20th Century Fox
 |
20th Century Fox logo |
 |
Fox Plaza, the company headquarters. |
Twentieth (20th) Century Fox, shorthand for Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation, is one of the major movie studios, located in the Century City area of Los Angeles, California, USA, just west of Beverly Hills. The studio is a subsidiary of News Corporation, the media conglomerate controlled by Rupert Murdoch.
The company is the result of a 1935 merger of two entities,
Fox Film Corporation founded by
William Fox in
1914, and
Twentieth Century Pictures, begun in
1933 by
Darryl F. Zanuck,
Joseph Schenck,
Raymond Griffith and
William Goetz. William Fox, a pioneer in creating the theater "chain," began producing films in 1914, and in 1917 hit the jackpot when he offered the sensation of her time,
Theda Bara. Always more of an entrepreneur than a showman, Fox concentrated on acquiring and building theaters; pictures were secondary. When sound came along, Fox acquired the rights to a German sound-on-film process which he dubbed "Movietone," and in 1926 began offering films with a music-and- effects track. The following year he began the weekly "Fox Movietone News" feature, which ran until 1963. The growing company needed space, and in 1926 Fox acquired three-hundred acres in the open country west of Beverly Hills and built "Movietone City," the best-equipped studio of its time.
When rival
Marcus Loew died in 1927, Fox offered to buy the Loew family's holdings; Loew's Inc. controlled more than two-hundred theaters as well as the
MGM studio. When the family agreed to the sale, the merger of Fox and Loew's Inc. was announced in 1929. But MGM studio-boss
Louis B. Mayer, not included in the deal, fought back; using political connections, he called on the Justice Department's anti-trust unit block the merger. Fate favored Mayer; Fox was badly injured in a car wreck, and by the time he recovered, the 1929 stock market crash had taken most of his fortune, and put an end to the Loew's merger.
Over-extended, near bankruptcy, Fox was stripped of his empire. Fox Film, with more than five-hundred theaters, was placed in receivership; a bank-mandated reorganization propped the company up for a time, but it was clear a merger was the only way Fox Film could survive.
At
Warner Brothers, production-head Darryl Zanuck was in a feud over money; tight-fisted Warners had cut costs in the depression by reducing salaries. When Zanuck asked for his pay to be restored, they refused, and he quit. Days later he announced the formation of a new company
Twentieth Century Pictures, in partnership with Joseph Schenck, president of United Artists. Begun in mid-1933, releasing four to six pictures a year through United Artists, Twentieth Century was a success, in part due to financial backing from L.B. Mayer and
Nicholas Schenck, Joe's brother and head of Loews.
Two years later, Joe Schenck and Fox Film management agreed to a merger; Zanuck was to head production, and Schenck would be chief executive. Observers of this mouse-and-elephant combination expected that the new company would be called "Fox-Twentieth Century." But taking the name
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, the new company was created on May 31,
1935.
Aside from the theater chain and a first-rate studio lot, Zanuck and Schenck there wasn't much else to Fox Film. The studio's biggest star,
Will Rogers, died in a plane crash weeks after the merger. Its leading female star,
Janet Gaynor, was fading in popularity. Promising leading men
James Dunn and
Spencer Tracy had been dropped because of heavy drinking. Zanuck quickly signed young actors who would carry Twentieth Century-Fox for years:
Tyrone Power,
Don Ameche,
Henry Fonda, ice-skater
Sonja Henie, and
Betty Grable. And also on the Fox payroll he found two players whom he would build into the studio's leading assets,
Alice Faye and seven-year-old
Shirley Temple.
Favoring popular biographies and musicals, Zanuck built Fox back to profitability. Thanks to record attendance during World War II, Fox passed RKO and mighty MGM to become the third-most profitable studio. While Zanuck went off for eighteen months' war service, junior partner William Goetz kept profits high by emphasizing light entertainment; the studio's - indeed the industry's, biggest star was creamy blonde Betty Grable. But when Zanuck returned in 1943 he intended to make Fox's output more serious-minded. During the next few years, with pictures like
Wilson,
Gentleman's Agreement,
The Snake Pit,
Boomerang and
Pinkie, Zanuck established a reputation for provocative, adult films. Fox also specialized in adaptations of best-selling books and Broadway musicals.
