Rosebud Film Corporation

Year Founded
1927
Location
Los Angeles, CA
Overview
After the Lincoln Motion Picture Company closed in 1923, its secretary Clarence A. Brooks co-founded Rosebud Films which produced race films such as Absent (1928) and Georgia Rose (1930). The latter is one of the earliest sound films and is not thought to have survived, but surviving lobby cards and script pages offer a peek into the production.
About the Filmography
The selected filmography for the years 1897–1971 includes works featured in the exhibition and others that are considered historically, socially, or politically relevant. Hollywood productions are generally excluded; the focus is instead on independent films, particularly the work of Black filmmakers. Black Academy Award nominees and winners are noted. This filmography was compiled using the AFI Catalog of Feature Films and various filmographies, including those by Klotman, Richards, and Hyatt. Primary production materials and contemporaneous film reviews were also consulted. Complete credits for many of the films are unavailable. All films are US productions unless otherwise noted, and distribution credits refer to the original distributors.