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Auction History Result

1a271 EDWARD G. ROBINSON/FRANK MORGAN/IRVING THALBERG 8x10.25 still 1930s Lederer, Louise, Lasky!

Date Sold 10/14/2018
Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price.


An Original Vintage 8" x 10 1/4" [20 x 26 cm] Still (Learn More)

Edward G. Robinson was born Emmanuel Goldenberg in Romania in 1892, and his parents took him to the U.S. in 1902. He was a small man, but possessed a gigantic talent! He was a stage actor in the 1910s and 1920s, but when sound came to movies Hollywood turned to Broadway to find talent who could talk, and he made his debut (after two minor roles) in The Hole in the Wall, starring opposite future major star Claudette Colbert, in her second movie. Seven movies later, he starred as Cesare Bandello (Rico) in Little Caesar, and it not only made him a major star, it also ushered in the great gangster movies of the 1930s. It also typecast him, and he made mostly gangster movies in the 1930s and 1940s, sometimes comedies or parodies of his classic image. In 1944 he made the incredibly wise decision to accept third billing in Billy Wilder's film noir Double Indemnity, and he and the movie were wonderful. That same year he also memorably starred in Fritz Lang's uber-depressing masterpiece, The Woman in the Window, and the following year he and Lang virtually remade that movie as Scarlet Street (although the two movies come from different source novels). He settled into character roles in major movies and lead roles in minor ones, greatly enriching such movies as The Stranger, Key Largo, and many more. He was caught up in the HUAAC hearings, and though he wasn't blacklisted, he spent a year on Broadway in plays. As he grew older he continued to enrich lots of movies in character roles, including his great performance as master poker player Lancey Howard in The Cincinnati Kid (opposite Steve McQueen), and as Sol Roth in Soylent Green (opposite Charlton Heston). In real life he was a quiet, retiring man, nothing at all like his onscreen persona of a brash tough man brandishing a cigar like a weapon. He was a lifelong collector, and one of the first in Hollywood to collect fine art, and he accumulated a collection worth millions of dollars. The ultimate proof of just how flawed to Motion Picture Academy's methods were over the years is that not only did Edward G. never win an Oscar, he never even was NOMINATED for an Oscar, and yet he gave some of the finest movie performances over, over a span of over 40 years! AND Frank Morgan was an actor from the 1910s to the 1950s. Some of his movies include: Affairs Of Cellini (nominated for the Best Actor Academy Award for this film), Manhandled, The Good Fairy, The Shop Around the Corner (as Hugo Matuschek), Tortilla Flat (nominated for the Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for this film), and The Mortal Storm, but he is best remembered for playing the title role in The Wizard of Oz! AND Irving G. Thalberg was a producer, writer and director from the 1920s to the 1930s. In 1920 at 21, he became an executive at Universal Studios, which was then the number one movie studio. He did well there, but he had a failed romance with owner Carl Laemmle's daughter, which likely caused him to leave the studio, and he signed with Louis B. Mayer. When Mayer joined with Metro to form MGM, Thalberg rose in the ranks at the new combined studio and helped turn MGM into the number one studio. He married actress Norma Shearer, and greatly helped her career at MGM. While he made most of the decisions at MGM, he took no screen credit, except on a single movie! Tragically, he died in 1936 of pneumonia, at just 37.
Important Added Info: Note that this cool still shows eight people standing in a field, perhaps at a wedding. In addition to the above three, there are also Francis Lederer, Anita Louise, and producer Jesse Lasky (we don't know who the two remaining people are). If anyone knows who the other two people are or what occasion this is, please e-mail us and we will post it here.

Condition: very good.
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