-40%

MAE WEST DIAMOND LIL PLAY 1949 ORIGINAL SIGNED CONTRACT AUTOGRAPHED + PHOTOGRAPH

$ 20.06

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Genre: memorabilia
  • Authenticity: guaranteed 100% authentic
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Object Type: Cards & Paper
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Category: ENTERTAINMENT MEMORABILIA
  • Industry: Movies
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Signed: Yes
  • sub category: autographs - original
  • Condition: Very Good to Fine, with original folds from mailing and handling. (Please note that I am extremely condition conscious so I always point out the slightest anomalies)
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • GENERAL: MOVIE
  • Autograph Authentication: UACC
  • Autograph Type: Entertainment: Originals
  • Modified Item: No
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Country of Manufacture: United States
  • Signed by: Mae West

    Description

    MAE WEST DIAMOND LIL PLAY 1949 ORIGINAL SIGNED CONTRACT AUTOGRAPHED + PHOTOGRAPH
    PROVENANCE:
    From the personal collection of
    MAE WEST
    , whose material passed to her nephew, John West, after her death in 1980.
    DESCRIPTION:
    Actress
    MAE WEST
    authentic signed vintage February 3, 1949 original 1 page (2-sided)
    Actors' Equity Association
    standard run-of-the-play contract agreement for her play,
    DIAMOND LIL
    , signed at the bottom of the first page with a blue ink fountain pen.
    Accompanied by an attached rider also signed by Ms. West. Includes a typed letter signed from William Morris Agency and the original mailing envelope, as well as a vintage original gelatin silver glossy 8" x 10" Universal Studios publicity photograph of the actress.
    ·
    Certified 100% authentic original hand signed. This autographed item has been authenticated by MY MOVIE MEMORABILIA & MORE, a UACC (Universal Autograph Collectors Club) Registered Dealer (No. RD321), which must abide by the UACC Code of Ethics, all policies that the UACC has enacted and must have a good standing as a reputable dealer recommended by long-term UACC dealers. We have years of experience selling to buyers internationally with a 100% positive feedback. All of my autographed items have a lifetime money back guarantee of authenticity.
    -
    SIZE:
    8 1/2" x 22" (contract), 8" x 10" (photograph)
    __________________________________________________________
    SHIPPING TERMS
    -
    I ship all items using, what I call, triple protection packing. The photos are inserted into a display bag with a white board, then packed in between two thick packaging boards and lastly wrapped with plastic film for weather protection before being placed into the shipping envelope.
    -
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    -
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    ________________________________________________________________________
    MAE WEST BIO
    (August 17, 1893 ? November 22, 1980) was an American actress, playwright, screenwriter and sex symbol.
    Known for her bawdy double entendres, West made a name for herself in Vaudeville and on the stage in New York before moving to Hollywood to become a comedienne, actress and writer in the motion picture industry. One of the more controversial movie stars of her day, West encountered many problems including censorship.
    When her cinematic career ended, she continued to perform on stage, in Las Vegas, in the United Kingdom, on radio and television, and recorded rock and roll albums.
    West was born
    Mary Jane West
    in Bushwick, Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, daughter of John Patrick West and Matilda "Tillie" Doelger (also spelled Delker).
    Her father was a prizefighter known as "Battlin' Jack West" who later worked as a "special policeman" and then as a private investigator who ran his own agency. Her mother was a former corset and fashion model. The family was Protestant, although West's mother was reported as a Jewish immigrant from Bavaria. Her Irish Catholic paternal grandmother, as well as other relatives who were Roman Catholic, disapproved of her career and her choices, as did the aunt who helped deliver her. By some accounts, West's paternal grandfather, John Edwin, may have been an African American who
    passed for white
    .
