20th Century Fox Television
Subsidiary | |
Industry | Television production |
Founded | 1949 | (as TCF Television Productions, Inc.)
Headquarters | Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Key people | Dana Walden and Gary Newman, co-chairs |
Products | Television programs |
Revenue | $11.7 billion USD (2006) |
$845 million USD (2006) | |
Owner | 21st Century Fox |
Parent | Fox Entertainment Group |
Divisions |
20th Television Fox Television Animation |
Subsidiaries | Fox 21 Television Studios |
Website |
Twentieth Century Fox Television (TCFTV, stylized as 20th Century Fox Television) is the television production subsidiary of 20th Century Fox, and a production arm of the Fox Television Group (both are owned by Rupert Murdoch's 21st Century Fox). 20th Television is the syndication arm of 20th Century Fox Television.[1]
Overview and history
20th Century Fox Television was formed in 1949 as other studios were branching out into television production as well. At that time, the company was known as TCF Television Productions, Inc. until 1958. TCFTV folded the operations of TV production companies it has acquired: Metromedia Producers Corporation in 1986, New World Entertainment in 1997, and MTM Enterprises in 1998, and is the current distributor (via its distribution division, 20th Television) for most of the shows originally produced by these companies.
Since 1986, 20th Century Fox Television has served as the Fox television network's official production arm (with Fox Television Studios being viewed as the network's unofficial television production division), producing the bulk of television series airing on the television network. 20CFT produced the first two series that aired on Fox's sister network, MyNetworkTV: the telenovelas Desire and Fashion House.
In 1989, 20th Century Fox Television's functions were taken over by Twentieth Television Corporation, a separate entity from 20th Century Fox Film Corporation. Both companies were subsidiaries of News Corporation unit Fox Inc.; the move was made to separate the television productions from the movie studio in order to increase the latter's output.[2] Following a 1994 restructuring of Fox's television production companies, 20th Television was refocused on syndication and "non-traditional programs", while network television programming once more came under the 20th Century Fox Television banner and returned to being a division of the movie studio.[3] In 1998, MTM folded into 20th Century Fox Television, but MTM was in-name only. In 2012, 20th Century Fox Television was reorganized as a separate unit of News Corporation; 20th Century Fox Television chairs Dana Walden and Gary Newman now report to Chase Carey, COO of 21st Century Fox.[4]
As is the case with most of its sibling studios, copyright notices of programming produced by either the television or syndication divisions bears the copyright of the overall film studio, i.e. "© (respective year) Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation".
Notable shows produced by 20th Century Fox Television include: M*A*S*H, Glee, How I Met Your Mother, Bones, Empire, Family Guy, 24, Modern Family, American Dad!, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Futurama, New Girl, and most notably The X-Files and The Simpsons.
In July 2014, it was announced that the operations of the Fox Broadcasting Company and 20th Century Fox Television will merge into a new unit, the Fox Television Group, which will be overseen by Walden and Newman.[5]
List of programs produced and distributed by 20th Century Fox Television
Television series
Live-action
Title | Years | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Crusade in Europe | 1949 | ABC | |
The 20th Century Fox Hour | 1955–1957 | CBS | |
My Friend Flicka | 1956–1958 | CBS | based on the 1943 film of the same name |
Broken Arrow | 1956–1960 | ABC | based on the 1950 film of the same name |
Man Without a Gun | 1957–1959 | NTA Film Network | |
