-40%

His Girl Friday, 1940, Movie Glass Slide, Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell

$ 316.8

Availability: 85 in stock
  • Modified Item: No
  • Industry: Movies
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Condition: used,(see description and images).
  • Country of Manufacture: United States
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Modification Description: None

    Description

    His Girl Friday, 1940, Movie Glass Slide, Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell
    His Girl Friday, 1940, Movie Glass Slide, Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell
    Click images to enlarge
    Description
    You are bidding on an ORIGINAL "coming attraction" Movie Glass/Lantern Slide that was designed to promote the theatrical release of the 1940, screwball comedy feature, "His Girl Friday".
    I am Auctioning off my entire collection of
    Movie Glass Slides
    this week (over 100). Please check out some of these titles:
    1935, R48,
    A Night at the Opera
    , The Marx Brothers (Groucho, Harpo, Chico), Margaret Dumont,
    SOLD
    1939 -
    Alleghany Uprising
    , John Wayne, Claire Trevor
    1939 -
    Destry Rides Again
    , Marlene Dietrich, James Stewart
    1939 -
    Gunga Din
    , Cary Grant, Victor McLaglen, Joan Fontaine
    1939 -
    The Roaring Twenties
    , James Cagney,
    Humphrey Bogart, Priscilla Lane
    1940 -
    Boom Town
    , Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, Hedy Lamarr
    1940 -
    Brigham Young
    , Tyrone Power, Linda Darnell, Dean Jagger
    1940 -
    Charlie Chan in Panama
    , Sidney Toler, Jean Rogers, Victor Sen Yung
    ,
    SOLD
    1940 -
    Gone With The Wind
    , Clark Gable, Vivian Leigh, Olivia de Havilland
    ,
    SOLD
    1940 -
    His Girl Friday
    , Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell
    1940 -
    Knute Rockne, All American
    , Pat O'Brien, Ronald Reagan
    1940 -
    Santa Fe Trail
    ,
    Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, Ronald Reagan, Alan Hale
    1940 -
    Strike Up the Band
    , Mickey Rooney, Judy Garland
    1940 -
    The Great Walt Disney Festival of Hits
    , Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
    ,
    SOLD
    1940 -
    The Green Hornet Strikes Again
    , Warren Hull, Keye Luke
    ,
    SOLD
    1940 -
    The Mark of Zorro
    , Tyrone Power, Linda Darnell
    ,
    SOLD
    1940 -
    The Return of Frank James
    , Henry Fonda, Gene Tierney, Jackie Cooper
    1940 -
    Virginia City
    , Errol Flynn, Mariam Hopkins,
    Humphrey Bogart,
    1941 -
    High Sierra
    , Humphrey Bogart, Ida Lupino
    ,
    SOLD
    1941 -
    Strawberry Blonde
    , James Cagney,
    Olivia de Havilland, Rita Hayworth
    1941 -
    Suspicion
    - Cary Grant, Joan Fontaine (directed by Alfred Hitchcock)
    ,
    SOLD
    1941 -
    The Little Foxes
    , Bette Davis, Herbert Marshall, Teresa Wright
    1941 -
    The Great Lie
    ,
    Bette Davis, George Brent, Mary Astor
    1942, R49 -
    The Pride of the Yankees
    , Gary Cooper, Babe Ruth
    , Teresa Wright
    1948 -
    Fort Apache
    , John Wayne, Henry Fonda, Shirley Temple
    1949 -
    Little Women
    - June Allyson, Janet Leigh, Mary Astor, Margaret O'Brien, Elizabeth Taylor, Peter Lawford
    ,
    SOLD
    1949 -
    The Fighting Kentuckian
    ,
    John Wayne, Oliver Hardy, Vera Ralston
    1950 -
    Fancy Pants
    , Bob Hope, Lucille Ball, Bruce Cabot
    1950 -
    Father of the Bride
    , Spencer Tracy, Joan Bennett, Elizabeth Taylor
    1950 -
    The Asphalt Jungle
    , Marilyn Monroe, Sterling Hayden, Louis Calhern
    1950 -
    Sunset Boulevard
    , William Holden, Gloria Swanson
    ,
    SOLD
    And Many, Many More Great Titles...
    This hand colored glass slide is an ORIGINAL and it is NOT a reproduction. It was created to be projected onto the movie theatre screen before the film was released to promote the "coming attraction". Some people in the movie collectible world have said, that, glass slides are much rarer than the paper poster memorabilia from the same film and are very rare pieces of film history.
    Format:
    Glass Slide: 3 1/4" x 4"
    Plot Summary:
    His Girl Friday is a 1940 American screwball comedy drama romance film directed by Howard Hawks, starring Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell and featuring Ralph Bellamy and Gene Lockhart. It was released by Columbia Pictures. The plot centers on a newspaper editor named Walter Burns who is about to lose his ace reporter and ex-wife Hildy Johnson, newly engaged to another man. Burns suggests they cover one more story together, getting themselves entangled in the case of murderer Earl Williams as Burns desperately tries to win back his wife. The screenplay was adapted from the 1928 play The Front Page by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur. This was the second time the play had been adapted for the screen, the first occasion being the 1931 film also called The Front Page.
