eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 4h917 TARZAN & THE SLAVE GIRL 1sh '50 art of Lex Barker on elephant fighting off lions with spear! Date Sold 3/24/2009Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Theatrical Folded One-Sheet Movie Poster (1sh; measures 27" x 41") (Learn More) Tarzan and the Slave Girl, the 1950 Lee Sholem Africa romantic jungle action adventure thriller ("The One and Only Tarzan in his most Thrilling Adventure!"; "The one and only Tarzan defies death to free captive beauties!"; "Thrills by the score in this Mightiest of Tarzan adventures... when marauding henchmen of an evil jungle prince kidnap lively maidens for his harem!"; "See Jane and the slave girl entombed alive! See poison-killing Wadis who look like the trees! See the frenzied fury of the death dance! See the fight for life at the pit of lions! See wicked pagan pleasures in a dazzling forest palace! See Tarzan's elephant friends destroy a granite building!"; "Based on the character created by Edgar Rice Burroughs") starring Lex Barker (in the title role as Tarzan), Vanessa Brown (as Jane), Robert Alda, Denise Darcel (in the title role as the half-breed "slave girl"), Arthur Shields, Hurd Hatfield, and Anthony Caruso. Note that you might not recognize the name of "Vanessa Brown", who was intended to be in a series of Tarzan movies after this one, but who left the series after this, likely because she got married to a Hollywood plastic surgeon. She was born in Austria as "Smylla Brind", and she appeared on stage and in movies in the 1940s as "Vanessa Brind". After she married, she became a panelist on TV quiz shows, but she did some more stage and film work, but she divorced and remarried, and had two children, which kept her from a full time movie career (in 1956, she became very active in politics, serving as a delegate to the Democratic Convention). NOTE: Click on linked names to see a biography. If you know who did the art (if any), please let us know. Condition: fair to good. There were a series of tiny horizontal tears and a few tiny areas of paper loss in the vertical foldline and tiny paper loss at each crossfold. Someone put clear tape on the back of parts of the vertical foldline, taping pieces of paper to the back of the areas of paper loss. Learn More about condition grades
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