    Her siblings were Mildred Katherine West (December 8, 1898 ? March 12, 1982), known as Beverly, and John Edwin West (February 11, 1900 ? October 12, 1964). During her childhood, West's family moved to various parts of Woodhaven, Queens, as well as WilliamsburgGreenpoint in Brooklyn. She may have attended Erasmus Hall High School. and
    At five years old West first entertained a crowd, at a church social, and she started appearing in amateur shows at the age of seven. She often won prizes at local talent contests. She began performing professionally in vaudeville in the Hal Clarendon Stock Company in 1907 at the age of fourteen. West first performed under the stage name
    Baby Mae
    , and tried various personas including a
    male impersonator
    , Sis Hopkins, and a blackface coon shouter. Her trademark walk was said to have been inspired or influenced by female impersonators Bert Savoy and Julian Eltinge, who were famous during the Pansy Craze. Her first appearance in a legitimate Broadway
    A La Broadway
    put on by her former dancing teacher, Ned Wayburn. The show folded after just eight performances. She then appeared in a show called "Vera Violetta," whose cast featured another newcomer, Al Jolson. In 1912 she also appeared in the opening performance of "A Winsome Widow" as a 'baby vamp' named La Petite Daffy. show was in a 1911 revue
    Her photograph appeared on an edition of the sheet music for the popular number "Ev'rybody Shimmies Now" in 1918. She was encouraged as a performer by her mother, who, according to West, always thought that whatever her daughter did was fantastic.
    In 1918, after exiting several high-profile revues, West finally got her break in the
    Shubert Brothers
    revue
    Sometime
    , opposite Ed Wynn. Her character Mayme danced the shimmy. Eventually, she began writing her own risqué plays using the pen name Jane Mast. Her first starring role on
    Broadway
    was in a play she titled
    Sex
    , which she also wrote, produced, and directed. Though critics hated the show, ticket sales were good. The notorious production did not go over well with city officials and the theater was raided with West arrested along with the cast.
    She was prosecuted on morals charges and, on April 19, 1927, was sentenced to ten days for "corrupting the morals of youth".Roosevelt Island), she dined with the warden and his wife and told reporters that she wore her silk underpants while serving time. She served eight days with two days off for good behavior. Media attention about the case enhanced her career. Her next play,
    The Drag
    , dealt with homosexuality and was what West called one of her "comedy-dramas of life". After a series of try-outs in Connecticut and New Jersey, West announced she would open the play in New York.
    The Drag
    never opened on Broadway due to the Society for the Prevention of Vice vows to ban it if West attempted to stage it. West was an early supporter of the women's liberation movement, but stated she was not a
    feminist
    . She was also a supporter of gay rights. While incarcerated on Welfare Island (now known as However,
    West continued to write plays, including
    The Wicked Age
    ,
    Pleasure Man
    and
    The Constant Sinner
    . Her productions were plagued by controversy and other problems, although the controversy ensured that West stayed in the news and most of the time this resulted in packed performances. Her 1928 play,
    Diamond Lil
    , about a racy, easygoing lady of the 1890s, became a Broadway hit. This show enjoyed an enduring popularity and West would successfully revive it many times throughout the course of her career.
    In 1932, West was offered a motion picture contract by Paramount Pictures. She was 38, unusually advanced for a first movie, especially for a sex symbol (though she kept her age ambiguous for several more years). West made her film debut in
    Night After Night
    George Raft. At first, she did not like her small role in
    Night After Night,
    but was appeased when she was allowed to rewrite her scenes.
    [38]
    In West's first scene, a hat check girl exclaims, "Goodness, what beautiful diamonds." West replies, "Goodness had nothing to do with it, dearie."
    [39]
    Reflecting on the overall result of her rewritten scenes, Raft is said to have remarked, "She stole everything but the cameras."
    [39]
    starring
    She brought her
    Diamond Lil
    character, now renamed
    Lady Lou
    , to the screen in
    She Done Him Wrong
    (1933).
    [40]
    The film is also notable as one of Cary Grant's first major roles, which boosted his career. West claimed she spotted Grant at the studio and insisted that he be cast as the male lead.
    [41]
    The film was a box office hit and earned an
    Academy Award
    nomination for Best Picture.
    [40][42]
    The success of the film most likely saved Paramount from bankruptcy.
    Her next release,
    I'm No Angel
    (1933), paired her with Grant again.
    I'm No Angel
    was also a financial success.
    [44]
    By 1933, West was the eighth-largest U.S. box office draw in the United States
    [45]
    and, by 1935, the second-highest paid person in the United States (after William Randolph Hearst).
