eMoviePoster.comAuction History Result 1a514 LANA TURNER/GEORGE RAFT/GLENN FORD 7.25x9.75 still 1940s with over a dozen other top stars! Date Sold 10/14/2018Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage 7 1/4" x 9 3/4" [18 x 25 cm] Still (Learn More) Lana Turner was an actress from the 1930s to the 1990s. She remained a top leading actress for over 20 years, though her turbulent personal life definitely affected her career (including the murder of her violent lover, Johnny Stompanato, by her own daughter Cheryl Crane!). Some of her movies include: The Postman Always Rings Twice, Imitation of Life, The Bad and the Beautiful, Peyton Place (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film), and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde AND George Raft (born George Ranft) was a legendary tough guy actor (specializing in crime and film noir roles) from the 1920s to the 1980s. Like James Cagney, he actually WAS born in a tough neighborhood in New York City, so his tough guy persona was honestly earned! Note that he first appeared in movies in minor roles in 1929, but it took three years and seven movies before he got his big break in Howard Hughes' "Scarface" (where he played Paul Muni's coin-flipping henchman). After that, he was rushed into six movies in the rest of 1932 alone, and he remained a major star (mostly in gangster roles) for many years. Some of his other movies include: Each Dawn I Die, Manpower, If I Had a Million, They Drive by Night, and Some Like It Hot (in a great cameo where he played a parody of his earlier gangster roles) AND Glenn Ford was born Gwyllyn Samuel Newton Ford in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada in 1916. When he was eight, his family moved to Santa Monica, California. After acting in a road company, he was signed to a contract by Columbia Pictures in 1939 (that same year they signed William Holden, and they made similar movies over the next few years, sometimes appearing together). Ford made 14 movies between 1939 and 1943, but nothing all that memorable, and he had enlisted in the United States Marine Corps (USMC) Reserve in 1942, and he stopped making movies for the duration of the war. In 1943, while still in the Marines, he married actress Eleanor Powell, who was far more famous than he, and they had a son, Peter (who was Ford's only child, and who, many years later, would collect many posters on his dad's movies!). After the war, he had a major breakout role in Gilda in 1946, opposite Rita Hayworth. While everyone mostly just remembers Hayworth's super sexy sheath dress and sultry singing, the movie finally got Ford noticed, but it would be several years before he got more substantial roles (he would appear in two similar movies with Hayworth, The Loves of Carmen and Affair in Trinidad, but neither had the success of Gilda). Ford was one of those actors who aged extremely well (like Robert Mitchum and John Wayne) and who actually had more appeal when he reached his mid 30s than he had ten years earlier! In 1953 he starred in Fritz Lang's ultra gritty film noir, The Big Heat (the movie where Gloria Grahame has scalding hot coffee thrown in her face by Lee Marvin). Lang, Ford, and Grahame would reunite two years later in Human Desire, but it did not have the success of The Big Heat. In 1955, Ford starred in the schoolteacher classic, Blackboard Jungle. In the 1950s and 1960s, Ford alternated between romantic comedies like The Courtship of Eddie's Father and action movies (often westerns). In 1971 he starred in a TV series Cade's County. His roles became fewer in the later 1970s. He played "Pa Kent" in Superman in 1978. His last film appearances were in 1991, and he passed away in 2006. Glenn Ford was a solid performer who appeared in movies in seven different decades, but was often overshadowed by his co-stars. His career started out very similar to that of William Holden, but unlike Holden, Ford did not have some breakout hits in the 1960s that gave his career a resurgence, and he was never really a "superstar", but he left behind a great body of work that includes some very enjoyable films and performances! Important Added Info: Note that this still was taken at a "Meet the Stars" broadcast in the 1940s. Commissioner Melvin C. Hazin gathered these stars together to help President Roosevelt celebrate his birthday, and those pictured include the above three, plus Jean Hersholt, Preston Foster, Sterling Hayden, Maureen O'Hara, Wallace Beery, Constance Moore, Wayne Morris, Mrs. Red Skelton, Deanna Durbin, Red Skelton, Al Ritz, Kay Aldrich, Clifton Fadiman, and "Little Carol Ann" (Wallace Beery's adopted daughter, who is sitting in the commissioner's lap). What a great assembly of stars in one room! If anyone knows more about this, please e-mail us and we will post it here. Also note that this still measures 7 1/4" x 9 3/4" [18 x 25 cm], but it has not been trimmed. Condition: good to very good. Learn More about condition grades
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