-40%

DOCTOR FAUSTUS 8 color 8x10 stills '68 Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton. MINT

$ 39.6

Availability: 47 in stock
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    DOCTOR FAUSTUS
    8 color 8x10 stills
    '68 Elizabeth Taylor, director & star Richard Burton!
    Doctor Faustus, the 1967 (released in the U.S. in 1968)
    Richard Burton
    & Nevill Coghill English horror melodrama ("The most distinguished star of the screen today...in a brilliant new characterization as the legendary Faustus, who sold his soul to the devil for a woman."; "Adapted for the Screen by Nevill Coghill"; adaptation of the play, "The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus", by Christopher Marlowe) starring
    Richard Burton
    (in the title role as Doctor Faustus),
    Elizabeth Taylor
    , The Oxford University Dramatic Society, Andreas Teuber, Ian Marter, Elizabeth O'Donovan, and David McIntosh
    Up for auction this week we have this large selection of 8"x10"
    Lobby Card Sets. All these cards are in near mint to mint condition.
    Shipping in the U.S. is just .00 for the first set and .00 for each additional set shipped together.
    Inernational Shipping is .00 for the first set and .00 for each additional set shipped together.
    What is a lobby card?
    A lobby card is an 11x14 or 8x10 inch (landscape orientated) "poster" printed on heavy stock featuring a scene from the film advertised. 8x10 inch cards are also called stills or Front-Of-House cards. They briefly summarize the movie in a series of captioned scenes. Usually there are 8 cards in a set, however there are also sets that have more or less cards. The number of cards in a set can vary from as few as three to as many as 22 or more. Lobby cards first appeared in the early 1910s. During the silent-era lobby cards were often nothing more than black and white or duotone stills which were eventually replaced by hand-tinted scenes and in the 1920s by full-color lobby cards. These cards were designed for display in a theatre's lobby or foyer with the intention of promoting the movie.
    Studios stopped producing lobby card sets for the American market sometime in the mid-1980's. After the mid-1980's, the only lobby card sets produced were for International releases.
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