INGRID BERGMAN - AUTOGRAPHED INSCRIBED PHOTOGRAPH CO-SIGNED BY: JACK HYLTON - HFSID 153676
Sale Price $315.00
Reg. $380.00
INGRID BERGMAN and JACK HYLTON
The Academy Award winning actress and the British pianist are shown together in this
black and white photograph.
Photograph signed: "Ingrid Bergman" and "Jack Hylton". B/w, 10x8. Swedish-born
actress INGRID BERGMAN (1915-1982) was nominated for seven Academy Awards,
winning three: Best Actress in 1944 (Gaslight) and 1956 (Anastasia) and Best Supporting
Actress in 1974 (Murder on the Orient Express). In 1950, she had accepted Roberto
Rossellini's offer of the lead role in Stromboli. During the production, the actress and
director fell in love and she became pregnant with his child while she was still married to her first
husband, Swedish doctor Peter Lindstrom. Although she married Rossellini shortly after
divorcing Lindstrom, the damage had been done. Stromboli was banned in many markets and
boycotted in others and the actress found herself and her work shunned by audiences. It was
not until 1956, when she made Anastasia, that she made a successful comeback.
Among her other notable films are Intermezzo (1936), Casablanca (1942), For Whom the Bell
Tolls (1943; Best Actress Oscar nomination), The Bells of St. Mary's (1945; Best Actress
Oscar nomination), Spellbound (1945), Joan of Arc (1948; Best Actress Oscar
nomination), The Inn of the Sixth Happiness (1958), The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1965) and
Autumn Sonata (1978; Best Actress Oscar nomination). British pianist and orchestra
leader JACK HYLTON (1892-1965), born John Greenhalgh Hilton, formed Jack Hylton &
His Orchestra in 1921 and began his epic recording career in 1923. The band, which gave its
first Royal Command Performance in 1926, was extremely popular in the British Isles and in
Europe, but wasn't heard in the U.S. until its first broadcast in 1932. In 1935, Hylton
disbanded his orchestra to travel to the U.S., where he led a group of American musicians.
Upon his return to Britain, he reformed his orchestra, which was as successful as his previous
one. In 1941, Hylton, who was losing band members to the military, became a theatrical
producer. He appeared at a final Royal Command Performance in 1950. Minor surface
scratches. Ink stamp on verso. Fine condition.
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