The rare poster was
estimated at $16/24,000.
Private
Collector Wins 'Outlaw' Poster for $83,648 in UK
Sale
SOUTH KENSINGTON, ENGLAND - Christie's first vintage film poster
sale of 2003 realized $422,368, selling 93 percent by lot, with
more than 280 lots embracing all the collectible film genres such
as westerns, horror, science fiction, Ealing, Hitchcock and Bond.
Sarah Hodgson, associate director, head of popular entertainment
of Christie's London, said, "I am absolutely delighted with the
results of the sale, which realized our highest ever sold
percentage since Christie's began holding sales devoted
exclusively to film posters in 1995. There was a packed saleroom
throughout the afternoon, with particularly strong interest from
America. Many lots exceeded presale expectations, underlining the
current strength of the market in London. We look forward to our
next sale on September 19."
A highlight of the sale was the Lisa Caidin Collection. In 1996,
Christie's successfully sold the vintage film poster collection
of Stanley Caidin, a prominent Hollywood lawyer. He passed his
passion for film on to his daughter, Lisa, who became a
discerning collector in her own right. Lisa Caidin died last
year. Christie's offered 72 lots from her collection. Part of the
proceeds of the sale will be donated to a number of animal
charities, which Lisa Caidin supported as an animal lover
throughout her life.
Spanning five decades of cinematic history from the early 1900s
to the 1950s, the collection includes posters for classics such
as Some Like it Hot, 1959, which was voted the number one
comedy of all time by the American Film Institute.
Top lot in the sale was an exceptionally rare poster for Howard
Hughes's 1943 film, The Outlaw. Estimated at $16/24,000,
the poster sold for $83,648 to a private British collector. The
notorious Hughes often battled with the censors over his films
and this one was no exception. He premiered the film without
consent at the Geary Theatre in San Francisco where it was shown
for only one week before the censors withdrew it due to its
sexually explicit nature. This is the first time this particular
poster has been seen and it is the only copy known to exist.
Creature from the Black Lagoon, 1954, Universal, US
three-sheet, measuring 81 by 41 inches, was the second highest
selling poster, realizing $11,153. Another notable lot, at
$10,781, was a German poster for Der Blaue Engel/The Blue
Angel, 1930. The first film in which Marlene Dietrich starred
in and met her Svengali, Josef von Sternberg, The Blue
Angel almost instantly made her an international film star.
All prices quoted above include buyer's premium.
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