How to Marry a Millionaire | 1957–1959 | NTA Film Network | based on the 1953 Marilyn Monroe film of the same name |
The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis | 1959–1963 | CBS | |
Five Fingers | 1959–1960 | NBC | |
Adventures in Paradise | 1959–1962 | ABC | |
Hong Kong | 1960–1961 | ABC | |
Follow the Sun | 1961–1962 | ABC | |
Bus Stop | 1961–1962 | ABC | based on the 1956 Marilyn Monroe film of the same name |
Margie | 1961–1962 | ABC | |
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea | 1964–1968 | ABC | based on the 1961 film of the same name |
Peyton Place | 1964–1969 | ABC | based on the 1957 film of the same name |
Valentine's Day | 1964–1965 | ABC | |
Twelve O'Clock High | 1964–1967 | ABC | based on the 1949 film of the same name |
Daniel Boone | 1964–1970 | NBC | |
The Legend of Jesse James | 1965–1966 | ABC | |
Lost in Space | 1965–1968 | CBS | |
The Long, Hot Summer | 1965–1966 | ABC | |
The Loner | 1965–1966 | CBS | |
Blue Light | 1966 | ABC | |
Batman | 1966–1968 | ABC | |
The Monroes | 1966–1967 | ABC | |
The Man Who Never Was | 1966–1967 | ABC | |
The Tammy Grimes Show | 1966 | ABC | |
The Time Tunnel | 1966–1967 | ABC | |
The Green Hornet | 1966–1967 | ABC | |
Felony Squad | 1966–1969 | ABC | |
Custer | 1967 | ABC | |
Judd, for the Defense | 1967–1969 | ABC | |
Julia | 1968–1971 | NBC | |
Land of the Giants | 1968–1970 | ABC | |
Lancer | 1968–1970 | CBS | |
Journey to the Unknown | 1968 | ABC | |
The Ghost & Mrs. Muir | 1968–1970 | NBC/ABC | based on the 1947 film of the same name |
Room 222 | 1969–1974 | ABC | |
Bracken's World | 1969–1970 | NBC | |
Nanny and the Professor | 1970–1971 | ABC | |
The Best of Everything | 1970 | ABC | based on the 1959 film of the same name |
Here Come the Double Deckers | 1970–1971 | ABC | |
Arnie | 1970–1972 | CBS | |
Circus | 1971–1973 | ||
Cade's County | 1971–1972 | CBS | |
Return to Peyton Place | 1972–1974 | NBC | based on the 1961 film of the same name |
M*A*S*H | 1972–1983 | CBS | from the 1970 film of the same name |
Anna and the King | 1972 | CBS | based on the 1946 film of the same name and the 1956 musical version The King and I |
ABC's Wide World of Entertainment | 1973–1976 | ABC | select programming |
Orson Welles' Great Mysteries | 1973 | ITV | |
The New Perry Mason | 1973–1974 | CBS | |
The Starlost | 1973 | CTV | |
Roll Out | 1973–1974 | CBS | |
Run, Joe, Run | 1974 | NBC | |
Dinah! | 1974 | NBC | |
Masquerade Party | 1974-1975 | Syndication | revival of 1952-1960 game show |
Planet of the Apes | 1974 | CBS | based on the 1968 film of the same name |
Karen | 1975 | ABC | |
Oil Strike North | 1975 | BBC | |
The Swiss Family Robinson | 1975–1976 | ABC | |
That's Hollywood | 1977–1978[6] | ||
ABC Weekend Special | 1977–1997 | ABC | |
Loves Me, Loves Me Not | 1977 | CBS | |
Young Dan'l Boone | 1977 | CBS | |
James at 15 | 1977–1978 | NBC | |
Husbands, Wives & Lovers | 1978 | CBS | |
The Paper Chase | 1978–1979 1983-1986 | CBS Showtime | based on the 1973 film of the same name |
W.E.B. | 1978 | NBC | |
Dance Fever | 1979–1987 | Syndication | |
Billy | 1979 | CBS | |
Trapper John, M.D. | 1979–1986 | CBS | |
Hagen | 1980 | CBS | |
The Monte Carlo Show | 1980 | ||
Breaking Away | 1980–1981 | ABC | based on the 1979 film of the same name |
The Fall Guy | 1981–1986 | ABC | |
Jessica Novak | 1981 | CBS | |
All-American Ultra Quiz | 1981 | NBC | |
9 to 5 | 1982–1983 1986-1988 | ABC Syndication | based on the 1980 film of the same name |
Trauma Center | 1983 | ABC | |
AfterMASH | 1983–1984 | CBS | |
Emerald Point N.A.S. | 1983–1984 | CBS | |
It's Not Easy | 1983 | ABC | |
Manimal | 1983 | NBC | |
Masquerade | 1983–1984 | ABC | |
Automan | 1983–1984 | ABC | |
Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense | 1984 | ITV | |
Cover Up | 1984–1985 | CBS | |
Mr. Belvedere | 1985–1990 | ABC | based on the 1948 film Sitting Pretty and its two sequels |
Half Nelson | 1985 | NBC | |
Small Wonder | 1985–1989 | Syndication | continued production after acquiring Metromedia |
