eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 3f0328 ROSALIE pressbook 1937 West Point cadet Nelson Eddy, sexy Eleanor Powell, ultra rare! Date Sold 11/22/2022Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Theatrical Movie Pressbook (pb; measures 14" x 20" [36 x 51 cm]; 14 pages). Also included are 2 ad supplements that have 10 pages and 9 pages. (Learn More) Rosalie, the 1937 W.S. Van Dyke (billed as "W.S. Van Dyke II") patriotic West Point military academy romantic musical ("Blazing with glamour, gaiety, gorgeous girls!"; ".....The most lavish musical hit ever filmed!"; about a West Point cadet who falls in love with a girl who turns out to be a princess from Europe and she sneaks into the Academy dressed as a cadet, and performs some pretty amazing marching dance numbers with the cadets!) starring Nelson Eddy, Eleanor Powell (in the title role as Princess Rosalie Romanikov), Frank Morgan, Edna May Oliver, Ray Bolger, Ilona Massey, Billy Gilbert, and Reginald Owen. Note that MGM originally hired Austrian singer Grete Natzler (renamed "Della Lind") to play the role in this movie that ended up being played by Hungarian singer Ilona Massey. NOTE: Click on linked names to see a biography. Important Added Info: Note that we have never before auctioned this pressbook! Note that in December 2021, we were consigned a truly remarkable collection of pressbooks (the first 37 were auctioned in our December Major Auction, and the most expensive one sold for $17,500!). In our regular auctions since, we have auctioned hundreds more from this collection. Now we continue to auction more of these pressbooks, which is absolutely the finest collection of pressbooks we have ever been consigned. In this set of auctions, most of the ones we are auctioning are larger pressbooks, mostly 11" x 15" or larger. Some of them were folded at one time, but they were stored unfolded for many years, so we left them unfolded, and unless the new owner requests otherwise, we will send them unfolded, because re-folding them would likely lessen the condition. Many of these are ones we have either never auctioned before or only once auctioned before, sometimes many years ago. These were collected decades ago, which was the only time that many of these could be found, and after these auctions are over it may be years (or decades!) before some of these are offered again. They ARE that rare! Note that pressbooks from the 1930s are almost never found in great condition, and some of them (especially those printed during World War II, including all the MGM ones from that time) are printed on newsprint, and are hard to find in even lesser condition. We have several images from each pressbook. We have given each an overall grade, and ask that you look at our images to get a good sense of the condition of that pressbook, because, since they have many pages, it would take forever to describe their condition in detail. However, EVERY one of these pressbooks is complete and uncut! Note that MGM, being the foremost studio of the 1930s felt they did not need to create wonderful posters for their movies, because they had so many top stars, so often their 1930s posters have simple artwork against a white background with a duotone photo of the top stars! However, they knew that they needed theater owners to book their movies, so they spent quite a bit more money on their pressbooks, often making them close to window card size, with an exact color recreation of the window card image on the cover of the pressbook, and the posters on the back cover in full color, and often a full-color sample herald, "tipped in" to the inside of one of the covers! However, they economized on the interior on these large pressbooks and used newsprint for the interior pages, which in almost every case has aged greatly and is fragile, if not brittle (see below for the exact condition of this pressbook). Note: We have 12 images of this pressbook, but due to a space limitation, only TEN of the 12 images are displayed above. However, there is a "supersize" link to the right of those images that lets you see the other 2. Condition: fair to good, NO CUTS. The pressbook is complete and uncut. However, all of the pages of each MGM pressbook from this period were printed on a newsprint that was exactly like what was used in newspapers at that time (see above), and it almost always ages terribly, resulting in incredibly brittle insides. The interior pages are incredibly fragile and there are tears and paper loss around the edges, and many of the pages are separated at the spine. The cover is in better condition than the interior pages, but it has damage, tears, and small paper loss down the spine. The pressbook had a tipped-in herald that is no longer present (of course, one could find another example to replace it with). Learn More about condition grades
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