Charles A. Lindbergh Rare Signed Book!

Charles A. Lindbergh Rare Signed Book!
Charles A. Lindbergh Rare Signed Book!

ILLUSTRATIONS OF COLONEL LINDBERGH’S DECORATIONS and Some of His Trophies Received Within the Year Following His Trans-Atlantic Flight of May 20-22, 1927.

Buy Kamagra Online style=”font-family: Consolas; font-size: small;”>Photos include title page portrait of Lindbergh, oblong 8 x 11, printed tied wraps with oval cut-out on cover, 52 pages unpaged, first year of publication.  Compiled by Nettie H. Beauregard, Curator of Missouri Historical Society. Beautifully inscribed, “To Frank J. Daugherty Jr.

Sincerely Charles A Lindbergh April 22, 1933”  $1,750. Item is not listed on website as of yet, any questions or interest in purchasing email me directly at trish@trishautographs.com

 

RAY BOLGER AUTOGRAPHED PHOTO, THE SCARECROW FROM THE WIZARD OF OZ

Vintage glossy 7.5 x 9.25 photo of Bolger as the Scarecrow, signed and inscribed in fountain pen “To Charles K. Stumpf, All the best, Ray Bolger.” Three binder dings to right edge, paperclip impression along top edge, and some scattered surface marks and creases, otherwise fine condition.

Although he had racked up numerous stage and screen credits, rubber-legged song-and-dance man Ray Bolger will forever be remembered by children of all ages as the Scarecrow who accompanies Dorothy, the Tin Man and the Cowardly Lion to the Emerald City in search of “The Wizard of Oz” in that 1939 MGM classic.

A tall, slender man whose physical capacities as a dancer often mystified audiences (he was so lithe as to appear double-jointed), the Massachusetts native began his career in vaudeville. Although generations came to know him through his musical roles, Bolger first and foremost considered himself to be a comic actor, skills he first honed with the Bob Ott Musical Comedy Repertory in the early 1920s and later as part of a vaudeville act. In 1926, he was spotted by Gus Edwards who hired him as a comedian for the Broadway show “A Merry World”. Other stage roles followed, most notably as the lead in the Rodgers and Hart classic “On Your Toes” (1936), introducing the now famous “Slaughter on Tenth Avenue” number. Based on the strength of that performance, he was signed to a film contract by MGM.