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Adolph Zukor (/ˈzuːkər/; Hungarian:
Czukor Adolf;
January 7, 1873 – June 10, 1976) was a Hungarian-American film
producer best
known as one of the three...
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located within the city
limits of Los Angeles. In 1916, film
producer Adolph Zukor put 24
actors and
actresses under contract and
honored each with a star...
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Zukor's was a U.S.
chain of women's
clothing stores,
specializing in dresses. The
company was part of a
broader trend of
dress shops that
catered to middle-class...
- on June 28, 1916, from the
merger of
Adolph Zukor's Famous Players Film Company –
originally formed by
Zukor as
Famous Players in
Famous Plays – and the...
- companies.[citation needed]
Pickford left the
stage to join
Zukor's roster of stars.
Zukor believed film's
potential lay in
recording theatrical players...
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Famous Players Film
Company was a film
company founded in 1912 by
Adolph Zukor in
partnership with the
Frohman brothers,
powerful New York City theatre...
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Lusitania in 1915, she
moved into films,
initially under contract to
Adolph Zukor; most of her
early movies are lost.
After making a few
films in Europe,...
- was
Adolph Zukor's Famous Players Company. The two
companies merged on 28 June 1916,
forming the
Famous Players–Lasky Corporation.
Zukor had been quietly...
- Press. ISBN 9781461660910.
Zukor, Adolph; Kramer, Dale (1953). The
Public is
Never Wrong: The
Autobiography of
Adolph Zukor. New York: Putnam. hdl:2027/mdp...
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survivors (the
length of his
career was
rivaled only by that of
Adolph Zukor). He
produced three films that won the
Academy Award for Best Picture. Zanuck...