Remembering Greek film pioneer, Spyros Skouras

·

Spyros Skouras, was one of the most important figures in the film industry and a man that played a key role in some of Hollywood’s most important movies. He also helped alter the course of the industry through his many contributions, innovations and hard work.

Skouras was born on March 28, 1893, and was raised in Greece before moving to the United States in the early years of the 20th century.

Here are some important things you need to know about the legendary film executive:

He was born in Skourochori of Pyrgos and he had two brothers, Karolos (Charles) and Giorgos (George) with whom he migrated together to the city of Saint Louis in Missouri.

Skouras served as president of the well-known film studio 20th Century Fox for two decades. In fact, he was the one behind the creation of the company when he pushed forward the merger of Fox Studios with 20th Century Pictures.

He helped launch the career of many aspiring actors and actresses. Most notable among them was a young Norma Jean Baker, who would eventually change her stage name to Marilyn Monroe. She was known to affectionately call him “Papa Skouras.”

Skouras was the mind behind the creation and introduction of CinemaScope to movie theaters, a move which brought back audiences to the cinemas and helped secure the future of the industry for at least the next few decades. Via CinemaScope, movie-makers could use a wide-angle lens to capture the scenes of their films, which in turn could only be shown inside a movie theater.

Some of the most notable films to be made under his supervision are Cleopatra, The Seven-Year Itch, The King and I and The Robe.

Sources: Wikipedia, Stanford.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Michael Christofas shortlisted for national portrait prize with tribute to Kastellorizian women

Melbourne photographer Michael Christofas has been named a finalist in the 2026 Percival Photographic Portrait Prize in Townsville.

Memory gathers at double book launch: Rain-soaked readings of migration and storytelling

As rain lashed the windows of St Catherine’s Greek Orthodox Church Hall, warmth gathered around a long table laid with yiayia’s tablecloth.

The last thing born in Ephesus wasn’t marble, and Melbourne has the answer

When you hear the title The Library of Ephesus, you expect marble ruins and dusty scrolls. You do not expect soccer teams, Aristotle Onassis.

Filotimo on a plate: Neoléa and the Cretan Association bring Crete to Adelaide

Neoléa, in collaboration with the Cretan Association of South Australia, hosted an intimate and engaging culinary workshop on Sunday, May 17.

Pallaconians’ OPA Y2K Youth Night brings the 2000s back to Brunswick

More than 100 young people gathered at the Pallaconian Brotherhood’s Laconian House in Brunswick on Saturday, May 9.

You May Also Like

‘Hymn to Liberty’: How Dionysios Solomos wrote Greece’s national anthem

On this day in 1865, the "Hymn to Liberty" by Dionysios Solomos is established as the National Anthem of Greece. It clearly represents modern-day Greece.

NSW Government awards almost $700,000 in funding for Small Business Month

Organisations across NSW have been awarded almost $700,000 in NSW Government funding to host events as part of Small Business Month in March.

Greece condemns Turkey’s ‘repeated threats of war’

Greece's Foreign Ministry has slammed what it called Turkey's 'repeated threats of war' in an official statement on Wednesday.