Description: 1950’s NATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF REDHEADS First Annual Award PIPER LAURIE Photos. Two photos showing Piper holding the award. Quote at the bottom states “to combat the wide-spread publicity afforded to blondes and brunettes and to restore America’s Titian-tressed beauty to her rightful place on the pedestal of loveliness” PHOTO ID: N/A RARE METER: 10/10 - Undiscoverable. Very rare! Absolutely these are the only two in existence. MEASURES: 8” x 10” CONDITION: Edge and corner wear (crimps, corner rounding) as well as discoloration and indentations when held at an angle under light - you can see all of these condition notes in my pictures. Overall: VERY GOOD SHIPPING: Fast & free via USPS (for USA). Will ship same day if payment is received by 3pm EST! Free returns! Shipped with care (cardboard backers, bubble wrap, peanuts & or double boxed whenever necessary). Signature confirmation for high value items is required. HISTORY: An important element in Cleveland’s success as a movie studio hub was the CLEVELAND FILM EXCHANGE BUILDING (also known as Cleveland Film Service and The Academy Film Service) located on the southeast corner of Payne Ave. and East 21st St. Studios and distributors in the specially constructed building performed a film pickup and delivery service, rewound and inspected returned movies, and stored films between showings. In an age when movie theaters would change their offerings several times a week, the films had to be ready to ship. Trucks would move in and out of the Film Exchange Building at all hours of the day and night to serve the more than 700 theaters of northern Ohio. At its peak, fourteen national studios had offices in the building. Cleveland was also home to over a dozen sponsored film studios, including CINECRAFT PRODUCTIONS (established in 1939), ESCAR (1942), GENERAL PICTURES CORP. (1957), and TRI-STATE MOTION PICTURES (1926). Other film studios, with their main offices in other cities, also had sales offices in Cleveland. These included Wilding Studios out of Chicago, the Jam Handy Organization out of Detroit, Roland Reed Productions, Jerry Fairbanks, Inc., and Riviera Productions out of Los Angeles. My items all come from Elmer Kadar - who partially owned the film exchange (Kadar was also very wealthy as he was family to the ruler of Hungary - Janos Kadar). I am the sole owner of the vast majority of the Cleveland film exchanges receipts, records, etc (what is left of it anyways) that Kadar meticulously stored and documented. He was a serial collector in many facets. Which is where many of my items come from for those who would like to know! A MODERN RECORD: In March of 2024 MegaTraders set a world record for the most valuable set (8) of original lobby cards for a “modern” cartoon fantasy film in the past decade. That set - 1982 The Last Unicorn sold for $5,000 right here on eBay! A COSTLY MISTAKE: In 2012 I mistakenly sold the Gone With The Wind continuity signed by Selznick (overlooked the signature) for $300. It went on to sell for almost $15,000-$20,000 years later. A rookie mistake and one I vowed to never make again!
Price: 102 USD
Location: Cleveland, Ohio
End Time: 2024-11-25T18:31:30.000Z
Shipping Cost: 0 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Return policy details:
Industry: Movies
Size: 8” x 10”
Object Type: Photograph
Original/Reproduction: Original
Style: Black & White
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States