    Trivia
    :
    It is estimated that the normal rate of verbal dialogue in most films is around 90 words a minute. In His Girl Friday (1940), the delivery has been clocked at 240 words a minute.
    One of the first films (preceded by "Stage Door" (1937)) to have characters talk over the lines of other characters, for a more realistic sound. Prior to this, movie characters completed their lines before the next lines were started.
    Rosalind Russell thought, while shooting, that she didn't have as many good lines as Cary Grant had, so she hired an advertisement writer through her brother-in-law and had him write more clever lines for the dialog. Since Howard Hawks allowed for spontaneity and ad-libbing, he, and many of the cast and crew didn't notice it, but Grant knew she was up to something, leading him to greet her every morning: "What have you got today?"
    During the 1930s, Howard Hawks was hosting a dinner party when the topic of dialogue was brought up. He pulled out a copy of "The Front Page" to demonstrate the snappy exchanges between characters, taking the role of Burns. A female guest took the role of Hildy. While reading, Hawks realized the dialogue sounded much better with a woman reading, and quickly secured the rights for the film from Howard Hughes. Ben Hecht (the author of "The Front Page") approved the gender change and the screenplay was put into production.
    Ginger Rogers wrote that she was offered the role of Hildy Johnson. She read the script, but this was before Cary Grant was cast, and she turned it down. After learning that Grant was cast, she regretted it.
    One scene required Cary Grant to push Rosalind Russell onto a couch. Howard Hawks asked the actor to try shoving her harder. When Grant protested that he didn't want to kill her, Hawks said, "Try killin' 'er."
    Studio:
    Columbia Pictures
    Date:
    1940
    Genre:
    Screwball Comedy, Drama, Romance
    Director(s):
    Howard Hawks
    Producer(s):
    Howard Hawks
    Cast
    :
    Cary Grant as Walter Burns
    Rosalind Russell as Hildy Johnson
    Ralph Bellamy as Bruce Baldwin
    Gene Lockhart as Sheriff Hartwell
    Porter Hall as Murphy
    Ernest Truex as Bensinger
    Cliff Edwards as Endicott
    Clarence Kolb as the Mayor
    Roscoe Karns as McCue
    Frank Jenks as Wilson
    Regis Toomey as Sanders
    Abner Biberman as Louie
    Frank Orth as Duffy
    John Qualen as Earl Williams
    Helen Mack as Mollie Malloy
    Alma Kruger as Mrs. Baldwin
    Billy Gilbert as Joe Pettibone
    Pat West as Warden Cooley
    Edwin Maxwell as Dr. Eggelhoffer
    Marion Martin as Evangeline (uncredited)
    More Info on Cary Grant
    :
    Cary Grant was born Archibald Alexander Leach in Bristol, England in 1904. After a bizarre childhood (he came home one day when he was nine and was told his chronically depressed mother had died, when actually his father had put her in a mental institution!), young Archie was kicked out of school and ran away and joined a group of stage acrobats. When he was 16 the group went on a two year tour of the U.S., and when the tour ended, he stayed and acted on the stage. In 1931 he had much success in regional theater in St. Louis, and he moved to Hollywood. At this point he changed his name to Cary Grant. After a few minor roles he starred in Blonde Venus opposite Marlene Dietrich, and in She Done Him Wrong, opposite
    Mae West
    (it is Grant she invites to come up and see her sometime). He was under contract to Paramount, and was the first choice for every romantic comedy and melodrama, and when his contract was up he refused to re-sign, and he remained independent for the rest of his career, and he made excellent choices in what movies he made. He remained a major star throughout the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, and he was equally successful in comedy as he was in dramas and thrillers. His best movies span his entire career. Just a few of them are
    Penny Serenade
    (nominated for the Best Actor Academy Award for this film), None But The Lonely Heart (nominated for the Best Actor Academy Award for this film),
    Bringing Up Baby
    , Only Angels Have Wings, Mr. Lucky, Arsenic and Old Lace,
    Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House
    , An Affair to Remember, and of course the movies he made with Alfred Hitchcock;
    Suspicion
    (1941), Notorious (1946), To Catch a Thief (1955), and North by Northwest (1959). His personal life was very different from his onscreen persona (supposedly, when he was told "everybody would like to be Cary Grant" he said "So would I!"). He was married five times, but he spent most of the years in-between those marriages living with Randolph Scott, and many have suggested he was bisexual. Chevy Chase once publicly joked that Grant was gay, and Grant sued him over it. In the early 1960s he took LSD over 100 times, and in 1965 he married the much younger
