PAULETTE GODDARD - AUTOGRAPH POST CARD SIGNED - HFSID 36139
Price: $280.00
PAULETTE GODDARD
Goddard handwrote and signed this picture postcard "P.G." in blue ink
to Anita Loos. In it, she says about returning to her apartment, which her
"ma" was preparing for her arrival.
Autograph postcard signed "P.G." in blue ink.With "G"
in unknown handin green ink. 5¾x4.With color photograph on
verso of a Claude Monet painting. With blue airmail label and stamp in red ink:
"From the Estate/of ANITA LOOS". Addressed to Anita Loos, New York City. In
full: "Dear Cookie, My ma is at 320 preparing apt. for my arrival now
March 1st. Finally! Love and a million thanks". Author and screenwriter
Anita Loos is perhaps best known for her 1925 novel, Gentlemen Prefer
Blondes, which was later made into a silent film (1928), a 1949 Broadway
musical and the 1952 film starring Marilyn Monroe. Among her most successful
theatrical projects were adaptations of Gigi (1950, filmed in 1958) and
Cheri (1957). Goddard (1911-1990, born Pauline Marion Goddard
Levee in Whitestone Landing, Long Island, New York) was an American actress. A
former teen Broadway chorus girl, she first attracted attention when she was
featured reclining on a prop crescent moon in the 1928 Ziegfeld musical, Rio
Rita. Goddard reportedly made several two-reel comedies for Hal Roach (in a
blond wig) before being featured as a "Goldwyn Girl" in Eddie Cantor's film,
Kid from Spain, in 1932. She shot to stardom when she was cast by
Charlie Chaplin in his 1936 film, Modern Times. Goddard also won
Chaplin's heart as well as the role, but there were questions as to whether
the two were ever legally married, and her relationship with Chaplin cost her
the one role that she truly coveted: Scarlett O'Hara in the 1939 epic, Gone
With the Wind. Goddard, who was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress
Academy Award for So Proudly We Hail (1943), also appeared in such
films as The Great Dictator (1940) and Reap the Wild Wind (1942)
before making her final film, the French/Italian movie Gli Inderrenti
(Time of Indifference), in 1964. She was coaxed out of retirement for a
made-for-TV movie, The Snoop Sisters, in 1972. Edges are scalloped.
Lightly toned and creased. Light dents and tears on lower edge. Otherwise in
fine condition.
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