-40%

Joan Crawford * James Stewart in "Ice Follies of 1939" MGM Wonderful Portrait

$ 89.23

Availability: 43 in stock
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Modified Item: No
  • Condition: Very Good Condition
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back

    Description

    Joan Crawford & James Stewart  in "The Ice Follies of 1939 "  presented by MGM  1939 !!!
    .  Lobby card is in very good condition!!!!... wear around the edges with pinholes -
    Ironically, the film mirrored what was happening in Crawford's life at the time. Just as her character finds her marriage threatened when her success as a film star eclipses Stewart's status as a skater and ice choreographer, so her real-life marriage to Franchot Tone was falling apart, partly because he had never matched her success as a Hollywood star.
    Still, Crawford tried to make the best of things. Although there was little of the star's skating in the film (she would later say she did all of her skating on her ankles), the studio sent out press releases to announce that she was rigorously training to sing in the film (she had already sung on-screen in a few early musicals like
    The Hollywood Revue of 1929
    ). The flacks even suggested that the results were so impressive that after performing her six songs in Ice Follies of 1939, she was considering making her debut at the Metropolitan Opera. When the film came out, however, her songs had been reduced to two, both of which were dubbed by a professional singer. Crawford claimed her vocals had been cut under orders from Jeanette MacDonald, who was afraid of being supplanted as MGM's resident singing star. At least the situation gave MacDonald a good laugh.
    For both Stewart and Crawford, the best thing about Ice Follies of 1939 was moving on to other films. For Crawford, the film gave her another excuse for demanding better roles from the studio, which helped lead to her casting in the more prestigious and successful
    The Women
    (1939) later that year. Stewart would follow with the charming screwball comedy
    It's a Wonderful World
    (1939), which teamed him with Claudette Colbert, and the political comedy that helped shape his image as an all-American hero, Frank Capra's
    Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
    (1939).
    Also listed
    Katharine Hepburn SIGNED, Barbara Stanwyck, Frances Farmer, Doris Day SIGNED, Jayne Mansfield, John Waters SIGNED, Bette Davis SIGNED  & other Hollywood Items!!
    Thanks for looking and happy bidding
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