After the war audiences drifted away, and the arrival of television hastened the process. Fox held on to its theaters until a court-mandated divorce; they were spun off as Fox National Theaters in 1953. That year, with attendance at one-half 1946's level, Fox gambled on an unproven gimmick. Noting that the two movie sensations of 1952 had been Cinerama, which required three projectors to fill a giant curved screen, and "Natural Vision" 3-D, which got its effects of depth by requiring the use of polarized glasses, Fox mortgaged its studio to buy rights to a French anamorphic projection system which gave a slight illusion of depth without glasses. In February, 1953, Zanuck announced that henceforth all Fox pictures would be made in
CinemaScope. To convince theater owners to install this new process, Fox agreed to help pay conversion costs (about $25,000 per screen); and to insure enough product, Fox gave access to CinemaScope to any rival studio choosing to use it. Seeing the box-office for the first two CinemaScope features,
The Robe and
How to Marry a Millionaire, Warners, MGM, Universal and Columbia quickly adopted the process.
CinemaScope brought a brief up-turn in attendance, but by 1956 the numbers again began to slide. That year Darryl Zanuck announced his resignation as head of production. Officially attributed to burn-out, rumors persisted that Mrs. Zanuck had threatened divorce (in community-property California) after discovering Zanuck's affair with actress Bella Darvi. Zanuck moved to Paris, setting up as an independent producer; he did not set foot in California again for fifteen years.
His successor, producer
Buddy Adler, died a year later. Chairman
Spyros Skouras brought in a series of production executives, but none had Zanuck's touch. By the early
1960s Fox was in trouble. A remake of Theda Bara's
Cleopatra had begun in 1959 with
Joan Collins in the lead; as a publicity gimmick producer
Walter Wanger offered one million dollars to
Elizabeth Taylor if she woud star; Taylor accepted, and costs for
Cleopatra began to escalate. As
Cleopatra's budget passed the ten-million dollar mark, Fox sold its back lot (now the site of
Century City) to Alcoa in 1961 to raise cash. With few pictures on the schedule, Skouras wanted to rush Zanuck's big-budget war epic
The Longest Day into release as another source of quick cash. This offended Zanuck, still Fox's largest shareholder; at the next board meeting Zanuck spoke for eight hours, convincing directors that Skouras was mis-managing the company and the only possible savior was Darryl F. Zanuck. He was installed as chairman; named as president was son
Richard Zanuck. This new management group: seized
Cleopatra and rushed it to completion; shut down the studio and laid off the entire staff to save money; axed the long-running Movietone Newsreel; and, with limited funds, made a series of cheap, popular pictures that luckily restored Fox as a major studio.
Zanuck stayed on as chairman until 1971 but his last years were not easy; expensive pictures he'd commissioned flopped, and in 1969, 1970 and 1971 the studio recorded huge losses. Following his removal, and after an uncertain period, new management brought Fox back to health. Under president Dennis Stanfill and production head
Alan Ladd, Jr., Fox films connected with modern audiences. Stanfill used the profits to acquire resort properties, soft-drink bottlers, Australian theaters, and other properties in an attempt to diversify enough to offset the boom-or-bust cycle of picture-making. With financial stability came new owners, and in 1978 control passed to the investors
Marc Rich and
Marvin Davis. Three years later, Rich sold his shares to
Rupert Murdoch's Australian media group,
News Corporation. In 1984, Davis sold his half of Fox to News Corp., giving Murdoch's company complete control. To run the studio, Murdoch hired
Barry Diller from
Paramount; Diller brought with him a plan which Paramount's board had refused: a studio-backed, fourth commercial television-network.
But to gain FCC approval of Fox's purchase of
Metromedia's television holdings (once the stations of the old
DuMont network), Murdoch had to become an American citizen. This he did, and in 1985 the new Fox Broadcasting took to the air. Over the next twenty years the network and owned-stations group have expanded to become extremely profitable for News Corp. The film studio has prospered too, although Fox has backed away from its reputation for literary adaptations and adult themes to concentrate on "popcorn" movies.