Charlie & Co. | 1985–1986 | CBS | |
Tender is the Night | 1985 | Showtime | miniseries; based on the 1962 film of the same name |
Spearfield's Daughter | 1986 | miniseries | |
Dream Girl, U.S.A. | 1986–1987 | ||
Fathers and Sons | 1986 | NBC | |
The Wizard | 1986–1987 | CBS | |
L.A. Law | 1986–1994 | NBC | |
The Tracey Ullman Show | 1987–1990 | FOX | with Gracie Films |
21 Jump Street | 1987–1991 | FOX | |
Hooperman | 1987–1989 | ABC | |
Finders Keepers | 1987–1989 | Nickelodeon/Syndication | distributor only |
America's Most Wanted | 1988–2012 | FOX/Lifetime | |
Anything but Love | 1989–1992 | ABC | |
COPS | 1989–2013 2013–present | FOX/Spike | co-production with Barbour Langley Productions, Langley Productions, and Fox Television Stations Productions co-production moved to Spike Original Productions after move of show to Spike |
Have Faith | 1989 | ABC | |
Sister Kate | 1989–1990 | NBC | |
Alien Nation | 1989-1990 | FOX | based on the 1988 film of the same name |
Doogie Howser, M.D. | 1989–1993 | ABC | |
In Living Color | 1990–1994 | FOX | |
Working Girl | 1990 | NBC | based on the 1988 film of the same name |
Good Grief | 1990–1991 | FOX | |
The Sunday Comics | 1991–1992 | FOX | |
Silk Stalkings | 1991–1999 | CBS/USA Network | co-production with Stu Segall Productions, Stephen J. Cannell Productions (1991-1995); Cannell Entertainment (1995-1999), New World Entertainment (1995-1997) and Columbia Pictures Television (1995-1997) Produced from 1997-1999 after Fox acquiring New World |
Civil Wars | 1991–1993 | ABC | |
Picket Fences | 1992–1996 | CBS | |
The X-Files | 1993–2002 2016–present | FOX | co-production with Ten Thirteen Productions |
NYPD Blue | 1993–2005 | ABC | co-production with Steven Bochco Productions |
Chicago Hope | 1994–2000 | CBS | co-production with David E. Kelly Productions |
The Crew | 1995–1996 | FOX | |
Space: Above and Beyond | 1995–1996 | FOX | co-production with Hard Eight Pictures, Inc. |
The Pretender | 1996–2000 | NBC | co-production with Mitchel Van Sickle Productions, NBC Studios, and MTM Enterprises TCFTV only handles Domestic distribution while NBCUniversal Television Distribution handles only the international distribution |
The Practice | 1997–2004 | ABC | co-production with David E. Kelley Productions |
Buffy the Vampire Slayer | 1997–2003 | The WB/UPN | co-production with Mutant Enemy Productions, Kuzui Enterprises, and Sandollar Television; based on the 1992 film of the same name |
Ally McBeal | 1997–2002 | FOX | co-production with David E. Kelley Productions |
413 Hope St. | 1997–1998 | FOX | co-production with Nu Systems Productions, Inc. |
Nothing Sacred | 1997–1998 | ABC | co-production with Sarabande Productions |
The Visitor | 1997–1998 | FOX | co-production with Centropolis Television |
Dharma & Greg | 1997–2002 | ABC | co-production with Chuck Lorre Productions and 4 to 6 Foot Productions |
Two Guys and a Girl | 1998–2001 | ABC | co-production with In Front Productions |
The Magic Hour | 1998–2000 | Syndication | |
Holding the Baby | 1998–2000 | FOX | |
Martial Law | 1998–2002 | CBS | co-production with Carlton Cuse Productions, Ruddy Morgan Productions, and CBS Productions TCFTV only handles the U.S. distribution of the series while CBS Broadcast International handles only international distribution |
Strange World | 1999–2002 | ABC | co-production with Teakwood Lane Productions |
Judging Amy | 1999–2005 | CBS | with Barbara Hall-Joseph Stern Productions and CBS Productions TCFTV only handles the U.S. distribution of the series while CBS Broadcast International handles only international distribution |
Stark Raving Mad | 1999–2000 | NBC | |
Angel | 1999–2004 | The WB | with Mutant Enemy Productions, Greenwolf Corp., Kuzui Enterprises, and Sandollar Television |
Roswell | 1999–2002 | The WB/UPN | with Jason Katims Productions and Regency Television |
Harsh Realm | 1999–2000 | FOX/FX | with Ten Thirteen Productions |
Greed | 1999–2000 | FOX | |
