eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 2r458 TIM TYLER'S LUCK 7 LCs R1940s adventure strip comes to the screen, cool stock cards! Date Sold 12/20/2018Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. 7 Undated (probably 1940s) Re-Release Vintage Theatrical Movie Lobby Cards (LCs; measure 11" x 14" [28 x 36 cm]) (Learn More) Tim Tyler's Luck, the 1937 Ford Beebe & Wyndham Gittens Africa juvenile jungle safari adventure serial ("The great adventure strip hero comes to the screen!"; "From the popular newspaper strip by Lyman Young"; "Owned and Copyrighted by King Features, Oct. 1, 1928"; "Original story and screen play by Wyndham Gittens, Norman S. Hall, Ray Trampe"; about a youthful adventurer who travels to Africa in search of his lost father, and he must fight the mysterious "Spider Webb") starring Frankie Thomas (in the title role "as Tim Tyler"), Frances Robinson ("as Lora Lacey"), Jack Mulhall ("as 'Sergeant Gates'"), Norman Willis ("as Spider Webb"), Al Shean ("as Professor Tyler"), William 'Billy' Benedict, Pat J. O'Brien (not THE Pat O'Brien who was part of the "Irish Mafia" with Cagney and McHugh, but another actor who appeared in 17 films between 1921 and 1941), and Jack Leonard (as the man in the gorilla suit). Note that Jack Leonard was one of the first men to play gorillas in movies. He was an extra in Tarzan the Ape Man, and the director did not like the way the men in ape suits were performing, and Jack Leonard said he could do better, and he was given the part! He and his wife made his gorilla suit and he studied real life gorillas to see how they moved and the sounds they made. He appeared in a dozen movies between 1932 and 1940, nine times of them as an ape! We don't know what happened to him after that (perhaps he passed away). If anyone knows more about Jack Leonard, please e-mail us and we will post it here. Also note that Ray 'Crash' Corrigan and Charles Gemora were two actors who played lots of gorillas in movies in the 1930s and 1940s. Emil Van Horn and Jack Leonard each played around a dozen gorillas, and interestingly, that was all they did (no doubt all four of them owned a gorilla suit!). Also note that Lyman Young, the creator of this comic strip, was the older brother of Chic Young, creator of "Blondie"! NOTE: Click on linked names to see a biography. Important Added Info: Note that for this undated (likely 1940s) re-release, lobby cards were created for this serial that each have a blank area at the top (surely so that the theater could put a snipe or overprint that area with the chapter that they were showing that day. Condition: good. Each has creases, defects, areas of paper loss and tears of varying lengths along parts of some edges (more so along portions of the upper edge). Please see our super-sized images to get a good sense of the condition of these items prior to placing a bid. Learn More about condition grades
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