JEAN HERSHOLT - DOCUMENT DOUBLE SIGNED 07/23/1946 - HFSID 288897
Price: $1,500.00
JEAN HERSHOLT
Consent form authorizing the Motion Picture Relief Fund to reproduce Jean Hersholt's
signature and likeness for a series of stamps raising money for needy film industry
veterans. The form is signed twice by Jean Hersholt, once as an autograph sample and
again to grant permission. A remarkable, perfectly verified example!
Document signed twice: "Jean Hersholt", 1 page, 8½x11. Hollywood, California, 1946 July
23. Jean Hersholt grants to the Motion Picture Relief Fund, Inc., its successors and assigns, the
exclusive right, to use his name, autograph, photographic likeness, or artist's sketch of the
likeness, for reproduction on engraved, embossed or printed stamps, and in stamp albums, and
in connection with the advertising and exploitation of these stamps and stamp albums for sale
throughout the world. Danish actor Jean Hersholt's (1886-1956) screen image was altered
permanently in 1936 when he was cast as Dr. Dafoe, the Canadian obstetrician who
delivered the celebrated Dionne Quintuplets, in 20th Century-Fox's The Country Doctor.
Plans to create a Dr. Dafoe movie series were blocked by the real Dafoe, but Hersholt was
anxious to sustain the characterization of a beneficent, lovable small-town doctor. Thus
Dr. Christian, named for Hersholt's favorite author, Hans Christian Andersen, was born.
The actor created the role of Dr. Christian on radio in 1937 and then filmed a series of
six Christian movies for RKO (1939-1941). Extending the ethics and generosity of Dr.
Christian into his private life, Hersholt set up the Motion Picture Relief Fund, which
provided medical care and a livable income for actors, directors and other studio employees
who were no longer able to care for themselves. While serving as President of the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, he received two honorary Academy Awards for his charity
work (1940, 1950). The Motion Picture Relief Fund was founded in 1921 to assist ill and
needy film industry veterans, as expressed in its motto: "We take care of our own." The fund
raised money through voluntary payroll deductions and celebrity events. As President of the
Fund from 1939 until his death in 1956, film and radio star Jean Hersholt conceived
Hollywood Star Stamps as a fundraising method. These stamps, 468 in all, were sold at
dime stores after World War II in sheets of 6-12, at 10 cents per sheet, and were an immediate
hit with collectors. Now called the Motion Picture and Television Fund, the non-profit
organization funds its own hospital and retirement home. It confers the Jean Hersholt
Humanitarian Award annually at the Academy Awards ceremony to "an individual in the
motion picture industry whose humanitarian efforts have brought credit to the industry."
Three filing holes at left edge. Staple holes at top left. Slightly soiled. Pencil note (unknown
hand) next to signature. Fine condition.
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