eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 5d080 WILD PARTY linen WC '29 hear Clara Bow's voice in this all-talking picture, sexy artwork! Date Sold 3/12/2017Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Theatrical Linenbacked Window Card Movie Poster (WC; measures 14" x 22" [36 x 56 cm]) (Learn More) The Wild Party, the 1929 Dorothy Arzner Roaring Twenties flapper girl romantic college comedy ("A Paramount All-Talking Picture"; "The life of the party and How!"; "Everybody's invited ... Big Doings! ...Much Whoopee! at Clara Bow's Wild Party"; "You don't know the half of It until you hear Clara Bow Talk!"; a wacky story of a wild female student at an all-girls college, and she falls in love with her young professor, but when he rejects her, she goes to a "wild party", and that results in her being expelled and him being fired, but they find their love for each other) starring Clara Bow, Fredric March (in his second real movie role!), Marceline Day, Shirley O'Hara, Adrienne Dore, Joyce Compton, Phillips Holmes, and Jack Oakie. Note that Phillips Holmes had made an impression in some movies in the late 1920s. In 1931, he would get the lead in the first version of "An American Tragedy", which made it seem like he would become a major star, but that didn't materialize. He had a major affair with Libby Holman, but that was certainly complicated, and when they broke up, she immediately married his brother! Oddly, years later, Holman would have another very complicated affair with Montgomery Clift, who played the same part in the remake of "An American Tragedy", retitled "A Place in the Sun". Sadly, Holmes died in a plane crash in 1942. I am very surprised no one has made a movie about his life, or a joint movie about him and Libby Holman! Like most of director Arzner's movies, this one dealt with a very independent woman who "goes her own way" in life! Also note that Dorothy Arzner was a director from the 1920s to the 1940s, and she was the only woman director during the "Golden Age" of Hollywood ('20s to '40s) and she was the first woman to join the Directors Guild of America. Arzner was a lesbian at a time when almost no females openly were, and she was surprisingly open about it, often dressing in "men's clothes" and wearing her hair short. She made many "women's movies" and movies with a "feminist" theme. After making "First Comes Courage" in 1943, she made training films for the U.S. Army WACs, and she never returned to making Hollywood movies, becoming a film teacher of directing and screenwriting, teaching at UCLA until her passing in 1979. NOTE: Click on linked names to see a biography. If you know who did the art (if any), please let us know. Important Added Info: Note that this window card (and several others we are auctioning in this part of our major auction) has been linenbacked. They were recently backed by a restoration studio that prefers linenbacking to paperbacking, because there is less alteration to the card. There is no right or wrong to this, just a matter of personal opinion. On each of those window cards, the restorer left 1/2" of excess linen on all four sides (see our image). What IS linenbacking? Learn More Overall Condition and Pre-Restoration Defects with Quality of Restoration: good to very good. The poster had pinholes and a few small tears around the edges, with some creases, smudges, and stains scattered in the image. Overall, the poster was in good to very good condition prior to linenbacking. The poster was pretty well backed, and displays well, but there has been over painting in much of the lettering, to "even the color out". Learn More about condition grades
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