CHARLES LAUGHTON - DOCUMENT SIGNED 11/14/1941 - HFSID 169032
Price: $400.00
CHARLES LAUGHTON
Oscar-winning actor Charles Laughton signed this document in 1941 to
direct any money owed to him to his agent at Phil Berg-Bert Allenberg,
Inc.
Document signed "Charles Laughton" in blue ink. Pencil
notations near bottom edge in unknown hand. 1 page, 8½x11, carbon copy, with two
file holes at top edge. Nov. 14, 1941. Addressed to Twentieth Century-Fox
Film Corporation, Los Angeles, California. Document directing Twentieth
Century-Fox to direct any money owed to him to the theatrical agency Phil
Berg-Bert Allenberg, Inc. in 1941, Laughton started in the Universal Studios
film It Started With Eve. British stage and screen actor Laughton
(1899-1962) won the 1932-1933 Best Actor Academy Award for The Private
Life of Henry VIII, which he had reprised from his stage role, and he was
nominated for Best Actor Oscars for Mutiny on the Bounty
(1935) and Witness for the Prosecution (1957). Laughton, who
made his film debut in 1928, starred in a long list of feature films, including
Island of Lost Souls (1933), The Barretts of Wimpole Street
(1934), Les Misérables (1935), The Hunchback of Notre
Dame and Jamaica Inn (both in 1939), It Started With Eve
(1941), The Canterville Ghost (1944), Captain Kidd (1945),
Young Bess (1953, in which he played King Henry VIII), Spartacus
(1960) and Advise and Consent (1962, his last film). The multitalented
performer, who became an American citizen in 1950, was also a prolific stage
director (he only directed one major film, 1955's Night of the Hunter),
producer and drama teacher. Laughton also made several appearances on
television from 1949, including roles in several early anthology series, and
gave popular one-man tours, reading the works of authors including George
Bernard Shaw and William Shakespeare. Laughton, who was a veteran of World
War I, was married to actress Elsa Lanchester from February 9, 1929 until
his death on December 15, 1962. According to Lanchester, Laughton
would never have made a film if it had been left up to him. Nervous about his
performances, Laughton was always threatening to quit early in a production.
Lightly toned and creased. Pencil notations touch signature. Light tear at right
edge. Otherwise in fine condition.
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