Twentieth-Century Fox

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Employer Elinor Glyn
By now her Hollywood career had begun to taper off, as her contract with Paramount expired in this year. She made only one film in the US after 1928: a talkie entitled Such Men are...
Publishing Alison Uttley
This book caused AU much anguish in writing. She took the idea from the Babington ancestral home at Dethick, close to her childhood home of Castle Top Farm, and from a dream she...
Publishing Elinor Glyn
The film came from a long magazine story she had written and sold to Twentieth Century Fox for ¥6,000.
Etherington-Smith, Meredith, and Jeremy Pilcher. The "It" Girls. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1986.
244
Reception Ethel Wilson
Lilly's Story was translated into German and published in Switzerland in 1952, entitled simply Lilly. This was also the title for the Danish edition which appeared in 1954. Both stories were published in an...
Reception Mary Renault
As soon as it was published, the book became a best-seller. Several weeks after publication, Twentieth-Century Fox bought the film rights for $75,000. Time and Newsweek published major articles in Britain on The King Must...
Textual Production Simone de Beauvoir
This novel was made into a film by Twentieth-Century Fox in 1969.
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
Textual Production Lesley Storm
In 1948, Twentieth-Century Fox filmed LS 's screenplay Meet Me At Dawn, which she wrote in collaboration with James Seymour .
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
She also co-wrote, with Graham Greene and William Templeton , the screenplay for...
Textual Production Elinor Glyn
EG 's last film to be written for and produced in Hollywood was Such Men are Dangerous, for Twentieth Century Fox . This was her first talkie.
Etherington-Smith, Meredith, and Jeremy Pilcher. The "It" Girls. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1986.
244
Textual Production Margaret Kennedy
The theatrical staging of the novel proved so successful that film versions soon followed: by Fox (1934), Gaumont (1935), and Warner Brothers (1943).
“Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC.
36
For the 1934 filming, Victoria Hopper , who later married Basil...

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