It was in April of 1994 that a rambunctious rabble-rousing media mogul named Ted Turner and husband to Jane Fonda at the time launched Turner Classic Movies (TCM) at a Times Square celebration surrounded by Hollywood legends and former Hollywood Reporter columnist Robert Osborne. A movie buff from Atlanta whose favorite film was Gone with the Wind, Turner bought MGM’s library of 2,200 films made before 1986.
For the same man who launched CNN and was the owner of the Atlanta Braves among countless other projects, TCM was perhaps the closest to his heart. And as it turns out, to movie fans all over the world as well.
In the last 30 years, the franchise has grown to include classic boat cruises, an annual film festival, a wine club, and podcasts with Hollywood legends like Pam Grier and Peter Bogdanovich. But probably more significant than anything, TCM has performed a cultural service by introducing a whole new generation to silent movies and film noir. Through hundreds of interviews with Hollywood legends, forgotten stars like Marie Windsor were brought back to life with refreshed fan bases via a unique hosted format.
Film historian Osborne performed as host up until 2016 and the channel now boasts a lineup that includes director and president of the Academy of Museum Jacqueline Stewart, who introduced Silent Sunday Nights. Also part of the stable are Dave Karger, Ben Mankiewicz, Alicia Malone, and the dashing and debonair Eddie Muller, whose Noir Alley on Saturday nights has developed a huge cult following and has spawned an explosion of noir film festivals.
“TCM has been vital to the resurrection of forgotten films,” Muller says. “Some restored movies never reach an audience beyond the festival circuit, but TCM reaches hundreds of thousands of viewers at once, which is essential to the mission of film preservationists. TCM has been crucial to the efforts of my Film Noir Foundation, providing valuable underwriting in addition to the vast exposure we…
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