New York-born Nat Levine got his start in show business when he dropped
out of high school to take a job as an accountant with the Loew's
theater chain, and eventually worked his way up to become personal
secretary to
Marcus Loew. Levine soaked up
as much knowledge about the film business as he possibly could, and in
1926 he and a few investors produced a serial called
The Silent Flyer (1926), which
they sold to Universal Pictures. Emboldened by the film's success, the
next year Levine founded his own production company, Mascot Pictures,
which specialized in serials. The coming of talking pictures didn't
deter Mascot from its serial production, and in 1931 it produced
The Phantom of the West (1930),
the company's first all-talking picture. Although Mascot produced a few
features, the vast majority of its output was serials, starring, among
others,
Tom Tyler,
Harry Carey and
John Wayne (for better or worse,
Levine also was responsible for the birth of the "singing cowboy" by
bringing
Gene Autry to the screen).
His most notable success was producing the
Tom Mix serial
The Miracle Rider (1935), which
netted over $1 million (Levine dangled $10,000 a week to pull a
cash-strapped Mix out of retirement and shot the chapters quickly).
Mascot's western, action and sci-fi serials were immensely popular, and
in a move to expand production, Levine signed a lease option on the old
Mack Sennett Studios facility, envisioning consolidating several
independent production companies as a movie studio version of General
Motors. In 1935 Levine and
Herbert J. Yates, the wealthy president
of Consolidated Film Labs, arranged to merge Mascot with Monogram
Pictures, Victory Pictures and a few other independents to form
Republic Pictures. On paper the deal probably looked good, but in
reality Levine signed a deal with the devil--in the form of Mr. Yates,
an autocratic, hard-nosed businessman who retained control of the
studio despite it ostensibly having a separate production chief,
Levine, who was put in charge of producing Republic's westerns and
serials. While running Mascot Levine had perfected the technique of
using separate units for shooting his serials--one unit shooting all
the exposition and dialogue scenes and the second simultaneously doing
all the interior and exterior action scenes (brawls, gun battles,
chases, etc.)--and he brought that technique with him to Republic.
Yates, however, proved to be a difficult man to work with (producers
Trem Carr and
W. Ray Johnston of Monogram left
Republic within a year because they fought constantly with Yates, and
they re-formed Monogram).
By late 1938 Yates wanted Levine gone; the two men eventually agreed to
a buyout (which reportedly netted Levine more than $1 million). The
money was not as much of a blessing as it would seem, however. Levine,
who had been an inveterate gambler all his life, now found himself with
two things he seldom had before: plenty of money and plenty time on his
hands, and unfortunately he spent most of both at the racetrack. Before
long all the money he had made on the buyout had been blown on the
ponies, and he found himself not only unemployed but divorced and
broke. However, he had become friendly with MGM chief
Louis B. Mayer--they both shared a keen
interest in horses, Mayer in breeding them and Levine in betting on
them--and Mayer gave him a job at the studio in the "B" unit. Levine,
who had always run his own operation, couldn't adjust to being a "hired
gun", however, and before long he and MGM parted ways. He took a job
managing a movie theater in Redondo Beach, California. It apparently
suited him, as he spent the next 20 years there. By the late 1960s,
though, his health started to deteriorate, and he was admitted to the
Motion Picture Country Home in Woodland Hills, California. While there
he granted a handful of interviews but remained cautious of anyone
using him to meet other more notable residents. He died at the facility
in 1989.