Among the studio's notable films:
 |
20th Century Fox logo, 1935-1953 |
1920s
*
The Iron Horse (1924)
*
What Price Glory (1925)
*
Sunrise (drama, 1927, selected "Most Artistic Achievement" at the first Academy Awards)
*
Seventh Heaven (drama, 1927)
1930s
*
Cavalcade (drama, 1933, Academy Award winner, "Best Picture")
*
State Fair (comedy, 1933)
*
Stand Up and Cheer! (1934)
*
In Old Chicago (drama, 1937)
*
Alexander's Ragtime Band (drama,
1938)
*
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (comedy-drama,
1938)
*
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (
1939)
*
Young Mr. Lincoln (drama,
1939)
1940s
*
The Mark of Zorro (
1940)
*
The Grapes of Wrath (drama,
1940)
*
How Green Was My Valley (drama,
1941)
*
Blood and Sand (drama,
1941)
*
The Pied Piper (drama,
1942)
*
The Song of Bernadette (drama,
1943)
*
The Ox-Bow Incident (drama,
1943)
*
The Gang's All Here (
1943)
*
My Friend Flicka (drama
1943)
*
Heaven Can Wait (comedy,
1943)
*
Laura (drama,
1944)
*
Wilson (drama,
1944)
*
Jane Eyre (
1944)
*
State Fair (
1945)
*
Leave Her to Heaven (drama,
1945)
*
Anna and the King of Siam (drama,
1946)
*
Gentlemen's Agreement (
1947)
*
Miracle on 34th Street (comedy-drama,
1947)
*
A Letter to Three Wives (drama,
1949)
 |
20th Century Fox logo, 1953-1981 |
1950s
The famous musical fanfare by
Alfred Newman first accompanied the
Twentieth Century Pictures logo in
1933. The longer version, with the "
CinemaScope extension" was introduced in 1953.
*
All About Eve (drama,
1950)
*
Cheaper by the Dozen (comedy-drama,
1950)
*
The Day the Earth Stood Still (science fiction,
1951)
*
Viva Zapata! (
1952)
*
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (
1953)
*
The Robe (
1953) (the first film in CinemaScope)
*
How to Marry a Millionaire (
1953)
*
Carmen Jones (
1954)
*
The Seven Year Itch (
1955)
*
The King and I (
1956)
*
Anastasia (
1956)
*
Bus Stop (
1956)
*
The Girl Can't Help It (
1956)
*
Peyton Place (
1957)
*
An Affair to Remember (
1957)
*
The Fly (
1958)
*
South Pacific (
1958)
*
The Diary of Anne Frank (
1959)
*
Wanker! (1959)1960s* The Hustler (1961) * The Longest Day (1962) * Cleopatra (1963) * Zorba the Greek (1964) * The Sound of Music (1965) * The Flight of the Phoenix (1965) * The Sand Pebbles (1966) * Doctor Doolittle (1967) * Valley of the Dolls (1967) * Planet of the Apes (1968) * Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969) * Hello, Dolly! (1969) * The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1969)1970s* M*A*S*H (1970) * Patton (1970) * Myra Breckinridge (1970) * The French Connection (1971) and sequel (1975) * The Poseidon Adventure (1972) * The Paper Chase (1973) * Young Frankenstein (1974) * Silver Streak (1976) * The Omen (1976) * Star Wars (1977) and, as distributor only, five sequels/prequels * Julia (1977) * Breaking Away (1979) * Norma Rae (1979) * Alien (1979) | 20th Century Fox logo, 1981-1994 |
1980s* Nine to Five (1980) * History of the World, Part I (1981) * The King of Comedy (1983) * Revenge of the Nerds (1984) * The Flamingo Kid (1984) (in association with ABC) * Romancing the Stone (1984) * Cocoon (1985) * Ladyhawke (1985) * Aliens (1986) * Broadcast News (1987) * Raising Arizona (1987) * Wall Street (1987) * Die Hard (1988) * Working Girl (1988) * Big (1988) * The Abyss (1989) * Say Anything... (1989) | 20th Century Fox logo, since 1994 |
1990s* Home Alone (1990) * Hot Shots! (1991) * Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992) * Mrs. Doubtfire (1993) * Hot Shots!: Part Deux (1993) * Rookie Of The Year (1993) * Beach Day (1993) * The Sandlot (1993) * Speed (1994) * Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Movie (1995) * Independence Day (1996) * William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet (1996) * Home Alone 3 (1997) * Titanic (1997) (co-production with Paramount Pictures) * There's Something About Mary (1998) * Fight Club (1999)2000sDespite suggestions that the studio change its name to Twenty-first Century Fox it did not do so. Though the studio owned the rights to the updated name, it decided to keep its name unchanged to reflect the original name of Darryl Zanuck's company. The television series Futurama, in keeping with its futuristic setting, features a "30th Century Fox" logo (though it is technically set in the early 31st century). * Big Momma's House (2000) * X-Men (2000) * Cast Away (2000) * Moulin Rouge! (2001) * Ice Age (2002) * Cut But (2002) * Soul