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Studios and theatres
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William Fox'' studio- independent filmmaking
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William Fox Building 1929, downtown LA
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Fox theatre on Wilshire blvd.
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Universal Studio, Hollywood. For more than 80 years, this amazing place has manufactured thousands of American dreams on the wide silver screen. Today when you talk about LA, what''s the first thing pop into your mind (besides the smoggy sky)? Hollywood! If you ever wonder why poeple call LA the Tinsel Town, just go to Hollywood and you''ll understand -
http://www.mse.berkeley.edu/~xli/SLi_Homepage/LA.htm.
early pictures - http://helenmack.us/Main%20Pages/Pics.htm
William Fox, born in Tulchva, Hungary in 1879, dominated the movie industry of the 1920''s. He began a leading production company and he owned various movie theaters, both in America and abroad. This is impressive for a Hungarian immigrant who was formerly in the garment industry.
Fox''s empire began, when he bought a nickelodeon and turned it into a chain if movie theaters. This did not prove as lucrative an enterprise as Fox expected, so he began to form a production company. By 1915 Fox had a monopoly over film production and was strong-arming the movie industry. This was such a beautiful monopoly because Fox pictures made the films, and they were viewed in Fox-owned theaters.
Fox was most successful because he was a visionary. He saw a place for sound in the movies when other producers and production companies did not. Even during the Great Depression, Fox retrofitted over a thousand theaters with equipment to make this possible.
Fox''s domination of the movie industry could not remain long before it attracted attention, jealousy, and a desire to make Fox and Fox Pictures tumble. Fox Pictures suffered anti-trust litigation, and William Fox went bankrupt. He could not tolerate such failure, and tried bribing a judge. He was sentenced to jail and died May 8, 1952.
From Encyclopedia Britannic Online
Original name WILHELM FRIED (b. Jan. 1, 1879, Tulchva, Hung.--d. May 8, 1952, New York, N.Y., U.S.), American motion-picture executive who built a multimillion-dollar empire controlling a large portion of the exhibition, distribution, and production of film facilities during the era of silent film.
Fox worked as a newsboy and in the fur and garment industry before investing in a Brooklyn nickelodeon. By 1913 he was one of the most powerful of the independent exhibitors and distributors and led their successful fight against the Motion Picture Patents Company, an attempted monopoly of the industry. In 1915 the Fox Film Corporation, the progenitor of the Twentieth Century-Fox studios, was formed.
Fox introduced organ accompaniment to the silent films shown in his theatres and pioneered in designing theatres for the comfort of the patrons. Through an adroit use of publicity, he developed Theda Bara into the first screen vamp and a star. He was also famous for the 1927 news series Movietone News, the first commercially successful sound film.
Because of the expense of converting 1,100 theatres to sound equipment and the economic crisis of the early 1930s, Fox''s empire crumbled. He declared bankruptcy in 1936 and in 1942 served a term in prison for obstructing justice. For the remainder of his life he lived quietly in Long Island, New York.
the Historic Los Angeles Theatre, the last and most extravagant of the ornate movie palaces built on 615 s.Broadway in downtown Los Angeles between 1911 and 1931. Designed by S. Charles Lee with a French Baroque-inspired dcor, its majestic six-story main lobby and 2,000 seat auditorium of carved plaster ornamentation, mirrors, and cove-lit murals recall the glamorous days of 1930s Hollywood.
XX century Fox - http://www.titanic-deutschland.de/Spielfilme/20th_Century_Fox/20th_century_fox.html
XX centure Fox - http://www.fox.com/home.htm
William Fox bio - http://xroads.virginia.edu/~UG00/3on1/movies/fox.html
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