eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 4z0203 TRADER HORN WC 1931 different art of Edwina Booth & Harry Carey w/ elephants, very rare! Date Sold 7/9/2020Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Theatrical Unfolded Movie Window Card (WC; measures 14" x 22" [36 x 56 cm]) (Learn More) Trader Horn, the 1931 W.S. Van Dyke Africa jungle safari adventure thriller ("White Goddess of the Pagan Tribes. The cruelest woman in all Africa!"; "All talking picture"; "Based on the book by Ethelreda Lewis"; nominated for the Best Picture Academy Award; made the year prior to his returning to Africa to make "Tarzan the Ape Man") starring Edwina Booth, Harry Carey Sr. (in the title role as Aloysius 'Trader' Horn), Olive Carey, Duncan Renaldo, and Mutia Omoolu. Note that this is a famous "bad luck" film, many of the crew contracted malaria, two people were killed, there were flash floods, instances of sunstroke, locusts and more. Edwina Booth was an up and coming actress, but she caught African sleeping sickness while making this movie, and her recovery took a long time, and her career never recovered. After filming, Duncan Renaldo encountered legal problems and was almost deported. As for Harry Carey Sr., many consider this his last "A-picture" before starring in low-budget B-westerns and serials, although he had a memorable role in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. Also note that the year after this movie was made, director W.S. Van Dyke had incredible success with another movie set in Africa, Tarzan the Ape Man, which led to one of the most successful movie franchises in history! Finally, note that there was an actual "Trader Horn". Author Ethelreda Lewis, a South African lady, was at her home in Johannesburg, and an old man came up to her house and offered to sell her items. He had been making his living traveling Africa with a large pack on his back containing kitchen utensils and other items which he sold door to door. He also said he had been a big game hunter, a Scotland Yard detective, and many other occupations, and that at that time, he thought he had met more African natives than any other white man who had ever lived! NOTE: Click on linked names to see a biography. If you know who did the art (if any), please let us know. Important Added Info: Note that we have previously auctioned three examples of this first release window card, and only one in the last 18 years! This is likely because the movie got a quick re-release in the early 1930s after the great success of director Van Dyke's "Tarzan the Ape Man", and it also had several other re-releases in the 1940s and 1950s. In any event, all 1931 first release movie paper is extremely rare! Also note that this window card was never folded. Often window cards would be folded across the middle, because that would make them 11" x 14", and they could then be sent with standard folded posters. Most collectors put an added value on a window card that has never been folded. Condition: good. The card was folded across the middle and it had rough creases along that fold. It had a 7" tear in the right of the bottom border (it once had tape on the back which bled through to the front), with a 3" crease near the top of that tear. It had a 1 1/2" crease in the center of the bottom border and some small stains and tiny pinholes around the edges. Many years ago, someone lightly bleached the card and performed slight restoration to the above defects without backing the card, but they left alone the light staining along the tear described above. It can be displayed and enjoyed as it is, or certainly, one could have additional restoration performed. Learn More about condition grades
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