Calibur (2003) (co-production with Dreamworks SKG) * The Day After Tomorrow (2004) * Robots (2005) * Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith (2005) * The Sandlot 2 (2005) * Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005) * Fantastic Four (2005) * Eragon (2006) * Garfield 2 (2006) * The Omen 666 (2006) * X-Men 3 (2006) * The Sentinel (2006) * Flicka (2006) * Big Momma's House 2 (2006) * Andrew Henry's Meadow (2006) * The A-Team (2006) * The Deep Blue Goodbye (2006) * Die Hard 4.0 (2006) * Dr. Dolittle 3 (2006) * Ice Age 2: The Meltdown (2006) * Josiah's Canon (2006) * Mrs. Doubtfire 2 (2006) * Reckless (2006) * Cheaper by the Dozen 2 (2006) * Wolverine (2007) * The Star Chamber (2007) * Hitman (2007) * Gangsta M.D. (2007) * Charlie Chan (2007) * Battle Angel (2007) * The Simpsons Movie'' (2008)  | 20th Century Fox Television logo |
 | 20th Television logo |
20th Television was initially the new name for Twentieth Century Fox Television in 1992, until the latter name returned for network TV in 1995. Since then, the "20th Television" name remains as the television syndication arm for 20th Century Fox TV. They syndicate first-run syndication programs, programs to be redistributed to local affiliates, and basic cable networks. TV seriesCrusade In Europe (1949) My Friend Flicka (1956-1958) Broken Arrow (1956-1960) Man Without A Gun (1957-1959) Five Fingers (1959-1960) Adventures In Paradise (1959-1962) The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis (1959-1963) Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (1964-1968) Peyton Place (1964-1969) Lost in Space (1965-1968) Batman (1966-1968) *Room 222 (1969-1974) *Nanny and the Professor (1970-1971) *M*A*S*H (1972-1983) (from the film of the same name) *That's Hollywood (1976-1982) *ABC Weekend Specials (1977-present) *The Paper Chase (1978-1986) *Dance Fever (1979-1987) *Trapper John, M.D. (1979-1986) *Breaking Away (1980-1981) *The Fall Guy (1981-1986) *9 to 5 (1982-1983, 1986-1988) *Masquerade (1983-1984) *Mr. Belvedere (1985-1990) (based on the film Sitting Pretty and its 2 sequels) *The Wizard (1986-1987) *L.A. Law (1986-1994) *Hooperman (1987-1989) *The Tracey Ullman Show (1987-1990) *21 Jump Street (1987-1991) *America's Most Wanted (1988-present) *The Simpsons (1989-present) *Cops (1989-present) *Sister Kate (1989-1990) *Anything But Love (1989-1992) *Doogie Howser, M.D. (1989-1993) *Good Grief (1990-1991) *In Living Color (1990-1994) *Bobby's World (1990-1998) *The Sunday Comics (1991-1992) *Civil Wars (1991-1993 *Silk Stalkings (1991-1999) *Picket Fences (1992-1996) *The X-Files (1993-2002) *NYPD Blue (1993-2005) *The Tick (1994-1997) *Chicago Hope (1994-2000) *The Crew (1995-1996) *Space: Above and Beyond (1995-1996) *The Pretender (1996-2000) *King of the Hill (1997-present) *413 Hope St. (1997-1998) *Nothing Sacred (1997-1998) *The Visitor (1997-1998) *Ally McBeal (1997-2002) *Dharma & Greg (1997-2002) *Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997-2003) *The Practice (1997-2004) *The Big House (1998-present) *The Magic Hour (1998-1999) *Holding the Baby (1998-1999) *Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place (1998-2001) *The Hughleys (1998-2002) *Martial Laws (1998-2002) *Judging Amy (1999-2005) *Harsh Realm (1999-2000) *Stark Raving Mad (1999-2000) *Ally (1999-2000) *Roswell (1999-2002) *Family Guy (1999-2002, 2005-present) *Futurama (1999-2003) *Angel (1999-2004) *Malcolm in the Middle (2000-present) Produced under the "Fox Television Studios" imprint *The Bernie Mac Show (2001-present) *24 (2001-present) *Arrested Development (2003-present) *The Simple Life (2003-present) *American Dad! (2005-present) *Bloopers! and Flooppper!'' (2005-present)In the link to the "Conrad Poohs and his Dancing Teeth" sketch in And Now For Something Completely Different (1971), 20th Century Fox is called 20th Century Frog, followed by a spoof of the MGM lion, being replaced by a frog burping.
A Monty Python's Flying Circus sketch portrayed a movie studio known as 20th Century Vole, with a logo and fanfare similar to that of Fox.
"Twentieth Century Fox" is also the punning title of a song by The Doors on their self-titled debut album (1967), referring to a foxy lady.*FOX Television Network *Fox Searchlight Pictures *Fox Entertainment Group *List of Hollywood movie studios *List of movies | Variant of current 20th Century Fox logo | * 20th Century Fox Movies official site
|