    [46]
    On July 1, 1934, the censorship of the
    Production Code
    began to be seriously and meticulously enforced, and her screenplays were heavily edited.
    West's next film was
    Belle of the Nineties
    (1934). Originally titled
    It Ain't No Sin
    , the title was changed due to the censors' objections.
    [47]
    Goin' to Town
    (1935), received mixed reviews.
    [48]
    Her next film,
    Her next film,
    Klondike Annie
    (1936), was concerned with religion and hypocrisy and was very controversial.
    [49]
    Many critics have called this film her screen masterpiece.
    [50]
    That same year, West played opposite Randolph Scott in
    Go West, Young Man
    . In this film, she adapted Lawrence Riley's Broadway hit
    Personal Appearance
    into a screenplay.
    [4][51]
    Directed by Henry Hathaway,
    Go West, Young Man
    [52]
    After this film, West starred in
    Every Day's a Holiday
    (1937) for Paramount before their association came to an end. is considered one of West's weaker films of the era.
    In 1939, Universal Pictures approached West to star in a film opposite W. C. Fields. The studio was eager to duplicate the success of
    Destry Rides Again
    starring Marlene Dietrich and
    James Stewart
    with a vehicle starring West and Fields.
    [53]
    Having left Paramount eighteen months earlier and looking for a comeback film, West accepted the role of Flower Belle Lee in the film
    My Little Chickadee
    [53][54]
    Despite mutual dislike between West and Fields (at least in part because West was a teetotaler who disapproved of Fields' heavy drinking) and fights over the screenplay,
    My Little Chickadee
    was a box office success, outgrossing Fields' previous films
    You Can't Cheat an Honest Man
    (1939) and
    The Bank Dick
    (1940). (1940).
    West's next film was
    The Heat's On
    (1943) for Columbia Pictures. She initially didn't want to do the film but after producer and director Gregory Ratoff pleaded with her and claimed he would go bankrupt if she didn't, West relented. The film opened to bad reviews and failed at the box office. West would not return to films until 1970.
    On December 12, 1937, West appeared in two separate sketches on ventriloquist Edgar Bergen's radio show
    The Chase and Sanborn Hour
    . Appearing as herself, West flirted with Charlie McCarthy, Bergen's dummy, using her usual brand of wit and risqué sexual references. West referred to Charlie as "all wood and a yard long" and commented that his kisses gave her splinters.
    Even more outrageous was a sketch written by Arch Oboler that starred West and Don Ameche as Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. She told Ameche in the show to "get me a big one... I feel like doin' a big apple!" Days after the broadcast, NBC received letters calling the show "immoral" and "obscene". Women's clubs and Catholic groups admonished the show's sponsor, Chase & Sanborn Coffee Company, for "prostituting" their services for allowing "impurity [to] invade the air". The Federal Communications Commission NBC personally blamed West for the incident and banned her (and the mention of her name) from their stations. West would not perform in radio for another twelve years until January 1950, in an episode of
    The Chesterfield Supper Club
    hosted by Perry Como. (FCC) later deemed the broadcast "vulgar and indecent" and "far below even the minimum standard which should control in the selection and production of broadcast programs".
    After appearing in
    The Heat's On
    in 1943, West remained active during the ensuing years. Among her stage performances was the title role in
    Catherine was Great
    (1944) on Broadway, in which she spoofed the story of Catherine the Great of Russia, surrounding herself with an "imperial guard" of tall, muscular young actors. The play was produced by Mike Todd and ran for 191 performances. In the 1950s, she also starred in her own Las Vegas stage show, singing while surrounded by bodybuilders. Jayne Mansfield met and later married one of West's muscle men, a former Mr. Universe, Mickey Hargitay.
    When casting the role of Norma Desmond for the 1950 film
    Sunset Boulevard
    , Billy Wilder offered West, then nearing 60, the role. West turned down the part. Wilder later said, "The idea of [casting] Mae West was idiotic because we only had to talk to her to find out that she thought she was as great, as desirable, as sexy as she had ever been." Gloria Swanson was eventually cast in the role.
    In 1958, West appeared at the
    Academy Awards
    and performed the song "Baby, It's Cold Outside" with Rock Hudson. In 1959, she released her autobiography entitled
    Goodness Had Nothing to Do with It
    , which went on to become a best seller.