Titus | 2000–2001 | FOX | with Kenny & Hargrove and Deranged Entertainment |
Soul Food: The Series | 2000-2004 | Showtime | with Water Walk Productions, Edmonds Entertainment, State Street Pictures, Fox Television Studios, and Paramount Network Television (Seasons 3 & 5) |
Yes, Dear | 2000-2006 | CBS | with Amigos de Garcia Productions, Cherry Tree Entertainment, and CBS Productions |
Dark Angel | 2000–2002 | FOX | with Cameron/Eglee Productions |
FreakyLinks | 2000-2001 | FOX | with Haxan Films and Regency Television |
Boston Public | 2000-2004 | FOX | |
American High | 2000 | FOX/PBS | |
Kate Brasher | 2001 | CBS | with Jersey Television and CBS Productions |
Danny | 2001 | CBS | with Acme Productions and Big Ticket Television |
The Bernie Mac Show | 2001-2006 | FOX | with Wilmore Films and Regency Television |
UC: Undercover | 2001–2002 | NBC | with Jersey Television, Chasing Time Pictures, Regency Television, and NBC Studios |
Bob Patterson | 2001 | ABC | with Angel Ark Productions and Touchstone Television |
Reba | 2001–2007 | The WB/The CW | with Bee Caves Road and Acme Productions |
24 | 2001–2010 | FOX | with Imagine Television, Real Time Productions, and Teakwood Lane Productions |
The Education of Max Bickford | 2001-2002 | CBS | with Sugar Mama Productions, Joe Cacaci Productions, Regency Television, and CBS Productions |
The American Embassy | 2002 | FOX | with Jersey Television |
Andy Richter Controls the Universe | 2002–2003 | FOX | with Garfield Grove Productions and Paramount Network Television TCFTV only distributes the series outside the US, Domestic distribution is handled by CBS Television Distribution |
Greg the Bunny | 2002-2006 | FOX/IFC | with Steven Levitan Productions |
Fastlane | 2002–2003 | FOX | with McNamara Paper Products, Wonderland Sound and Vision, and Warner Bros. Television TCFTV only handles the international distribution, U.S. distribution handled by Warner Bros. Television |
Firefly | 2002 | FOX | with Mutant Enemy Productions |
Still Standing | 2002-2006 | CBS | with Tea Gal and Java Boy Productions and CBS Productions |
Girls Club | 2002 | FOX | |
A.U.S.A. | 2003 | NBC | with Persons Unknown Productions and NBC Studios |
Oliver Beene | 2003–2004 | FOX | with Steven Levitan Productions, (ge.wirtz) Films, and DreamWorks Television |
The Pitts | 2003 | FOX | with Nothing Can Go Wrong Now Productions |
The Lyon's Den | 2003 | NBC | with Brad Grey Television and Baby Owl Works |
Married to the Kellys | 2003–2004 | ABC | with Brad Grey Television and Game Six Productions |
Tru Calling | 2003–2005 | FOX | with Oh That Gus! Inc. and Original Film |
Arrested Development | 2003–present | FOX/Netflix | with Imagine Television and The Hurwitz Company |
Wonderfalls | 2004 | FOX | with Living Dead Guy Productions, Walking Bud Productions, and Regency Television |
The Big House | 2004 | ABC | |
The Jury | 2004 | FOX | with The Levinson/Fontana Company, MarlJim Productions, and HBO Independent Productions |
Method & Red | 2004 | FOX | with If I Can Productions, Method Man Enterprises, Background Action, Inc., and Regency Television |
Quintuplets | 2004-2005 | FOX | with Imagine Television and Mark Reisman Productions |
Listen Up! | 2004-2005 | CBS | with Regency Television and CBS Productions TCFTV only distributes the series outside the US, Domestic distribution is handled by CBS Television Distribution |
Boston Legal | 2004–2008 | ABC | with David E. Kelley Productions |
Point Pleasant | 2005 | FOX | with Original Film |
Jake in Progress | 2005-2006 | ABC | |
Stacked | 2005-2006 | FOX | |
The Inside | 2005 | FOX | with Imagine Television and Reamworks |
Over There | 2005 | FX | |
Prison Break | 2005–2009 | FOX | with Rat Entertainment, Original Film, and Adelstein/Parouse Productions |
Bones | 2005–present | FOX | with Josephson Entertainment and Far Field Productions |
Head Cases | 2005 | FOX | |
How I Met Your Mother | 2005–2014 | CBS | with Bays & Thomas Productions |
