eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 6b1168 BETTE DAVIS/W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM 7x9.25 news photo 1940s meeting years after Of Human Bondage! Date Sold 3/12/2024Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage 7" x 9 1/4" [18 x 23 cm] News Photo (Learn More) Bette Davis was a legendary actress from the 1930s to the 1980s. She was Warner Bros. leading female star throughout the late 1930s, and she continued as a major star throughout the 1940s, and she had one of her greatest triumphs, All About Eve (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film), in 1950. She refused to retire, and took out a famous ad in Variety seeking work (citing her two Oscars!), and she starred in What Ever Happened To Baby Jane? (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film) and Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte in the 1960s. Some of her other movies include: Dangerous (winner of the Best Actress Academy Award for this film), Jezebel (winner of the Best Actress Academy Award for this film), Now, Voyager (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film), Of Human Bondage, Star (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film), Mr. Skeffington (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film), Little Foxes (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film), Letter (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film), Dark Victory (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film) and too many others to list! She passed away in 1989 at the age of 81. AND W. Somerset Maugham was born William Somerset Maugham in Paris, France in 1874 at the English Embassy, which made him an English citizen (his parents were English, and his father was a lawyer working at the embassy). He spent his early years in Paris, and French was his first language. His life took a massive downturn when his mother passed away when he was eight, and his father two years later. He was sent back to England to live with a creepy uncle, a Vicar. He was of small stature and spoke English with a stammer, and he was more attracted to boys than girls, all of which made for a miserable adolescence, He wanted to be a writer, but his uncle pushed him into going to medical school, and he went for five years, but when he graduated, he was able to publish a novel, Liza of Lambeth, about the working class Londoners he had lived among while at medical school, and it was very successful, and he was able to quit medicine, and become a full-time writer, first of novels, and then also of many successful plays. Over the years he became one of the most successful and highest paid English writers, and many of his novels and plays were adapted into movies, some more than once. Among these were The Moon and Sixpence (a fictionalized biography of Paul Gauguin), Rain, The Letter, The Painted Veil, Secret Agent, The Razor's Edge, and many more. Most of these movies were very successful, and Maugham was one of first English authors to make huge amounts of money selling the film rights to many of his works. Of course his masterpiece was Of Human Bondage, which clearly is somewhat autobiographical. The novel's central character is clearly Maugham himself (Maugham's stammer is replaced by Philip Carey's club foot), but who was the awful Mildred who wrecks his life? Maugham never told, and she may have in fact been based on a man who the bi-sexual Maugham had a relationship with while in medical school. Maugham's personal life was very messy, for he lived most of it as a closeted gay man who nonetheless married and had a child (although late in life he tried to disinherit her, and leave some of his estate to a gay lover, saying she was not his biological child). Maugham passed away in 1965 at the age of 91. Most of the characters in his works lead very messy lives themselves, and they often carry around terrible secrets, as Maugham himself did. I highly recommend most of the movies based on Maugham's works, but especially the 1934 version of Of Human Bondage, starring Bette Davis (in the most brilliant performance of an incredible career) and Leslie Howard. Because Bette Davis was a Warner Bros star, and because she was "loaned" to RKO to make the movie, Warner executives saw to it that she wasn't even nominated for the Best Actress Oscar. likely the greatest travesty in the history of the Academy Awards! As so often happens, Davis was given the Best Actress Oscar the following year for Dangerous, as a "consolation" prize. Important Added Info: Note that this news photo measures 7" x 9 1/4" [18 x 23 cm]. Condition: very good. There are some faint creases scattered in the photo, but they are mostly only noticeable when the photo is tilted to the light. Learn More about condition grades
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