    West made some rare appearances on television, including
    The Red Skelton Show
    in 1960. In 1964, she guest starred on the
    sitcom
    Mister Ed.
    In order to keep her appeal fresh with younger generations, she recorded two rock and roll albums,
    Way Out West
    and
    Wild Christmas
    in the late 1960s. She also recorded a number of parody songs including "Santa, Come Up to See Me" on the album
    Wild Christmas.
    After a 26-year absence from motion pictures, West appeared as Leticia Van Allen in Gore Vidal's
    Myra Breckinridge
    (1970) with Raquel Welch, Rex Reed, Farrah Fawcett, and Tom Selleck in a small part. The movie was a deliberately campy sex change comedy that was both a box office and critical failure. Vidal later called the film "an awful joke". Despite
    Myra Breckinridge'
    s mainstream failure, it did find an audience on the cult film circuit where West's films were regularly screened and West herself was dubbed "the queen of camp".
    West recorded another album in the 1970s on MGM Records titled
    Great Balls of Fire
    , which covered songs by The Doors among others.
    Goodness Had Nothing to Do with It,
    was also updated and republished. Her autobiography,
    In 1976, she appeared on
    The Dick Cavett Show
    and that same year began work on her final film,
    Sextette
    (1978). Adapted from a script written by West, daily revisions and disagreements hampered production from the beginning. Due to the numerous changes, West agreed to have her lines fed to her through a speaker concealed in her wig. Despite the daily problems, West was, according to
    Sextette
    director Ken Hughes, determined to see the film through.In spite of her determination, Hughes noted that West sometimes appeared disoriented and forgetful and found it difficult to follow his directions. Her now failing eyesight also made navigating around the set difficult. Hughes eventually began shooting her from the waist up to hide the out-of-shot production assistant crawling on the floor, guiding her around the set. Upon its release,
    Sextette
    was a critical and commercial failure.
    In August 1980, West tripped while getting out of bed. After the fall, West was unable to speak and was taken to the Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles where tests revealed that she had suffered a stroke. She remained in the hospital where, seven days later, she had a diabetic reaction to the formula in her feeding tube. On September 18, she suffered a second stroke which left her right side paralyzed and developed pneumonia. By November, West's condition had improved, but the prognosis was not good and she was sent home.
    She died there on November 22, 1980, at age 87.
    A private service was held in the Old North Church replica, in Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills, on November 25, 1980. Bishop Andre Penachio, who was also a friend, officiated at the entombment in the family room at
    Cypress Hills Abbey
    , Brooklyn, purchased in 1930 when her mother died. Her father and brother were also entombed there before her, and her younger sister was laid to rest in the last of the five crypts within 18 months after West's death.
    For her contribution to the film industry, she has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1560 Vine Street in
    Hollywood
    .
    West was married on April 11, 1911, in
    Milwaukee, Wisconsin
    , to Frank Szatkus, stage name Frank Wallace, a fellow vaudevillian whom she first met in 1909. She was 17, he was 21. West kept the marriage a secret. But in 1935, after West had made several hit movies, a filing clerk discovered West's marriage certificate and alerted the press. An affidavit in which she had declared herself married, which she made during the
    Sex
    trial in 1927, was also uncovered. At first, West denied ever marrying Wallace but finally admitted in July 1937, in reply to a legal interrogatory, that they had been married. Even though the marriage was a reality, she never lived with Wallace as husband and wife. She insisted they have separate bedrooms and she soon sent him away in a show of his own in order to get rid of him. She obtained a legal divorce on July 21, 1942, during which Wallace withdrew his request for separate maintenance, and West testified that she and Wallace had lived together for only "several weeks." The final divorce decree was granted on May 7, 1943.
    West may also have had another secret marriage. In August 1913, she met an Italian-born Vaudeville headliner and star of the piano-accordion, Guido Deiro. Her affair went
    "[v]ery deep, hittin' on all the emotions. You can't get too hot over anybody unless there's somethin' that goes along with the sex act, can you?"