Kitchen Confidential | 2005 | FOX | with Hemingson Entertainment, Darren Star Productions, and New Line Television |
My Name Is Earl | 2005–2009 | NBC | with Amigos de Garcia Productions |
The Unit | 2006-2009 | CBS | with David Mamet Chicago, Bay Kinescope Boston, and MiddKid Productions |
Pepper Dennis | 2006 | The WB | with Two Presbyterians and 21 Laps Entertainment |
Vanished | 2006 | FOX | with Osprey Productions |
The Loop | 2006-2007 | FOX | with Olive Bridge Entertainment and Wounded Poodle Productions |
Fashion House | 2006 | MyNetworkTV | |
Standoff | 2006-2007 | FOX | with Sesfonstein Productions |
Shark | 2006-2008 | CBS | with Imagine Television and Deforestation Services |
The 1/2 Hour News Hour | 2007 | Fox News Channel | |
The Winner | 2007 | FOX | |
Drive | 2007 | FOX | with Reamworks |
K-Ville | 2007 | FOX | |
Back to You | 2007–2008 | FOX | with Picture Day Productions |
Journeyman | 2007 | NBC | |
Women's Murder Club | 2007-2008 | ABC | with Papa Joe Television and Rat Entertainment |
Unhitched | 2008 | FOX | |
Miss Guided | 2008 | ABC | |
Do Not Disturb | 2008 | FOX | with Broken Good Productions, Principato-Young Entertainment, and Reveille Productions |
The Ex List | 2008 | CBS | with Keshet Media Group and Banana Goose Productions |
Life on Mars | 2008–2009 | ABC | with Space Floor Television, Kudos Film and Television, and ABC Studios TCFTV only handles the international distribution, US distribution is handled by Disney-ABC Domestic Television |
Lie to Me | 2009-2011 | FOX | with Imagine Television, Pagoda Pictures, Samuel Baum Productions, and MiddKid Productions |
Dollhouse | 2009–2010 | FOX | with Mutant Enemy Productions |
Better Off Ted | 2009–2010 | ABC | with Garfield Grove Productions |
Glee | 2009–2015 | FOX | with Brad Falchuk Teley-Vision and Ryan Murphy Productions |
Modern Family | 2009–present | ABC | with Lloyd-Levitan Productions, Steven Levitan Productions, and Picador Productions |
The Deep End | 2010 | ABC | |
Sons of Tucson | 2010 | FOX | with J2TV and Walking Bud Productions |
Raising Hope | 2010–2014 | FOX | with Amigos de Garcia Productions and Slowly I Turned Productions |
Marchlands | 2011 | ITV | |
The Chicago Code | 2011 | FOX | with MiddKid Productions |
Traffic Light | 2011 | FOX | with Middletown News, Hemingson Entertainment, Keshet Media Group, and Kuperman Productions |
CHAOS | 2011 | CBS | with Rat Entertainment, Certified Pulp, and CBS Television Studios |
Friends with Benefits | 2011 | NBC | with Imagine Television, Big Kid Pictures, and Pickle Films |
The Playboy Club | 2011 | NBC | with Alta Loma Entertainment, Imagine Television, and Storyland Entertainment |
New Girl | 2011–present | FOX | with Elizabeth Meriwether Pictures, American Nitwits, and Chernin Entertainment |
Terra Nova | 2011 | FOX | with Amblin Television, Chernin Entertainment, Kapital Entertainment, and Siesta Productions |
American Horror Story | 2011–present | FX | with Brad Falchuk Teley-Vision and Ryan Murphy Productions |
Last Man Standing | 2011–present | ABC | with 21-Laps/Adelstein Productions, Double Wide Productions, Mr. Big Shot Fancy-Pants Productions, Inc., and Lyonberry Productions |
The Finder | 2012 | FOX | with Josephson Entertainment and Far Field Productions |
Touch | 2012-2013 | FOX | with Tailwind Productions and Chernin Entertainment |
Awake | 2012 | NBC | with Letter Eleven and Teakwood Lane Productions |
Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23 | 2012-2013 | ABC | with Fierce Baby Productions and Hemingson Entertainment |
The New Normal | 2012–2013 | NBC | with Ali Adler is Here Productions and Ryan Murphy Productions |
Ben and Kate | 2012-2013 | FOX | with Hemingway Drive Productions and Chernin Entertainment |
1600 Penn | 2012-2013 | NBC | with Angry Child Productions, Snowpants Productions, and Small Dog Picture Company |
Lightfields | 2013 | ITV | |
How to Live with Your Parents (For the Rest of Your Life) | 2013 | ABC | with Imagine Television and Hot Lava Girl Productions |
