eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 8s045 DICK HAYMES personality poster 1940s great smiling portrait with facsimile signature! Date Sold 8/19/2018Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Theatrical Unfolded Personality Poster (measures 22" x 28" [56 x 71 cm]) (Learn More) Dick Haymes was an actor from the 1930s to the 1970s. He was born in 1918, and was a singer as a teenager. He wanted to become a songwriter, and he met Harry James, who instead hired him as his featured vocalist. He also worked with Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey, before becoming a solo performer. He appeared in a number of musicals in the 1940s. He had a really wonderful voice, but was a somewhat bland performer, and didn't have great success in the movies. He also didn't have great success romantically, having six wives, including Joanne Dru and Rita Hayworth. He was an alcoholic and had great financial difficulties, but he still lived until 1980, when he passed away at the age of 71. He is not remembered in the same way as other great singers of his era, like Frank Sinatra, but in his day, he was a really major singing star! If you know who did the art (if any), please let us know. Important Added Info: Note that this personality poster is printed on a heavier photo paper-like stock, not what the studios used in the 1920s and early 1930s. Since the poster clearly dates from either the late 1930s or very early 1940s, it probably just means that they found better printing technology at this time Note that starting in the very early 1910s (around 1912, when studios realized that people were more likely to go to a movie if it had a star they liked in it), studios created sets of special "personality" posters, which theaters that showed their movies could hang in their lobbies. These had a big advantage over posters for specific movies, because they could be used whenever a movie with that star was shown, which meant they could be used over and over! Because studios realized this, they made these posters on a high quality paper stock, sometimes with a "linen" texture, and sometimes with elaborate border designs, and almost always with great quality color printing. They almost always measured exactly 22" x 28", the same as "half-sheets" (which were then known as "displays", except that they were taller than they were wide, and that the images almost always had a "full bleed", meaning that there were no blank borders. They almost always showed a head and shoulders image of the star, and the image on these posters is often very close to actual life-size! They almost always have the name of the star and the studio they worked for at the bottom. Even though there were many sets of these from many studios over a period of approximately 30 years (they were rarely made after the early 1940s), very few survive, likely partially due to World War II paper drives, and partially due to the fact that they were never folded and the paper they were made of sometimes aged poorly. Note that William Fox (later Fox Films, and beginning in 1935, as 20th Century-Fox) owned one of the leading Hollywood studios in the 1910s, and remained at the forefront of Hollywood for the next several decades (although they ran into big trouble in 1929, when they went bankrupt after trying to buy MGM, which is a very long story!). Through the decades, they had a great lineup of stars, and they created many sets of personality posters to promote them (we know of ones from the 1910s and the 1920s, and also ones from the 1940s, but we are not sure if they made more than a few in the 1930s, perhaps related to their financial troubles at that time). You can tell their different sets in two ways. One is that all of the posters from a set have the same border design and the stars and studio names are written in the same font and layout, although oddly, their personality posters from the 1940s usually have no printing on them, just stars' images and names, which is completely different from how almost every other studio created theirs. The other is that you can look at the age of the star in the image (although that might possibly be deceptive, because they might have sometimes used a slightly younger version of a star!). These posters are extremely rare as it is likely few theaters ordered them, and fewer still saved them, and in addition, they could be easily torn, and if they were not stored carefully, they would become fragile, and it is likely many were damaged and discarded for that reason! Note that some of the later Fox personality posters from the 1940s are NOT printed on high quality paper stock like that used for their earlier ones. All of these posters do not always age very well, and can become fragile (usually resulting in chips around the edges of the poster). Because of their fragile nature and their age, we intend to send all of these personality posters in large flat packages, and never roll them into tubes (unless the buyer insists)! PLEASE DO NOT BID ON THIS POSTER, UNLESS YOU ARE WILLING TO PAY THE COST OF SHIPPING IT IN A LARGE FLAT PACKAGE! Condition: very good. There is rippling in the top of the poster. Otherwise, it is in nice condition, and is not at all fragile. Learn More about condition grades
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