    Deiro fell in love with West and arranged his bookings so that the two traveled together. They became engaged late in 1913 or perhaps early in 1914. Some sources reported the pair were married. During a 1935 radio broadcast Walter Winchell incorrectly reported that Mae West had been married to Guido's brother, Pietro. Walter Wincher, a writer for
    Accordion News
    magazine, corrected the error:
    "In a recent radio broadcast, Walter Winchell conveyed the information that Pietro Deiro had been married to Mae West for four years. As one Walter to another, I must set him right. Pietro was never married to the 'come up and see me sometime' girl. Guido Deiro, his brother, was supposed to be the fortunate accordionist."
    West made no public statements indicating that she had been married to Deiro. She referred to him simply as "D" in her autobiography. West's biographers state that the two never married. If they were married, this would have constituted bigamy as West was legally married to Frank Wallace at the time. West and Deiro split in 1916.
    Deiro's son claimed that years later Mae West privately revealed to him that she had become pregnant by Guido, had an abortion without his knowledge resulting in complications which left her sick for nearly a year and ultimately unable to bear children.
    According to Deiro's biographer, West filed for divorce on the grounds of adultery on July 14, 1920. The divorce was granted by the Supreme Court of the State of New York on November 9 of that year. West later said, "Marriage is a great institution. I?m not ready for an institution yet."
    Mae West remained close to her family throughout her life and was devastated by her mother's death in 1930. In that year, she moved to
    Hollywood
    and into the penthouse at the historic Ravenswood apartment building (where she would live until her death in 1980). Another person whom West spent her life with was lawyer James Timony. She met Timony, who was fifteen years her senior, in 1916 when she was a vaudeville actress. They became romantically involved and he also began to act as her manager. By the mid-Thirties when West was an established movie actress, they were no longer a couple. However, they remained extremely close, living in the same building, working together, and providing support for each other, until Timony's death in 1954. A year later, when she was 61, Mae West became romantically involved with one of the musclemen in her Las Vegas stage show: wrestler, former Mr. California and former merchant marine Chester Rybonski (1923?1999). He was thirty years younger than West, and later changed his name to Paul Novak. He soon moved in with her and their romance continued until West died at the age of 87. Novak once commented,
    "I believe I was put on this Earth to take care of Mae West."
    West also had many other boyfriends throughout her life. One was boxing champion William Jones, nicknamed Gorilla Jones. When the management at her apartment building discriminated against the African-American boxer and barred his entry, West solved the problem by buying the building. After she began her movie career, her sister, brother and father followed her there. West provided them with nearby homes and also jobs and sometimes financial support.
    During World War II, Allied aircrew called their yellow inflatable, vest-like life preserver jackets "Mae Wests" partly from rhyming slang and "life vest" and partly because of the resemblance to her curvaceous torso. for "breasts"
    A "Mae West" is also a type of round parachute malfunction (partial inversion) which contorts the shape of the canopy into the appearance of an extraordinarily large brassiere, presumably one suitable for a woman of West's generous proportions.
    West has been the subject of songs, such as in the title song of Cole Porter's Broadway musical
    Anything Goes
    and in "You're the Top", from the same show.
    MAE-West was also the name of the Metropolitan Area Exchange West, located in San Jose and Los Angeles, one of the first Internet tier-one hubs to connect all the major TCP/IP networks that made up the Internet in 1992. It is not documented whether the founders of MAE-West named this early Internet Exchange after the actress.
    One of the most popular objects of the
    surrealist
    movement was the Mae West Lips Sofa, which was completed by artist Salvador DalíEdward James in 1938 for
    A May West (originally spelled Mae West) is a Twinkie-like cake popular in the province of Quebec, Canada
    This page
    is a candidate to be
    copied
    to Wikiquote using the Transwiki process
    . If the page can be expanded into an encyclopedic article, rather than a list of quotes, please do so and remove this message.
    Mae West remains notable for a large number of quips, some firmly tied to herself and her characters, and others widely borrowed for very different settings. A famous Mae West quip was "Is that a pistol in your pocket or are you just glad to see me?" She made this remark in February 1936, at the railway station in Los Angeles upon her return from Chicago, when a Los Angeles police officer was assigned to escort her home. She delivered the line on film to George Hamilton in her last movie,
    Sextette
    (1978).
