Posts Tagged ‘marlon brando’

Another New York picture business bites the popcorn, Movie Star News

July 30, 2012

 i remember this store from when it was on 13th street almost next to the quad movie theater. then i think it moved to 18th street where i would pass it on my way to cambridge camera which is long gone also. sometimes i would go in drawn by the poster in the window, i like posters and pictures.

the world changes so fast and yet my mind still remembers the places that were and when i come upon a store, a building or a vacant lot, i remember what was there. i am sure there will come a time when i forget things and walk around with my shoe laces undone. heck i am not sure what day of the week it is. so it has already started, i loose words in conversations which baffles me. until it happens to you it’s hard to understand.

bettie page

greenstreet & bogart

i  must confess that i don’t remember the absents of this store. i didn’t go in there much but when i first came to nyc i was enthralled with everything entertainment wise. there is something about the smell of old paper that turns me on, the gotham book store sent shivers up my spine in anticipation of what treasures that awaited me on it’s shelves. so did this place, i loved flipping through the files of forgotten or unknown names that then resided there. now it’s time to move along no pictures there.

marilyn

Massive NYC movie star collection, images of pin-up queen Bettie Page slated for auction

By Associated Press, Updated: Monday, July 30, 2:52 AM AP

NEW YORK — Movie Star News amassed a staggering amount of film stills, posters and negatives over the past 73 years — nearly 3 million, including 1,500 prints of Bettie Page, known as the queen of pin-ups. But last week, the once-lively store in lower Manhattan was lifeless. The classic movie posters that once covered its narrow 2,000-square-foot space were rolled up or covered in cellophane, its bins and racks empty. Everything was packed up in cardboard boxes that lined the floor.

The legendary Manhattan store credited with creating pin-up art had sold its entire inventory to a Las Vegas collectibles company.

The collection, regarded as one of the largest of its kind, is headed for the auction block. It will be sold in a series of sales slated to begin next year. The bulk of the collection covers the years 1939 to 1979; 11,500 movies and 5,000 actors are represented.

“This is the most important photo archive of Hollywood in existence. There are tens of thousands of negatives that have never been reproduced,” said Stuart Scheinman, co-owner of Entertainment Collectibles, which bought the collection. “There are images here that have never been seen by the public.”

There are 2,000 original prints and negatives of Frank Sinatra and Marlon Brando, 1,000 of Gary Cooper, 400 of Bette Davis, hundreds of movie images of “The Godfather” and “Gone With the Wind.”

“This could literally take five to 10 years to go through it all,” Scheinman said. He would only say the company purchased the collection for “seven figures.” Its true value was anyone’s guess, but he believed it easily was worth $150 million.

Movie Star News produced 8-by-10 glossy prints from the negatives, selling each for a few dollars in the store and through the mail. But the Internet has significantly cut down on demand.

“I make references to things when customers come in, and they have no idea what I’m talking about,” said Ira Kramer, who took over the business that his mother, Paula, and uncle Irving Klaw, started in 1939. “Today, if you want a picture of a star you can go on the computer and download it. So what do you need me for?”

“The maintenance of the collection has been fastidious … the way a fine library would maintain material,” said Arlan Ettinger, president of Guernsey’s and in charge of selling the collection.

As far back as the 1940s, Movie Star News had a mailing list of 100,000 names. World War II soldiers were big customers, buying prints for their lockers, Kramer said.

The entrepreneurial Klaw, who died in 1966, hit on the idea of selling pictures of Hollywood stars while operating a movie bookstore.

“He noticed that kids were tearing out the pictures of the movie stars, so he decided to sell their pictures rather than the books,” Kramer said. Klaw started dealing directly with movie studios, RKO, Columbia and others, located in those days along Eleventh Avenue.

“He made arrangements to buy from them whatever they didn’t want … original negatives, original prints of ‘Citizen Kane,’ ‘Three Stooges,’” he said. The studios were more than happy to be rid of the stuff for which they had no room.

Kramer’s mother was the one who took the pin-up shots. But it was Klaw who launched that side of the business after a man approached him about making him a set of photographs of skimpily-clad girls posing with whips and ropes, said Kramer.

Page was Klaw’s favorite model, and a suitcase of the 7-inch heels she wore in the photos, plus other bondage props, will be included in the auction.

The photos were tame by today’s standards. In fact, the models were required to wear two pairs of underwear. But the FBI continuously harassed Klaw and he had to appear before the 1955 Senate Subcommittee on Obscene and Pornographic Materials.

“It was a big headache,” Kramer said. Klaw finally decided to burn all the pin-up material — but Paula Klaw saved a lot of it.

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Online:

Guernsey’s: http://www.guernseys.com