Frank J. Marion

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Frank Joseph Marion (c.1870 - March 28, 1963) was an American motion picture pioneer.

At the turn of the 20th Century when the film industry was still in its infancy, Frank Marion was employed at Biograph Studios in New York City as a sales manager as well as a screenwriter in collaboration with head writer Wallace McCutcheon. In 1907, Marion along with Biograph production manger Samuel Long, left the company to form their own film production business. Needing capital, they obtained financial backing from wealthy Chicago businessman and film distributor, George Kleine. Using their last name initials KLM, they called their new venture the Kalem Company.

Immediately successful, Marion proved to be an innovator and a businessman with a social conscience when he raised actor's wages to five dollars a day, thereby forcing the rest of the industry to follow suit. The Kalem company achieved a first in the film industry when Frank Marion sent director Sidney Olcott and a crew to Ireland in 1910 to make the first ever motion picture to be shot on location outside of the United States. Two years later, he sent Olcott's crew to Palestine where they filmed From the Manger To the Cross which in 1998 was selected for the National Film Registry of the United States Library of Congress. In November, 1917, given his experience in the film industry, Marion was appointed to be the director of the offices the Committee on Public Information created in Spain and Italy.

After ten years in business, the Kalem Company was sold to Vitagraph Studios and Frank Marion became part of Vitagraph management.

Frank Marion died in 1963 in Stamford, Connecticut.