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Burt Kelly
Burt Kelly
from Wikipedia

Burt Kelly (October 6, 1898 – 1983) was an American film producer and writer.[1] He was best known for Columbia Pictures' Blondie series.[2] He founded KBS Productions Inc. in 1932, along with Sam Bischoff and William Saal.[3]

Key Information

Career

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Kelly was a former stock company manager who entered the film industry as a booking agent for the Paramount Publix theater chain. He later functioned as an executive with Educational Pictures, a purveyor of comedy two-reelers, and then Poverty Row’s Tiffany Pictures. In 1932, Kelly founded KBS Productions with Sam Bischoff and William Saal.[4][3] The company thats name was derived from the initials of its three founders took over the former production facilities of Tiffany Pictures where they produced low budget Ken Maynard Westerns, and films such as The Death Kiss with Bela Lugosi, and Sherlock Holmes’ A Study in Scarlet. KBS (also known as Admiral Productions) lasted until late 1933, after which he joined Republic Pictures as an associate producer. In the early 1940s he joined Universal, producing his last movie Blondie's Secret in 1948.

Personal life

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He married actress Adrienne Dore in 1933.

Select filmography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Burt Kelly was an American film producer and writer known for his work on low-budget and genre films during the 1930s and 1940s, including several entries in Columbia Pictures' popular Blondie comedy series. Born on October 6, 1898, in Brooklyn, New York, Kelly began his career in Hollywood and co-founded Select Productions, a low-budget production company, during the 1930s. He produced a variety of films across genres, such as the disaster drama Deluge (1933), the horror film Black Friday (1940), and the mystery Strange Affair (1944). In the mid-1940s, he contributed significantly to the Blondie series, serving as producer on titles including Life with Blondie (1945), Leave It to Blondie (1945), Blondie's Big Moment (1947), and Blondie's Reward (1948). He also received a writing credit for the story of Swing, Sister, Swing (1938). Kelly was married to actress Adrienne Dore. He died on March 5, 1983, in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California.

Early life

Birth and early career

Burt Kelly was born on October 6, 1898, in Brooklyn, New York, USA. Limited verified details are available about his early career before entering film production in the 1930s.

KBS Productions

Founding and operations

Burt Kelly co-founded KBS Productions Inc. in 1932 alongside producers Sam Bischoff and William Saal, with the company name derived from the initials of their last names. KBS Productions was also known as Admiral Productions and operated as a low-budget independent production outfit during the early 1930s. The company took over the former production facilities of Tiffany Pictures following that studio's decline, leveraging Kelly's prior experience there to establish operations. KBS focused primarily on low-budget films, including westerns and other B-pictures typical of Poverty Row productions during the era. KBS Productions continued operations until late 1933, when the company folded. Some accounts note that it briefly shifted to the Admiral Productions banner and associated with RKO for lower-grade output before fully ceasing activity.

Notable films produced

KBS Productions, the independent company co-founded by Burt Kelly, produced several low-budget genre films during its brief operation from 1932 to late 1933, with Kelly actively involved as a producer on many titles, often alongside partners Sam Bischoff and William Saal. The company's output leaned heavily toward Westerns, particularly a string of films starring cowboy actor Ken Maynard, including Tombstone Canyon (1932), Fargo Express (1933), and Phantom Thunderbolt (1933), where Kelly received producer credit in collaboration with Bischoff and Saal. Among the more distinctive releases was Deluge (1933), a disaster-themed action picture in which Kelly was credited as producer (under the name Kelly) together with Bischoff and Saal. KBS also ventured into mystery and horror, producing The Death Kiss (1933) starring Bela Lugosi and A Study in Scarlet (1933), an adaptation featuring Sherlock Holmes, though Kelly's producer contributions to both were uncredited. These titles exemplified Poverty Row filmmaking—quickly made, modestly budgeted genre efforts distributed by companies such as World Wide Pictures, Fox, and RKO—before KBS ceased operations in late 1933.

Republic and Universal Pictures

Work at Republic Pictures

After the closure of KBS Productions in late 1933, Burt Kelly co-headed Select Productions, Inc. with William Saal in 1934, a subsidiary of Consolidated Film Industries that produced several features at Biograph Studio in New York. Select Productions was subsequently absorbed into Republic Pictures following the studio's formation in 1935, resulting in Kelly's brief tenure as an associate producer there during the mid-1930s. In this capacity, he received associate producer credit on at least one confirmed production, The Affairs of Cappy Ricks (1937), directed by Ralph Staub from a story by Peter B. Kyne and screenplay by Lester Cole. This role represented a transitional phase as Kelly adapted from independent production to the emerging B-picture operations of Republic under Herbert J. Yates' consolidation efforts.