    Dyan Cannon
    , and they had a daughter together, the only child either ever had. He retired in 1966, and passed away in 1986 at the age of 82. I don't know that there was ever a more appealing romantic leading man than Cary Grant and he had great romantic chemistry with every one of his leading ladies. He was the inspiration for the line, "Women want to be with him, men want to BE him".
    More Info on Rosalind Russell
    :
    Rosalind Russell (born Catherine Rosalind Russell) was an actress from the 1930s to the 1970s. Her middle name, which she used when she performed, came from the name of a ship! She was far from an overnight success. She did not start acting in movies until she was 27, and for several years, she was used by MGM to keep Myrna Loy from demanding more money! She mostly had secondary parts. In 1939, her skill at comedy was discovered when she played one of the leads in
    The Women
    , and that led to her starring role in
    His Girl Friday
    , playing a part written for a man. She alternated between making movies and appearing on the stage, and she had great success on both with
    Auntie Mame
    (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film). Some of her other movies include: Sister Kenny (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film), My Sister Eileen (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film), and Mourning Becomes Electra (nominated for the Best Actress Academy Award for this film). She passed away in 1976 at the age of 69.
    More Info on Ralph Bellamy:
    Ralph Bellamy was an actor from the 1930s to the 1990s. He had a major triumph playing FDR in
    Sunrise
    at Campobello, both on Broadway and in the movie version. He often had the non-glamorous role of the "guy who lost the girl"! Some of his movies include:
    His Girl Friday
    , The Awful Truth (nominated for the Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for this film), and Rosemary's Baby. He made a great "comeback" with Don Ameche in the movie
    Trading Places
    . He passed away in 1991 at the age of 87.
    More Info on Gene Lockhart
    :
    Gene Lockhart was a Canadian actor from the 1920s to the 1950s. Some of his movies include: Algiers (nominated for the Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for this film),
    Miracle on 34th Street
    , and Carousel. He passed away in 1957 at the age of 65.
    More Info on Marion Martin
    :
    Marion Martin was an actress from the 1930s to the 1950s. She certainly had a lot to live up to when she first started making movies, because she was the last of the girls personally selected by Flo Ziegfeld to be a "
    Ziegfeld Girl
    ", and he called her "the world's most beautiful woman". She started with a lot of uncredited roles, and never really hit it big, mostly playing chorus girls and other types of sexy blondes. Some of Martin's movies include: His Girl Friday,
    State of the Union
    , and
    Tales of Manhattan
    . She retired in 1951, having married well, and passed away in 1985 at the age of 77.
    More Info on John Qualen:
    John Qualen was a Canadian-born character actor from the 1930s to the 1970s. He never became a star, but he made 139 movies over a 40 year period, and whenever there was a need for a Swedish character, he surely got the first call! Some of his movies include: The Farmer Takes a Wife,
    Casablanca
    (as Berger), Anatomy of a Murder (as Deputy Sheriff Sulo), and
    The Sons of Katie Elder
    . He passed away in 1987 at the age of 87.
    More Info on Howard Hawks
    :
    Howard Hawks was a legendary director from the 1920s to 1970. Not only did he have great hits over many decades, but he also made movies in wildly different genres, and he succeeded at all of them! Some of his movies include: His Girl Friday,
    The Big Sleep
    , Red River, Rio Bravo, Bringing Up Baby,
    To Have and Have Not
    , Scarface, and more! He passed away in 1977 at the age of 81.
    Please, let me know if you have any questions about this item or any of the items I am selling.
    Slide Condition:
    The Glass Slide is NM, the cardboard holder VG-EX+ (shows some wear)
    . Please see the scans for actual condition.
    This Movie Glass Slide would make a great addition to your collection or as a Gift (great for Framing in a Shadow Box).
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    This glass slide will be wrapped in bubble wrap and shipped securely inside a sturdy box.
    I will combine lots to save on the shipping costs and I use USPS 1st class shipping (it gives both of us tracking of the package).
    Please look at my other Auctions for more Collectibles of the 1800's-1900's.
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