-40%

House Rent Party All Black Cast Dewey Pigmeat Markham Separate Cinema Harlem

$ 118.8

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Industry: Movies
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Condition: RARE 1946 TODDY PICTURES ALL BLACK-CAST HOUSE-RENT PARTY 27 1/2 X 41 ONE-SHEET 1-SHEET ORIGINAL VERY GOOD CONDITION FOR ITS AGE SEE ALL PICS...FROM THIS ONE IS A BEAUTY!..HOUSE-RENT PARTY..RARE 1946 BLACK EXPLOITATION MAYBE GRUMBLING IN WHITE BORDERS AND GRUMBLING BUT ITS ALL THERE IN THE PICS~THIS POSTER WAS JUST LAYED ON THE FLOOR AND NOT FLATTENED OUT AND ITS A LIGHTER STOCK PAPER THAN USUAL AS TODDY PICTURES OFTEN ORDERED FROM N.S.S. THIS ONE IS A BEAUTY! MORGAN LITHO CO. CLEVELAND OHIO # 29685INCREDIBLERARE 1946 BLACK EXPLOITATION MAYBE GRUMBLING IN WHITE BORDERS AND GRUMBLING BUT ITS ALL THERE IN THE PICS~THIS POSTER WAS JUST LAYED ON THE FLOOR AND NOT FLATTENED OUT AND ITS A LIGHTER STOCK PAPER THAN USUAL AS TODDY PICTURES OFTEN ORDERED FROM N.S.S. THIS ONE IS A BEAUTY! MORGAN LITHO CO. CLEVELAND OHIO # 29685
  • Year: 1940-49
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Size: 27 1/2 x 41 inches
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Object Type: Poster
  • Restocking Fee: No

