curated several museum exhibitions including Southampton Blue Book, 1930 to 1960: Photographs by Bert Morgan (2014) at the Southampton Historical Museum, and Awakening Jamaica, Photographs by Valentine and Sons, 1891 (2015)] at HistoryMiami., Palm Beach Society Photography of Bert Morgan (2016) at The Preservation Foundation of Palm Beach, and Historic Nassau (2016) at the Spady Cultural History Museum in Delray Beach, Florida.

Other activities

Since 2001 Montgomery has served as a member of the Board of Trustees of The George Eastman House Museum in Rochester, NY. He was named Vice Chairman of the Board in 2004 and has served as Chairman of both the Photography Acquisition Committee and the Conservation Committee.[43] He was also on the Board of Trustees of The Film Forum in New York City from the early 2000s until 2013 and has served on the Advisory Board of Witness from 2001 to 2006.[44]

Filmography

References

  1. "Billboard".
  2. "Billboard".
  3. "NitrateVille.com • View topic - Paul Killiam's silent film narration".
  4. ""Film Notes and Queries: THE KILLIAM COLLECTION: A NEW SOURCE OF VINTAGE SILENTS" by Welsh, J M - Literature/Film Quarterly, Vol. 2, Issue 3, Summer 1974 - Online Research Library: Questia".
  5. "Sunrise (1927)". IMDb. 4 November 1927.
  6. "European Silent Films on Video".
  7. 1 2 http://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/428496/The-Man-You-Loved-to-Hate/overview
  8. "Silent Era : Home Video Reviews".
  9. "Watch The Man You Loved to Hate, the Biography film by Patrick Montgomery - Fandor". Fandor.
  10. "Basquiat And Friends, In Creative Serendipity". The New York Times. 13 July 2001.
  11. Whitney Matheson, USA TODAY (26 June 2014). "'Downtown 81': The classic '80s film gets restored". USA TODAY.
  12. "The Beatles Encyclopedia: Everything Fab Four [2 volumes]".
  13. "Billboard".
  14. Inc, Nielsen Business Media (1982-11-20). Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc.
  15. "Rock'n'Roll - The Early Days". Internet Archive.
  16. "Billboard".
  17. ""Biography" Bing Crosby: America's Crooner (TV Episode 1993)". IMDb. 14 December 1993.
  18. ""Biography" Sid Caesar: Television's Comedy Genius (TV Episode 1994)". IMDb. 12 April 1994.
  19. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0526136/?ref_=nm_flmg_prd_1
  20. WeatherViolet (9 June 1994). "Humphrey Bogart: Behind the Legend (1994)". IMDb.
  21. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0979918/?ref_=nm_flmg_prd_4
  22. "Review/Television; How a Gift For Accents Flowered Into Genius". The New York Times. 12 April 1994.
  23. "Review/Television: Milton Berle -- Mr. Television; A Zillion Gags (Not Counting Repeats)". The New York Times. 15 March 1994.
  24. "Selling History, Reel By Reel, To Today's Media". The New York Times. 9 October 1995.
  25. "Archivist Has The Past At His Fingertips". tribunedigital-chicagotribune.
  26. https://business.highbeam.com/1081/article-1G1-17571839/anatomy-archivist
  27. "Archive Photos. : Tim Soter… blog.".
  28. "REUTERS NEWS PICTURES AVAILABLE THROUGH ARCHIVE PHOTOS".
  29. "Short Takes, December 1997". International Documentary Association.
  30. "Short Takes, December 1999". International Documentary Association.
  31. "Short Takes, December 1996". International Documentary Association.
  32. Julia Miller. (1 July 1994). "COLLECTED BARGAINING AS STOCK COMPANIES EXPAND TO KEEP UP WITH FICKLE DEMANDS FOR NEW (AND OLD) IMAGES, THE ESOTERIC MEETS THE ECLECTIC IN A RANGE OF NOT SO CALM, OFTEN COOL COLLECTIONS".
  33. "Archive Films to represent Prelinger collection".
  34. 1 2 "Getty Images Trumps Gates' Corbis With Acquisition".
  35. "The Image Bank acquires Archive Films/Archive Photos.".
  36. http://www.creativeplanetnetwork.com/news/news-articles/its-small-world-global-networking-shapes-stock-footage-business/381001
  37. "Learning with the Lights Off".
  38. "A Lens Aimed at Southampton High Society".
  39. "A past preserved on Coecles Harbor".
  40. "Icons at Leisure in Long-Ago Summers". The New York Times. 18 May 2014.
  41. "Exhibitions · HistoryMiami". HistoryMiami.
  42. "What Did Jamaica Look Like in 1891?". Caribbean Journal. 8 July 2015.
  43. https://www.eastman.org/sites/default/files/GeorgeEastmanHouse_AR2012_0.pdf
  44. "WITNESS - Patrick Montgomery - WITNESS". WITNESS.
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