CHARLES D. COBURN - DOCUMENT SIGNED 03/05/1947 CO-SIGNED BY: RICHARD HUNGATE - HFSID 287742
Price: $380.00
CHARLES COBURN
Supplementary agreement with David O. Selznick's production company
detailing Coburn's listing in the credits of The Paradine Case
Document signed: "Charles Coburn", 4 pages, 8½x11. Also signed
"Richard Hungate". New York, N.Y., 1947 March 5. Supplemental
agreement with Vanguard Films (of producer David O. Selznick) stipulating
Coburn's billing in a pending movie, The Paradine Case. Coburn is to be
billed right after Charles Laughton, and no lower than fifth in the list of
credits. However, his name need not be mentioned in "trailers" or any special
advertising for the film.Broadway actor, producer and director Coburn
(1877-1961), with his wife, Iva Wells, led a Shakespearean company, the
Coburn Shakespeare Players, from 1906 to 1937. Only after her death did he
close the company and move to Hollywood. Coburn did not appear in his
first feature film (Of Human Hearts) until 1938, when he was 61. In 1940,
he portrayed Dr. Henry Gordon, who unjustly amputated Drake McHugh's (Ronald
Reagan) legs in Kings Row, resulting in the future President's greatest
screen line (and title of his first autobiography): "Where's the rest of me?"
Coburn was nominated for three Academy Awards for Best Supporting Actor
(1941, The Devil and Miss Jones; 1943, The More the Merrier; 1946,
The Green Years), winning in 1943. He did appear in a
supporting role in The Paradine Case, but the film proved expensive to
make and disappointing at the box office. As a result, producer Selznick became
disenchanted with director Alfred Hitchcock, and never worked with him again.
RICHARD HUNGATE, a lawyer employed by producer David O. Selznick, became a
partner of a private firm, Youngman, Hungate and Leopold in 1954. While
Hungate was with the firm - he retired in 1980 - it represented Farah Fawcett,
sued for breach of contract for leaving the cast of Charlie's Angels; and
also Universal Studios, sued by Twentieth Century Fox and Lucas Films on the
grounds that the TV series Battlestar Galactica (1978) was a copyright
infringement on Star Wars. Both cases were ultimately settled out of
court. Lightly toned. File holes at left edge. Staple holes at top edge. Corners
lightly worn. Otherwise, fine condition.
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