Charles Herbert Christie and Alfred Ernest Christie were Canadian motion picture entrepreneurs.
The general office of the Christie Film Company
Al Christie filming a scene for Fair Enough
Charlie and Al Christie caricature (Los Angeles Herald, 1919)
The Nestor Film Company, originally known as the Nestor Motion Picture Company, was an American motion picture production company. It was founded in 1909 as the West Coast production unit of the Centaur Film Company located in Bayonne, New Jersey. While not the first movie studio in Los Angeles, Nestor made great strides on October 27, 1911, by establishing the first permanent motion picture studio in Hollywood, California, and producing the first Hollywood films. The company later merged with its distributor, the Universal Film Manufacturing Company, on May 20, 1912. Nestor remained a recognizable brand name for Universal until at least the middle of 1917.
Nestor Film Company
Blondeau Tavern (1911)
Detail of the above photo Front row: Nestor camera operator Bill Piltz; general manager Al Christie; camera operator Walter Pritchard; Milton H. Fahrney (on horseback), director of Westerns; David Horsley with his young son; camera operator Tom Harding; Thomas Ricketts, director of dramas and comedies.
The Best Man Wins (1911), directed by Thomas Ricketts