    Description

    House Rent Party All Black Cast Dewey Pigmeat Markham Comedy Music Harlem Poster
    House Rent Party All Black Cast Dewey Pigmeat Markham Comedy Music Harlem Separate Cinema Vintage Original 1946 Movie Theatre Poster
    Click images to enlarge
    Description
    THIS IS A NO RESERVE AUCTION!
    PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR FRESHLY SHOT PHOTOS OF THIS 1946 VINTAGE ORIGINAL  SEPARATE CINEMA EXPLOITATION 27 1/2 X41 ONE-SHEET POSTER...
    NO SURPRISES HERE...WHAT YOU SEE AND WHAT I DESCRIBE IS WHAT YOU GET AND YOU MUST BE HAPPY!..
    AND YOU WILL BE!!
    ANY GLARE IS FROM THE CAMERA FLASH!
    YOU ARE BIDDING ON AN ORIGINAL
    27 1/2X41 inch ONE-SHEET MOVIE POSTER VINTAGE ORIGINAL 1946 RELEASE BY TODDY PICTURES OF ..
    HOUSE-RENT PARTY
    Shorty's wife throws him out of the house for lying around reading detective thrillers and letting his boss Pigmeat get away with not paying him for the work he does at Pigmeat's barber shop in Harlem. He runs into Pigmeat on the street and asks for the money he's owed, but Pigmeat winds up convincing him that not only does he not owe Shorty any salary, but he actually overpays Shorty .25 a week. Later, Shorty reads about a jewel thief on the loose in Harlem and that there's a reward of ,000 for his capture. He convinces Pigmeat that the two of them can catch this guy, collect the reward and then become famous detectives. Complications ensue.
    RARE 1946 BLACK EXPLOITATION MAYBE GRUMBLING IN WHITE BORDERS AND GRUMBLING  BUT ITS ALL THERE IN THE PICS~THIS POSTER WAS JUST LAYED ON THE FLOOR AND NOT FLATTENED OUT AND ITS A LIGHTER STOCK PAPER THAN USUAL AS TODDY PICTURES  OFTEN ORDERED FROM N.S.S. THIS ONE IS A BEAUTY! MORGAN LITHO CO. CLEVELAND OHIO # 29685
    INCREDIBLE
    House Rent Party All Black Cast Dewey Pigmeat Markham Comedy Music Harlem Separate Cinema Vintage Original 1946 Movie Theatre Poster
    Dewey 'Pigmeat' Markham     ...     Pigmeat (as Pigmeat 'Alamo' Markham)
    John Murray     John Murray     ...     Shorty (as John 'Rastus' Murray)
    Alfred Cortez     Alfred Cortez     ...     Won Lung Lee
    David Bethea     David Bethea     ...     Nappy
    Rudy Toombs     Rudy Toombs     ...     Slippery Jim (as Rudolph Toombs)
    The Lord Invador     The Lord Invador     ...     The Lord Invador
    Macbeth's Calypso Band     Macbeth's Calypso Band     ...     Themselves
    Alberta Pryne     Alberta Pryne     ...     Alberta Pryne
    Ozzy Mallon's Jitterbugs     Ozzy Mallon's Jitterbugs     ...     Jitterbug Dancers
    Hannah Sylvester     Hannah Sylvester     ...     Hannibel - Shorty's Wife
    Claude Demetri     Claude Demetri     ...     Mr. Johnson
    Lou Swarz     Lou Swarz     ...     Mrs. Johnson
    Kay Freeman     Kay Freeman     ...     Mme. Crystal Ball
    James McNeely     James McNeely     ...     Police Sergeant
    Bill Dillard     Bill Dillard     ...     Police Officer
    Willis Drake     Willis Drake     ...     Master of Ceremonies
    Lance Taylor     Lance Taylor     ...     Tough Guy
    James Wilbur     James Wilbur     ...     Unidentified Character
    Roy Allen     Roy Allen     ...     Unidentified Character
    Dewey Wineglass     Dewey Wineglass     ...     Unidentified Character
    THIS ONE IS A
    BEAUTY!
    JUST NICE  FOLDED POSTER!
    THE ENTIRE POSTER IS REALLY FANTASTIC INDEED...SEE ALL PICS
    APPERANCE IS STRIKING AND ON THIS SUPER-RICHLY COLORFUL POSTER
    JUST GORGEOUS!
    SENT FLAT FOLDED SECURELY TO THE WINNER!
    IT DOESN'T GET MUCH BETTER THAN THIS!
    THIS IS NOT A REPRINT OR REPRO OF ANY KIND!..100% GUARANTEED VINTAGE ORIGINAL FOLDED 27 1/2 X 41 INCHES ONE-SHEET MOVIE POSTER DISPLAY!
    THIS IS AN ARTICLE I WROTE FOR "SCARY MONSTERS" MAGAZINE BOUT GHOSTMASTER JACK BAKER...DR. SILKINI!
    Direct From Hollywood!”
    ASYLUM OF HORRORS!
    A unique brand of entertainment in American Movie House history was known as the Midnight Ghost Show.  From its rise in the late 1920’s to its eventual demise in the late 60’s, the Spook Show captured imaginations and thrilled audiences in movie houses and drive-ins around the country.
    Midnight Ghost Shows or Spook Shows, later called Midnight Horror Shows, were orchestrated by a magician or “Spook Master,” and occurred live in the theatre before, between and after feature horror films.  Spook Show operators would take their shows on the road to small theaters across the country. Thousands of dollars could easily be made with a good routine and the willingness to live a somewhat transient existence. Theater operators made easy money booking these shows, with little out of pocket expense. Because the shows typically began at midnight, when the theater would otherwise be closed, the theater owners risked nothing by booking them and were all but guaranteed a profit.
    Elaborate advertising and posters were provided way in advance by the Spook Show operators, who mailed them to the theater with instructions about how to build up interest and suspense in their patrons. Intriguing posters often bearing shocking claims were placed in the movie house lobbies weeks before the show rolled into town for its one- night- stand.