    In her later years, she famously described the gangster Owney Madden, a former boyfriend who helped bankroll her Hollywood career, as "Sweet, but oh so vicious."
    Likewise, "When I'm good, I'm very good. When I'm bad, I'm better," from
    I'm No Angel,
    is generally quoted in its original context.
    [138]
    Warren Buffett (as a sound principle of informed financial investing). Conversely, however, some quips have been widely adapted to very different settings and meanings. For example, "Too much of a good thing can be wonderful" has been applied to many settings by others, including
    "It's not the men in your life that count, it's the life in your men."
    "Marriage is a great institution, but I'm not ready for an institution."
    "When I'm good, I'm very good, but when I'm bad, I'm better."
    "Is that a gun in your pocket, or are you just glad to see me?"
    Broadway stage
    Broadway stage
    Date
    Production
    Role
    Notes
    September 22, 1911 ? September 30, 1911
    A La Broadway
    Maggie O'Hara
    November 20, 1911 ? February 24, 1912
    Vera Violetta
    West left show during previews
    April 11, 1912 ? September 7, 1912
    A Winsome Widow
    Le Petite Daffy
    West left show after opening night
    October 4, 1918 ? June 1919
    Sometime
    August 17, 1921 ? September 10, 1921
    The Mimic World of 1921
    April 26, 1926 ? March 1927
    Sex
    Margie LaMont
    Written by Jane Mast (West)
    January 1927
    The Drag
    closed during out-of-town tryouts (Bridgeport, Connecticut)
    credited only as writer
    November 1927
    The Wicked Age
    Evelyn ("Babe") Carson
    April 9, 1928 ? September 1928
    Diamond Lil
    Diamond Lil
    October 1, 1928 ?October 2, 1928
    The Pleasure Man
    credited only as writer
    September 14, 1931 ? November 1931
    The Constant Sinner
    Babe Gordon
    August 2, 1944 ? January 13, 1945
    Catherine Was Great
    Catherine II
    1945?1946
    Come On Up
    Tour
    September 1947 ? May 1948
    Diamond Lil
    Diamond Lil
    (Revival) United Kingdom and Scotland
    February 5, 1949 ? February 26, 1949
    Diamond Lil
    Diamond Lil
    (2nd Revival) until West broke her ankle on the latter date.
    The play resumed as a "return engagement"
    September 7, 1949 ? January 21, 1950
    Diamond Lil
    Diamond Lil
    (2nd Revival) as "return engagement"
    September 14, 1951 ? November 10, 1951
    Diamond Lil
    Diamond Lil
    (3rd Revival)
    July 7, 1961 ? closing date unknown
    Sextette
    Edgewater Beach Playhouse
    Other plays as writer
    Other plays as writer
    Year
    Title
    Notes
    1921
    The Ruby Ring
    Vaudeville playlet
    1922
    The Hussy
    Unproduced
    1930
    Frisco Kate
    Unproduced
    1933
    Loose Women
    Performed in 1935 under title
    Ladies By Request
    1936
    Clean Beds
    Sold treatment to George S. George, who produced
    an unsuccessful Broadway play of West's treatment
    Filmography
    Feature films
    Year
    Film
    Role
    Studio
    1932
    Night After Night
    Maudie Triplett
    Paramount Pictures
    1933
    She Done Him Wrong
    Lady Lou
    I'm No Angel
    Tira
    1934
    Belle of the Nineties
    Ruby Carter
    1935
    Goin' to Town
    Cleo Borden
    1936
    Klondike Annie
    The Frisco Doll/Rose Carlton/Sister Annie Alden
    Go West, Young Man
    Mavis Arden
    1938
    Every Day's a Holiday
    Peaches O'Day
    1940
    My Little Chickadee
    Flower Belle Lee
    Universal Pictures
    1944
    The Heat's On
    Fay Lawrence
    Columbia Pictures
    1970
    Myra Breckinridge
    Leticia Van Allen
    20th Century Fox
    1978
    Sextette
    Marlo Manners/Lady Barrington
    Crown International Pictures
    (courtesy of wikipedia)
    inkfrog terapeak