The Goodwin Games | 2013 | FOX | with Shiny Brass Lamp Productions and Bays & Thomas Productions |
Sleepy Hollow | 2013–present | FOX | with Mark Goffman Productions, Sketch Films, and K/O Paper Products |
Dads | 2013-2014 | FOX | with Fuzzy Door Productions |
Back in the Game | 2013 | ABC | with Kapital Entertainment and Cullen Bros. Television |
The Crazy Ones | 2013–2014 | CBS | with David E. Kelley Productions |
Enlisted | 2014 | FOX | with Palace Flophouse and Snowpants Productions |
Mind Games | 2014 | ABC | |
24: Live Another Day | 2014 | FOX | with Imagine Television and Teakwood Lane Productions |
Crisis | 2014 | NBC | with Ravich-Shariat Productions |
Friends with Better Lives | 2014 | CBS | with Liscolaide Productions, Hemingson Entertainment, and Kapital Entertainment |
Gang Related | 2014 | FOX | with Imagine Television, Chris Morgan Productions, and Skeeter Rosenbaum Productions |
Cristela | 2014-2015 | ABC | with 21-Laps/Adelstein Productions and Hench in the Trench Productions |
Empire | 2015–present | FOX | with Imagine Television, Lee Daniels Entertainment, Danny Strong Productions, and Little Chicken Inc. |
Backstrom | 2015 | FOX | with Far Field Productions |
Fresh Off the Boat | 2015–present | ABC | with Fierce Baby Productions and The Detective Agency |
The Last Man on Earth | 2015–present | FOX | with The Si Fi Company and Lord Miller Productions |
Weird Loners | 2015 | FOX | with Hanley Productions and The Detective Agency |
The Carmichael Show | 2015–present | NBC | with Morningside Entertainment, A24 Films, Stoller Global Solutions, Lunch Bag Snail Productions, and Universal Television |
Life in Pieces | 2015–present | CBS | with Kapital Entertainment and 40 or 50 Years, Inc. |
Minority Report | 2015 | FOX | with Amblin Television and Paramount Television |
Scream Queens | 2015–present | FOX | with Prospect Films, Brad Falchuk Teley-Vision, and Ryan Murphy Productions |
Rosewood | 2015–present | FOX | with Temple Hill Productions and Nickels Productions |
Grandfathered | 2015–2016 | FOX | with Rhode Island Ave. Productions, Consolidated Chunworks, and ABC Studios |
The Grinder | 2015–2016 | FOX | with Paul Mogel Network Television, Stoller Global Solutions, and The Detective Agency |
Cooper Barrett's Guide to Surviving Life | 2016 | FOX | with Lansdowe Productions, Big Time Show Biz Entertainment, and The Jackal Group |
Second Chance | 2016 | FOX | with Teakwood Lane Productions and Kara Inc. |
This Is Us | 2016–present | NBC | with Rhode Island Ave. Productions and Zaftig Films |
Speechless | 2016–present | ABC | with Silver & Gold Productions, The Detective Agency and ABC Studios |
Pitch | 2016–present | FOX | with Barnstorm Films, Left Coast Productions, and Rhode Island Ave. Productions |
The Exorcist | 2016–present | FOX | with Morgan Creek Productions and New Neighborhood |
Famous | coming 2016 | FOX | with Warner Bros. Television |
A.P.B. | FOX | ||
24: Legacy | coming 2017 | FOX | |
Making History (TV series) | FOX | ||
Star | FOX | ||
Shots Fired | FOX | ||
The Mick | FOX | ||
Untitled X-Men TV Series | FOX | with Marvel Television | |
Animation
Title | Years | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Journey to the Center of the Earth | 1967 | ABC | based on the 1959 movie by 20th Century Fox |
Fantastic Voyage | 1968 | ABC | based on the 1966 movie of the same name by 20th Century Fox |
Doctor Dolittle | 1970–1971 | NBC | based on the 1967 movie by 20th Century Fox |
Return to the Planet of the Apes | 1975–1976 | NBC | based on the 1968 film and its sequels by APJAC Productions and 20th Century Fox |
The Simpsons | 1989–present | FOX | with Gracie Films and The Curiosity Company (Season 28–present) |
Peter Pan and the Pirates | 1990–1991 | Fox Kids | |
Little Shop | 1991 | Fox Kids | |
Capitol Critters | 1992 | ABC | |
Life with Louie | 1994–1998 | Fox Kids | |
King of the Hill | 1997–2010 | FOX | with Deedle-Dee Productions, Judgemental Films, and 3 Arts Entertainment |
