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Claudette Colbert Life Magazine 1939 Signed Autograph Photos

Colbert, Claudette  Life Magazine 1939 Signed Autograph Photos
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Colbert, Claudette Life Magazine 1939 Signed Autograph Photos
Item# newitem104367371
Price: $99.00

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Colbert, Claudette  Life Magazine 1939 Signed Autograph PhotosColbert, Claudette  Life Magazine 1939 Signed Autograph PhotosColbert, Claudette  Life Magazine 1939 Signed Autograph PhotosColbert, Claudette  Life Magazine 1939 Signed Autograph PhotosColbert, Claudette  Life Magazine 1939 Signed Autograph PhotosColbert, Claudette  Life Magazine 1939 Signed Autograph Photos
Life Magazine-November 13,1939-10 1/2" X 14"-89 pages. This vintage Life Magazine-which originally sold for ten cents-features a full cover photo of actress Caludette Colbert. The magazine also features a four page article with photos on Claudette Colbert's starring role in the movie-"Drums Along The Mohawk". Claudette Colbert's popularity (and salary) skyrocketed after she was cast as "the wickedest woman in history," Nero's unscrupulous wife Poppaea, in the Biblical epic The Sign of the Cross (1932). Colbert expanded her range as a street-smart smuggler's daughter in I Cover the Waterfront and in the pioneering screwball comedy Three-Cornered Moon (both 1933), but it was for a role she nearly refused that the actress secured her box-office stature. Virtually every other actress in Hollywood had turned down the role of spoiled heiress Ellie Andrews in Columbia's It Happened One Night (1934), and when director Frank Capra approached an unenthusiastic Colbert, she wearily agreed to appear in the film on the conditions that she be paid twice her normal salary and that the film be completed before she was scheduled to go on vacation in four weeks. Colbert considered the experience one of the worst in her life — until the 1935 Academy Awards ceremony, in which It Happened One Night won in virtually all major categories, including a Best Actress Oscar for her.

Colbert spent the next decade alternating between comedy and drama, frequently in the company of her most popular co-star, Fred MacMurray. She gained a reputation of giving 110 percent of her energies while acting, which compensated for her occasional imperviousness and her insistence that only one side of her face be photographed (which frequently necessitated redesigning movie sets just to accommodate her phobia about her "bad side"). Colbert remained a top money-making star until her last big hit, The Egg and I (1947), after which she lost some footing, partly because of producers' unwillingness to meet her demands that (under doctor's orders) she could only film a short time each day (her doctor was her husband). She hoped to jump-start her career in the role of Margo Channing in All About Eve, but those plans were squelched when she injured her back and had to relinquish the character to Bette Davis. Traveling the usual "fading star" route, Colbert made films in Europe and a budget Western in the U.S. before returning triumphantly to Broadway, first in 1956's Janus, then in the long-running 1958 comedy Marriage Go Round. The actress also appeared on television, although reportedly had trouble adjusting to live productions. In 1961, she returned to Hollywood as Troy Donahue's mother in Parrish. It would be her last film appearance until the 1987 TV movie, The Two Mrs. Grenvilles — in which she far outclassed her material.The Life Magazine has been autographed on the front cover by Claudette Colbert in black fountain pen..............BOTH MAGAZINE AND AUTOGRAPH ARE IN VERY GOOD CONDITION.....