My Account | shopping basketMy Basket | Wish List | Advanced Search | Login
Home | Register | Join As A Seller | Resources | About Us | Help

categories
 Advertising
 Architectural/Garden
 Art
 Auction Catalogs
 Books
 Clocks
 Decorative Arts
 Furniture
 Glass
 Jewelry
 Lighting Devices
 Photography
 Porcelain-Pottery
 Prints
 Scientific-Medical
 Silver/Silverware
 Textiles-Sewing
 Watches

 More Categories »



   

Lombard, Carole 1937 Color Magazine Advertisement Signed Autograph Lucky Strike Cigarettes

Email Dealer
View Dealers Other Items
Add To Wish List
Email Item To A Friend

Get an email when more items like this one arrives.
Manage Alerts | Help

Collectibles > Autographs


Dealer: Guaranteed Autographs
Contact: Al Radwill - Email Dealer
Add Item To Basket
Continue Shopping
Price: $199.00 USD  - Currency Converter

Shipping inside United States: Quoted at time of purchase
Shipping outside United States: Quoted at time of purchase

Description: This item is the back cover to a vintage 10" X 14" magazine. Please note this is the back cover only-there is no complete magazine. The back cover is to a 1937 magazine and features a color advertisement of Carole Lombard for Lucky Strike Cigarettes.When Carole Lombard died at the age of 34 in a plane crash following a World War II war bond drive, the American film industry lost one of its most talented and intelligent actresses. Starting out in silent films as a Mack Sennett bathing beauty, she later epitomized screwball comedy in Twentieth Century (1934); My Man Godfrey (1936), for which she was Oscar nominated as Irene Bullock, with ex-husband William Powell as Godfrey; and Nothing Sacred (1937), playing the not-so-doomed Hazel Flagg. But Lombard was also a capable dramatic actress whose talents can be seen in her subdued performance as a nurse in one of her final roles, in Vigil in the Night (1940), as well as in The Eagle and the Hawk (1933), In Name Only (1939) and They Knew What They Wanted (1940). Other fine appearances include teaming with Fred MacMurray in several films, the best of which are Hands Across the Table (1935) and The Princess Comes Across (1936), in which Lombard does a humorously accurate Greta Garbo takeoff. Her two final films contain two of her best performances: Mr. and Mrs. Smith (1940) and the Ernst Lubitsch war satire, To Be or Not To Be (1942). She was married to William Powell from 1931-33 and to Clark Gable from 1939 til her death.The magazine advertisement has been autographed on the front by Carole Lombard with a fountain pen in red..........BOTH MAGAZINE ADVERTISEMENT AND AUTOGRAPH ARE IN VERY GOOD CONDITION........................
Status: For Sale Reference#: loca19comaad
Condition: See Description Year: See Description


Dealer Policies: Guaranteed Autographs Policy Details

Dealer Accepts: Personal CheckMoney OrderPaypal



   





Home | Find a Dealer/Mall | Resources | Join | About Us | Contact Us | Help/FAQs
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

© 1996-2009 GoAntiques, Inc. All Rights & Media Reserved.