Family Guy | 1999–2003 2005–present | FOX | with Fuzzy Door Productions |
Futurama | 1999–2003 2008–2013 | FOX Comedy Central | with The Curiosity Company as "30th Century Fox Television" |
American Dad! | 2005–present | FOX/TBS | with Underdog Productions and Fuzzy Door Productions |
Sit Down, Shut Up | 2009 | FOX | with Tantamount Studios, ITV Studios, and Sony Pictures Television TCFTV only handles Domestic distribution of the series, while Sony Pictures Television only handles International distribution |
The Cleveland Show | 2009–2013 | FOX | with Persons Unknown Productions, Happy Jack Productions and Fuzzy Door Productions |
Archer | 2009–present | FX | with Floyd County Productions, Radical Axis and FX Productions |
Neighbors from Hell | 2010 | TBS | with Wounded Poodle Productions and MoonBoy Animation |
Bob's Burgers | 2011–present | FOX | with Wilo Productions and Buck & Millie Productions |
Allen Gregory | 2011 | FOX | with JHF, J. Paul/A. Mogel/D. Goodman Productions, and Chernin Entertainment |
Napoleon Dynamite | 2012 | FOX | with Hess Films and Scully Productions based on the 2004 film by Fox Searchlight, MTV Films, and Paramount Pictures |
Unsupervised | 2012 | FX | with Floyd County Productions, RCG Productions, The Professional Writing Company and FX Productions |
Out There | 2013 | IFC | with Quincy Productions |
Chozen | 2014 | FX | with Floyd County Productions, Rough House Pictures and FX Productions |
Bordertown | 2016 | FOX | with Hentemann Films and Fuzzy Door Productions |
Son of Zorn | 2016–present | FOX | with Agnew Jorne Productions and Lord Miller Productions |
Television films and specials
- The Forest Ranger (1956)
- Operation Cicero (1956)
- Monte Carlo (1961)
- Sally & Sam (1965)
- Batgirl (1968)
- Braddock (1968)
- European Eye (1968)
- The Desperate Mission (1969)
- City Beneath the Sea (1969)
- Anderson and Company (1969)
- The Flim-Flam Man (1969)
- Daughter of the Mind (1969)
- Honeymoon with a Stranger (1969)
- David Copperfield (1969)
- Along Came a Spider (1970)
- The Challenge (1970)
- The Kowboys (1970)
- Southern Fried (1970)
- Three Coins in the Fountain (1970)
- Prudence and the Chief (1970)
- Tribes (1970)
- Paper Man (1971)
- Mr. and Mrs. Bo Jo Jones (1971)
- They Call it Murder (1971)
- Dead Men Tell No Tales (1971)
- The CBS Late Movie (1972, select movies)
- When Michael Calls (1972)
- Fireball Forward (1972)
- Oh, Nurse! (1972)
- Return to Peyton Place (1972–1974)
- The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie (1972–1973)
- Nanny and the Professor (1972) (co-production with Fred Calvert Productions)
- Lost in Space (1973) (co-production with Hanna-Barbera Productions)
- Nanny and the Professor and the Phantom of the Circus (1973) (co-production with Fred Calvert Productions)
- Pursuit (1972)
- Incident on a Dark Street (1973)
- Going Places (1973)
- RX For Defense (1973)
- The Barbara Eden Show (1973)
- Terror on the Beach (1973)
- Ordeal (1973)
- Blood Sport (1973)
- Miracle on 34th Street (1973)
- The Borrowers (1973)
- Mrs. Sundance (1974)
- Fred Astaire Salutes the Fox Musicals (1974)
- If I Love You, Am I Trapped Forever? (1974)
- Remember When (1974)
- Big Rose: Double Trouble (1974)
- A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1974) (remake of the classic film of the same name)
- The Mark of Zorro (1974)
- The Red Badge of Courage (1974)
- Stowaway to the Moon (1975)
- The Trial of Chaplin Jensen (1975)
- Adventures of the Queen (1975)
- At Long Last Cole (1975)
- A Girl Named Sooner (1975)
- State Fair (1976)
- Our Man Flint: Dead on Target (1976)
- Time Travelers (1976)
- The Cheerleaders (1976)
- Jeremiah of Jacob's Neck (1976)
- Wanted: The Sundance Woman (1976)
- Sherlock Holmes in New York (1976)
- Life Goes to the Movies (1976)
- Raid on Entebbe (1977)
- A Circle of Children (1977)
- Spectre (1977)
- Good Against Evil (1977)
- James at 15 (1977)
- The Making of Star Wars (1977) (co-production with Lucasfilm, Ltd.)
