Portal:20th Century Studios/Selected picture

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Credit: Basil D Soufi

Century City, a district developed on the former backlot of 20th Century Studios in 2009

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20th Century-Fox production logo and fanfare, as seen in 1947

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Credit: 20th Century Pictures

Cedric Hardwicke and Fredric March in the 1935 film Les Misérables

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Credit: Winsor McCay

Animated film Gertie the Dinosaur (1914), which was the first film distributed by Fox Films

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Credit: 20th Century Fox

Photo from the 1942 film Ten Gentlemen From West Point; Maureen O’Hara is shown at center.

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Credit: CBS Television

Roddy McDowall's makeup work for the television series Planet of the Apes

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Credit: Unspecified; original copyright likely held by photographer or the Schedule Rating Office of New Jersey

Fire damage to the residence at 361 Main Street, directly in front of the 1937 Fox vault fire

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Credit: Fox Film Corp.

Lobby card for the American mystery film Alias the Night Wind (1923)

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Credit: Fox Films press photo

Press photo of James Dunn and Spencer Tracy in the 1932 film Society Girl

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Credit: Fox Films Corp.

Joyce Compton, Loretta Young, and Joan Marsh in Three Girls Lost (1931)

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Credit: Fox Films Corp.

William Farnum and Louise Lovely in the American western film The Lone Star Ranger

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Credit: 20th Century Fox

Mark Stevens, Barbara Lawrence, and Richard Widmark in The Street with No Name

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Credit: 20th Century Fox

Original trailer of the film The Diary of Anne Frank (1959)

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Credit: 20th Century Fox

Original teaser trailer of the film Planet of the Apes (1968)

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Credit: Harris & Ewing

Film prexy defends practice of "block booking." Washington, D.C., April 6. Sidney R. Kent, President of the 20th Century Fox Film Corp., testifying before the Senate Interstate Commerce Subcommittee today, defended block booking of Motion Pictures as legitimate and traditional business practices. The producers right to sell their merchandise in their own way, Kent said, is sacred so long as they are "In free and open competition."

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Credit: Los Angeles Times

Nikita Khrushchev watches filming for the 1960 movie Can-Can during his 1959 state visit to the United States. The people in this image from left to right are: Nikita's daughter, Rada, son Sergei (standing behind Rada), Mrs. Eric Johnston, Spyras Skouras, Premier Khrushchev, interpreter Mrs. Buddy Adler (Anita Louise), Mrs. Khrushchev, Mrs. Skouras . Behind Alders is Nitkia other daughter Yulia, standing ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge and Eric Johnston, Motion Picture Assn president.

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Credit: Andre Carrotflower

As seen in June 2020: the Streamline Moderne-style building at 290 Franklin Street in downtown Buffalo, New York was built in 1937 by the Twentieth Century Fox company to house their local film exchange, i.e. a sort of receiving and distribution center where films sourced from the main studio would be screened for local theater owners and offered for rent, and where advertising posters and other promotional material was made available to movie houses. The construction was considered state-of-the-art at the time; architecturally speaking, it's today considered the best preserved of the eight extant such facilities in Buffalo's "Film Row" along the 200 block of Franklin Street. Distinguishing characteristics include horizontal stone band courses narrowly spaced along the buff-brick façade above the ground floor, and a recessed entrance with curved corners flanked at ground level by Art Deco-redolent, stylized reliefs of tragedy and comedy masks. The building continued functioning as a film exchange until at least 1959; it was used for offices thereafter and is now vacant.

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Credit: Author unknown

Darryl F. Zanuck was one of the founders of 20th Century Fox

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Marilyn Monroe, Betty Grable and Lauren Bacall in the trailer for the film How to Marry a Millionaire

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Credit: Docter Macro

Alice Faye, Phil Baker, and Carmen Miranda in The Gang's All Here.