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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › VitaphoneVitaphone - Wikipedia

    Vitaphone was a sound film system used for feature films and nearly 1,000 short subjects made by Warner Bros. and its sister studio First National from 1926 to 1931. Vitaphone is the last major analog sound-on-disc system and the only one that was widely used and commercially successful.

  2. Warner Bros. was allowed to keep the Vitaphone Corporation, but it had to forfeit its partnership with AT&T, and become just another licensee of the proprietary technology. When Western Electric first developed the Vitaphone system, it also discovered a way to encode sound on the same strip of 35mm film that contained the picture.

  3. Contents. Vitaphone. cinematic sound system. Learn about this topic in these articles: motion-picture sound development. In history of film: Introduction of sound. …a sophisticated sound-on-disc system called Vitaphone, which their representatives attempted to market to Hollywood in 1925.

  4. acearchive.org › vitaphoneVitaphone

    Feb 25, 2023 · Vitaphone was a sound film system used by Warner Bros. and First National from 1926 to 1931. It was the last major analog sound-on-disc system, with a separate soundtrack recorded on phonograph records played on a turntable coupled to the projector motor.

  5. Apr 7, 2017 · Founded by Warner Bros. a year before the storied debut of The Jazz Singer (1927), Vitaphone Corp. filmed nearly 2,000 short talkies through 1930, capturing the “anything goes” energy of the Jazz Age and the top talents of the vaudeville circuit.

  6. Vitaphone was a sound film system used for feature films and nearly 1,000 short subjects made by Warner Bros. and its sister studio First National from 1926 to 1931. Vitaphone was the last major analog sound-on-disc system and the only one that was widely used and commercially successful.

  7. Whether Vitaphones debut really thrilled the world or not is debatable, but there’s no denying that it revolutionized motion pictures. Vitaphone became synonymous with sound films—whether they actually “talked” or not—and transformed Warner Bros. into one of the most powerful studios in Hollywood.