Kay-Bee Pictures
Kay-Bee Pictures was a film company. Its executives included Thomas Ince. The company's mottos included "Every picture a headliner" and "Kay-Bee stands for Kessel and Baumann and Kessel and Baumann stands for quality", referring to Adam Kessel and Charles Baumann.[1] It was party of the New York Motion Picture Company and was used after a settlement with rival Universal Pictures to end the film division named 101 Bison.[2] Anna Little was one of its stars.[3]

Poster for The Coward
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Ad for The Redskin Duel, a rerelease of The Death Mask (1914)
Filmography
    
- The Paymaster's Son (1913)
 - The Sergeant's Secret (1913)
 - Love's Sacrifice (1914)
 - Mother of the Shadows (1914)
 - The Death Mask (1914)
 - The Geisha (1914)
 - The Golden Claw (1915)
 - The Winged Idol (1915)
 - The Coward (1915)
 - The Famine (1915)
 - The Beckoning Flame (1915)
 - Civilization's Child (1916)
 - Somewhere in France (1916)
 - The Raiders (1916)
 - Hell's Hinges (1916)
 - The Return of Draw Egan (1916)
 - The Three Musketeers (1916)
 - The Stepping Stone (1916)
 - The Wolf Woman (1916)
 - The Corner (1916)
 - The Apostle of Vengeance (1916)
 - The Weaker Sex (1917)
 - The Clodhopper (1917)
 - The Hater of Men (1917)
 - The Bride of Hate (1917)
 - The Millionaire Vagrant (1917)
 - The Gunfighter (1917)
 - Happiness (1917)
 
References
    
- "Motion Picture News". Motion Picture News Incorporated. December 21, 1912 – via Google Books.
 - Tasker, Yvonne (August 19, 2004). The Action and Adventure Cinema. Routledge. ISBN 9781134564941 – via Google Books.
 - "To-day's Cinema News and Property Gazette". Amer. Company, Limited. December 21, 1913 – via Google Books.
 
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