Here is an example of how the Hollywood Studio/Star System worked in the 1930's. Paramount Studio's promoted True Confession, a 1937 screwball comedy film starring Carole Lombard, Fred MacMurray, and John Barrymore, by running a "Miss Typical America" contest in a Maybelline advertisement. The winner, Eleanor Fisher is given a small part in the film and the big teen story is splashed in True Confession magazine.
Lombard's career had been flying high since the release of Twentieth Century in 1934, which had begun her friendship with Barrymore. Although Barrymore, by 1937, had become an uncontrollable alcoholic and his career was severely fumbling, Lombard personally requested him for the role of Charley Jasper.
Helen and Ken are a pretty strange couple. She is a pathological liar, and he is a scrupulously honest (and therefore unsuccessful) lawyer... See full summary »
A straight arrow lawyer has his hands full when his wife implicates herself in a murder she didn't commit. When a blackmailer gets involved, the story becomes more comical and convoluted.
Cover also painted by Zoe Mozart. Carole Lombard appeared in the February 1938 True Confessions Magazine, which came out at the same time as the film was being shown at neighborhood movie houses.
In the end, the film was not a great success and Eleanor Fisher went back to being anonymous. However the Hollywood Studio-Star System was great as far as publicity was concerned. Maybelline sold truck loads of mascara, the Stars added more luster to their famous names and Paramount continued to bean ever expanding movie factory. So I guess in this instance, I can't say anything bad about The System, because there's actually no such thing as bad publicity... Why?...
because it's still PUBLICITY.