- Life Goes to War: Hollywood and the Home Front (1977)
- Murder in Peyton Place (1977)
- Christmas Miracle in Caufield, U.S.A. (1977)
- Ring of Passion (1978)
- Husbands, Wives & Lovers (1978)
- Mother, Jugs, and Speed (1978)
- A Guide for the Married Woman (1978)
- The Nativity (1978)
- Star Wars Holiday Special (1978)
- Like Normal People (1979)
- Swan Song (1980)
- The Day Christ Died (1980)
- Tourist (1980)
- The Diary of Anne Frank (1980)
- SP FX: The Empire Strikes Back (1980) (co-production with Lucasfilm, Ltd.)
- World of Honor (1981)
- Jacqueline Susann's Valley of the Dolls (1981)
- Aliens from Another Planet (1982)
- The Day the Bubble Burst (1982)
- Tomorrow's Child (1982)
- The Rules of Marriage (1982)
- Sister Sister (1982)
- Rooster (1982)
- Kentucky Woman (1983)
- Love Is Forever (1983)
- Blood Feud (1983)
- For Love and Honor (1983)
- Manimal (1983)
- From Star Wars to Jedi: The Making of a Saga (1983) (co-production with Lucasfilm, Ltd.)
- Helen Keller: The Miracle Continues (1984)
- W*A*L*T*E*R (1984)
- Love Thy Neighbor (1984)
- Cover Up (1984)
- Sentimental Journey (1984)
- The Sun Also Rises (1984)
- Half Nelson (1985)
- Peyton Place: The Next Generation (1985)
- Goodbye Charlie (1985)
- Covenant (1985)
- In Like Flynn (1985)
- Murder: By Reason of Insanity (1985)
- A Letter to Three Wives (1985)
- A Masterpiece of Murder (1986)
- Popeye Doyle (1986)
- Night of the Headless Horseman (1999)
- Olive, the Other Reindeer (1999) (co-production with The Curiosity Company)
- The Simpsons 20th Anniversary Special – In 3-D! On Ice! (2010)
See also
- 20th Television
- Foxstar Productions
- Fox 21 Television Studios
- List of 20th Century Fox Television programs
- 20th Century Fox
References
- ↑ "21st Century Fox Realigns TV Syndication, Distribution Biz Underdog/ 20th Century Fox TV". Foxmovies.com. Penske Media Corporation. July 8, 2013.
- ↑ Horn, John (July 12, 1989). "20th Century Fox Restructures Film, Television Units". Associated Press. Retrieved December 27, 2012.
- ↑ "2 Named to Executive Posts in Fox TV Restructuring". Los Angeles Times. December 5, 1994. Retrieved December 27, 2012.
- ↑ Finke, Nikki; Mike Fleming, Jr. (September 14, 2012). "SHOCKER! FOX SHAKEUP: Tom Rothman Exiting 20th Film Group; Jim Gianopulos Becomes Sole Chairman/CEO; 20th TV's Dana Walden & Gary Newman Now Report To News Corp #2 Chase Carey". Deadline.com. Penske Media Corporation. Retrieved May 16, 2013.
- ↑
- ↑ http://ctva.biz/US/Documentary/ThatsHollywood.htm