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Best Years Of Our Lives Lobby Card Signed By Harold Russell

Currency:USD Category:Memorabilia / Movie - Lobby Cards Start Price:50.00 USD Estimated At:200.00 - 400.00 USD
Best Years Of Our Lives Lobby Card Signed By Harold Russell
Best Years Of Our Lives Lobby Card Signed By Harold Russell Truly one of the greatest films of all time is "The Best Years Of Our Lives" (1949), the winner of nine Academy Awards including Best Picture. This masterpiece was one of the first films to show in emotionally tugging realistic detail the trials and tribulations of returning soldiers from WW II. It followed the lives of three returning vets (Frederick March, Dana Andrews and Harold Russell), who have found that their lives, their beliefs, and their dreams have changed forever. Scene after scene have become iconic great moments of the American Cinema. A brave movie on all fronts, it also cast a real returning vet, the non-actor Harold Russell to play Homer Parrish, a sweet local boy who came home to marry literally the "girl-next-door", except for the fact that he had both his hands blown off in a war-time ship accident. The real Harold Russell actually lost his own hands in the war. He had learned to proudly use his "hooks" with amazing skill. This is demonstrated to great dramatic effect in one moment where he rips the small American Flag label pin off a man spouting reactionary rhetoric that upsets him so much he feels he does not deserve to be wearing the Stars and Stripes. The scene where he shows his girlfriend just what her life would be with a "handless" husband, by taking her to his bedroom and having her watch him remove his hooks and show his stumps, is without a doubt the most emotionally honest and shocking sequence ever filmed. This is a Lobby Card from this classic. It's from the 1953 re-release of the film, and is signed by truly one of the greatest of American's, Harold Russell, (yes, he could autograph with his hooks). Russell, by the way became the first and only actor to ever win Oscars for the same Movie in the same category. The Academy presented him with an honorary Oscar for his astonishing performance, but he was also up for Best Supporting Actor, against some major stars, and no one thought he would win (which is why they gave him the Honorary Oscar). But he did! He held both Oscars proudly in both of his "hooks". The Lobby card has some tape stains on the boarders, along with corner pin holes. Lobby Card is 14"x11".