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LOUISE BROOKS (personality) LOUISE BROOKS (personality) fan photo OR search current auctions Auction History Result 2w143 LOUISE BROOKS 5x7 fan photo 1920s incredible portrait with her trademark bobbed hair! Date Sold 12/14/2017Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage 5" x 7" [13 x 18 cm] Fan Photo, with facsimile signature (Learn More) Louise Brooks was born Mary Louise Brooks in 1906, and she was always unconventional. She was the daughter of a Kansas lawyer, but she left at the age of 16 to go to New York and join Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn with their Denishawn dancers. Two years later she had a falling out with Shawn and was fired. She then worked in the George White's Scandals, the Ziegfeld Follies (where she was a semi-nude dancer, and was noticed, and signed to a Hollywood contract by Paramount Pictures, where she had several minor movies as a sexy flapper girl in comedies). She finally got her big break in a starring role in Beggars Of Life, and predictably she left Hollywood to go to Europe. But she had had the title role in The Canary Murder Case in 1929, which had been filmed as a silent, and Paramount asked her to return to dub the movie, and she refused, which effectively blacklisted her in Hollywood. She made two incredible movies with legendary German director G.W. Pabst, Pandora's Box, and Diary Of A Lost Girl and I highly recommend both. She made Prix de Beaute in France, and in the early 1930s she returned to Hollywood (minus her trademark flapper hairdo) where she could only get minor roles, and she returned to Kansas, and later New York. She lived an alcoholic life in obscurity (supported by former admirers including William S. Paley, founder of CBS). In the 1950s and 1960s she was "rediscovered" by film critics, and she wrote many articles and books about her life, which I also highly recommend. She is likely best remembered for her distinctive hair style! She passed away in 1985 at the age of 78. Important Added Info: Note that fan photos like this were sent to fans who wrote to their favorite stars from the 1910s to the 1940s (some are printed on a quality paper stock). Often they would have "autographs" on them, but they are always either printed within the photo or were signed by a secretary, or stamped on the photo, but they are NEVER actually signed by the star (unless someone who acquired one later met the star and got them to sign it). This fan photo has a printed facsimile signature. Please bear this in mind before bidding on this photo (which is a vintage photo, and is nice to display, but it is NOT personally signed by the star). Condition: good to very good. There are some tiny stains in the top of the image in Brooks' hair and a few around the edges (see our image). Learn More about condition grades
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