Warner Bros.-Seven Arts logo
|
|
Industry |
Film Television Music |
---|---|
Genre | Entertainment |
Fate | acquired by Kinney National Company |
Successor |
Warner Home Video (video) Warner Bros. Pictures (film) Warner Bros. Television (television) |
Founded | 1967 |
Defunct | 1970 |
Headquarters | Burbank, California |
Key people
|
Jack L. Warner Kenneth Hyman |
Parent | Independent (1967–1969) Kinney National Company (1969–1970) |
Warner Bros.-Seven Arts, Inc. was an American entertainment company active from 1967 until 1970.
Warner Bros.-Seven Arts started when Seven Arts Productions acquired Jack L. Warner's controlling interest in Warner Bros. for $32 million and merged with it.
The acquisition included the black and white Looney Tunes (plus the non-Harman and Ising Merrie Melodies) library and Warner Bros. Records plus Reprise Records. Later that same year, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts purchased Atlantic Records. Those record labels were combined in 1970 with two other acquisitions (Elektra Records and its sister label Nonesuch Records) in a new holding company, Warner-Elektra-Atlantic, under the direction of Mo Ostin and .
The head of production was Kenneth Hyman, son of Seven Arts co-founder Eliot Hyman. Their first film was Camelot and their last film was Wait Until Dark.
Warner Bros.-Seven Arts was acquired in 1969 by Kinney National Company, who deleted "Seven Arts" from the company name, reestablishing it as Warner Bros. Pictures. Due to a financial scandal over its parking operations, Kinney National spun off its non-entertainment assets in 1972 (as National Kinney Corporation) and changed its name to Warner Communications Inc..