Productions at Universal Pictures

In the early 1940s, Burt Kelly transitioned to Universal Pictures, where he served primarily as an associate producer on films spanning the horror and comedy genres. He received associate producer credit on Black Friday (1940), a horror film starring Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi centered on a brain transplant plot. That same year, Kelly was associate producer on The Invisible Woman (1940), a science fiction comedy that continued Universal's Invisible Man series with Virginia Bruce in the lead role. He also held associate producer credit on The House of the Seven Gables (1940), a gothic drama adapted from Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel starring George Sanders and Margaret Lindsay. In 1941, Kelly served as associate producer on Hold That Ghost, a comedy featuring Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. He received a full producer credit on The Black Cat (1941), a horror film starring Basil Rathbone and Hugh Herbert that drew loosely from Edgar Allan Poe's story. These credits reflect Kelly's contributions to Universal's genre-focused slate during this period.

Columbia Pictures

Transition to Columbia

Burt Kelly transitioned to Columbia Pictures in the mid-1940s following his earlier work at Universal Pictures. His initial credit at the studio came as associate producer on the war drama None Shall Escape (1944), which was produced by Samuel Bischoff and focused on the anticipated postwar trials of Nazi leaders. Later in 1944, Kelly served as full producer on two additional Columbia releases: the mystery Nine Girls, centered on a sorority house murder investigation, and the comedy-mystery Strange Affair, starring Allyn Joslyn and Evelyn Keyes. These projects marked his establishment as a producer at the studio during this period.

Other Columbia productions

In addition to producing multiple entries in the long-running Blondie series (including credited and uncredited roles on films from 1945 to 1948), Burt Kelly produced or associate produced a number of other films for Columbia Pictures during the 1940s. These projects spanned genres including drama, mystery, comedy, and adventure, showcasing his versatility beyond the studio's signature family comedies. Among his notable non-Blondie efforts was the associate production of None Shall Escape (1944), directed by André de Toth. The film presented the career of a Nazi officer through flashback testimonies at a postwar international war crimes tribunal, marking it as one of the earliest Hollywood depictions of Nazi atrocities against Jews. It received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Story. Kelly also produced Strange Affair (1944), a comedy-mystery, and Nine Girls (1944), a mystery revolving around sorority members and a murder investigation. In 1946, he served as associate producer on One Way to Love and producer on Meet Me on Broadway, the latter a musical comedy about a Broadway director's ambitions to stage his own productions independently. His final Columbia production outside the Blondie franchise was The Swordsman (1948), an adventure film set in late 17th-century Scotland. These films reflected Columbia's varied B-picture output during the decade, with Kelly contributing to both dramatic prestige projects and lighter entertainments.

Blondie series

Role as producer

Burt Kelly served as producer for several installments of Columbia Pictures' Blondie comedy film series during the mid-to-late 1940s, contributing to the long-running B-movie franchise based on Chic Young's popular comic strip. These films typically featured Penny Singleton and Arthur Lake in the lead roles of Blondie and Dagwood Bumstead, with Kelly overseeing production on entries released between 1945 and 1948. He received producer credit on Leave It to Blondie (1945) and Life with Blondie (1945), two consecutive releases that continued the series' family-oriented humor and domestic misadventures. In 1946, Kelly produced Blondie's Lucky Day and Blondie Knows Best, both credited. His work continued in 1947 with Blondie's Big Moment, Blondie's Holiday, Blondie in the Dough, and Blondie's Anniversary, each maintaining the series' formula of lighthearted comedy centered on the Bumstead family's everyday challenges. Kelly's final contributions to the series came in 1948 with Blondie's Reward, where he received producer credit, and Blondie's Secret, which listed him as an uncredited producer. Across these ten films, his involvement helped sustain the Blondie series as a reliable low-budget offering during the postwar years.

Personal life and death

Marriage and family

Burt Kelly married actress Adrienne Dore in 1932. The couple remained married until Kelly's death in 1983. The couple had no children. Kelly had no other marriages.

Later years and passing

After concluding his producing career with films including the Columbia Pictures production Blondie's Secret in 1948, Burt Kelly retired from the motion picture industry with no further credited productions. He resided in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, during his later years. Burt Kelly died on March 5, 1983, in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, at the age of 84.
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