eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 7a279 LOT OF 25 RAY MILLAND 8X10 STILLS '30s-60s great scenes from several of his movies! Date Sold 5/28/2017Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. a lot of 25 8x10 stills of Ray Milland. Ray Milland was born Reginald Alfred John Truscott-Jones in Wales in 1905. He spent 3 years as a guardsman with the Royal Household Cavalry in London, and then started appearing in English movies in 1929. He moved to Hollywood the following year and he had little success for a couple of years, but he eventually found his niche playing the younger brother or the rival to the male lead. In the middle 1930s he started getting leads in romantic comedies or dramas to the type of leading ladies who did not want too strong of a male co-star! It seemed like his career would never get better than this, but in 1944 he surprised everyone with his very strong performance in Fritz Lang's Ministry of Fear, and the following year he got even more positive reviews for his role as the alcoholic writer in Billy Wilder's The Lost Weekend, for which he won the Best Actor Oscar. In 1954, when Milland was pushing 50, he was offered the role of the duplicitous husband in Alfred Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder, and he gave one of the best performances of his career. But roles started drying up for the aging balding leading man, and he started taking many TV roles. He also took the lead roles in some truly dreadful low budget horror movies (including The Thing with Two Heads, where he played a rich white racist who had to spend the entire movie tied into a ridiculous body suit with giant black pro football player Rosey Grier!), although he did make a strong appearance as the father in Love Story, and he guest starred in two memorable Columbo episodes. Milland was a really first-rate actor, and when he had an important role for a top level director he proved he was as good as anyone, but sadly much of his career was spent on minor roles or in very minor movies. Note that the items in this lot are from the 1930s to the 1960s. We do not provide a list of these stills, but there are images of all of them (some of the stills do not identify either the movie or the people pictured). Condition: good to very good. Learn More about condition grades Titles included:
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