Sir Run Run Shaw (center) with acclaimed director Otto Preminger (left) at Jalan Ampas studio, 1958
Shaw Vee Ngok, Manager of Jalan Ampas studio
Kenduri prayer feast prior to the start of P Ramlee's Musang Berianggut, 1959
It helped that the actors' quarters were at Boon Teck Road which was just around the corner from the studio.
Research, brainstorming, and rehearsals would occur before, during and after their daily shoots.
This was to ensure the results came out nothing less than perfect.
For more than two decades, the cast and crew of MFP produced over 160 films, a few of them in scope and colour. Their prolific output ranged from six to ten films per year, entertaining audiences in Singapore, Malaya and Indonesia.
A special effects make up person hard at work.
A makeup unit at Jalan Ampas studio.
Artist at work in the Jalan Ampas art department
Sound boom on a film set.
A vocal recording session
The sound crew at Jalan Ampas studio doing a final mixdown.
The synchronisation of sound on film.
Building props for the film sets
Editing of film on a Moviola
A miniature ship for filming
These were a draw because the settings, themes and language were familiar, the same reasons that make local movies a draw today.
Often, a mix of Malay pantuns and proverbs were incorporated into the films that served to educate the audience.
Although many of the stories came from the bangsawan, some of the stories were of Chinese and Indian origin.
Some were used to enhance the main narrative by revealing characters' emotions and desires, influenced in no small part by Bollywood and Hollywood musicals of the 1930s, 40s and 50s.
Others served as 'comic relief' for particularly intense films such as horror films.
Booking a popular Malay film into cinemas to fall on Hari Raya (Malay New Year), posed its own challenges.
In Singapore, the manager of the Sky theatre would scan the midnight sky in order to spot the moon.
Once the lunar sign is seen, the word would go out to the Straits Times office next door. There, the newspaper advertisement for the Malay film would be rushed in time for the next morning's paper.
P Ramlee going through a script
Tengku Abdul Rahman Malaysia's Premier visits Shaw Studio in 1967 to see the shooting of his novel 'King of the Bloodsuckers'.
Sky Theatre in Great World Amusement Park, Singapore