#27: His Relationship with Warner Bros. Studio Head Jack L. Warner Becomes Increasingly Strained
During the late 1940s, his professional relationship with Warner Bros. studio head Jack L. Warner became increasingly tense. Like many actors under the studio system, he worked under contract, which often limited the types of roles he could accept.

Disagreements developed over film choices, scheduling, and creative control. As his popularity grew, he sought greater influence over the projects he appeared in. These tensions reflected broader changes in Hollywood as major stars began pushing back against traditional studio authority.