    Trailers for these events were shown with the feature films in the weeks leading up to the Spook Show, generating intense interest and advance tickets sales. Gimmicks such as give-aways and free passes were employed to great success, as was radio advertising.  Advertising included such blurbs as, “SO SCARY WE DARE YOU TO SIT THROUGH IT ALL!  IF YOU DO---YOU WIN FREE 2 FOR 1 PASSES TO A NEAR FUTURE MOVIE!”  Another promised, “MONSTERS AND WEIRD BEAUTIES.” Or from the Ahmen Ra and His Weird Tomb of Terrors featuring the Mummy in Person, “MONSTERS GRAB GIRLS FROM THE AUDIENCE!”
    The Spook Show phenomena began in the lavish theaters of the 1920’s where they were billed predominantly as midnight Magic Shows complete with magicians, seances, floating phantoms, illuminated spirits and often comedy as well. One of the unique aspects of these shows was the “blackout” where at the end of the show the theater lights would be turned off and glow-in-the-dark ghosts would appear to materialize overhead and on the stage, thrilling and terrifying audiences. Everything and anything could happen. Spiders would fly from the balcony, James Dean, Marilyn Monroe or Elvis Presley might materialize, if you were brave enough to sit through the whole show you might win a “dead body.” Then the feature film, generally a horror film, would be shown.
    Some would consider one man to be the king of the Spook Show Circuit- Jack Baker.
    John Kessler, later known as Jack Baker, was born in Detroit Michigan in 1914.  He started his career in show business as a teenager, doing magic.  He later went on to sell trade magazines and in his travels he was invited to a Midnight Ghost Show. When the mentalist, Mel-Roy didn’t show, Jack was tapped to do his magic act for the expectant audience.  He was hooked.
    In time young Kessler joined up with Wyman Baker. Adopted by Baker’s parents, (thus the change from Kessler to Baker)  the two “brothers” teamed up to create “Dr. Silkini’s Spiritualistic Séance and Ghost Show in 1938: what would become the long-standing,  “Asylum of Horrors.”
    The advertising for the “Asylum of Horrors” promised Monsters and Fright but leaned towards a “Hellsapoppin’ type show, replete with laughs as well as shrieks.  Typical Baker poster advertisement ‘ballyhoo’ for the Asylum of Horrors Show consisted of blurbs such as: “Eerie! See it Happen-right before your startled eyes- IN PERSON!…And on a rampage. DIRECT FROM HOLLYWOOD…THE FRANKENSTEIN MONSTER.”
    The show was a big hit. In fact it broke box office records. Over the years, real movie actors from Universal Films such as Glenn Strange, Bela Lugosi and Lon Chaney Jr., made guest appearances in Jack’s show.  Universal even gave Baker special permission to use their Frankenstein character in the show because they felt that it contributed to the popularity of their monster. At one point there were 7 “units” like franchises, doing the show around the country. For many years Asylum of Horrors was the most successful and lucrative Spook Show on the circuit and Jack Baker became known as the King of the Spook Shows.
    The decline of Spook Shows had many causes; greed for profit, jaded audiences, television and cinemascope, (resulting in the removal of stages from movie theaters.) But perhaps there was more. In the advent of Abbott and Costello meeting all the monsters, the Addams Family and The Munsters, there was a saturation of comedy into horror that spelled doom for the whole shebang.   Or perhaps too, the world was growing up, becoming more cynical, unwilling to suspend their disbelief even for a few short hours, when the Magic could happen
    HERE'S WHAT THE CUSTOMERS ARE SAYING!!!
    I buy from Colossusofny often and am always pleased.
    casarama
    Nice vntg. item in great condition! FAST shpng.  friendly service!
    thebonechief
    Wasn't beauty killed the beast....twas COLOSSUS, The best EBAY has to offer!!
    mo382
    ED IS THE ULTIMATE SPOOK SHOW HISTORIAN AND COLLECTOR
    cinemanure
    Poster is in beautiful condition, thank you!
    jlsx
    Beautiful poster,good packing,fast shipping,A 1 Seller
    shadowman_65
    Honest, dependable, reliable, considerate dealer. Packaging flawless. Excellent
    hinton1000
    Unusual items, extremely low price, very happy with deal
    buy4jim
    EXCELLENT!!! Honest and pleasant ebayer, truly one of the best!! Thanks Ed!
    rods-n-bods
    Thanks Ed & thanks for the bonus card! Great poster & speedy delivery
    greshplow
    THE BEST OF THE BEST - FEEL WHAT ITS LIKE TO DEAL WITH A PRO - BID W/CONFIDENCE!
    audiobknow
    INCREDIBLE ..DON'T MISS IT!!!
    POSTER WILL BE SENT FOLDED FLAT   SECURELY
    ~ANY QUESTIONS OR MORE PICS PLEASE JUST ASK~
    $FREE ANYWHERE IN THE U.S.A.
    SHIPPED IN STURDY BOX   AND GUTS!
    45.00 OVERSEAS
    GO NOW!, BID AND WIN! WINNER CAN COMBINE ANY AND ALL WINS FOR ONE LOW SHIPPING PRICE OF $FREE FOR WHAT IT TAKES HERE IN THE U.S.A.! ....
    .00 FOR OUR FRIENDS OVERSEAS! NO RESERVE! LOW MINIMUM PAYPAL ONLY PLEASE AS EBAY STATES
    I WILL BE AUCTIONING OFF SOME ONE OF A KIND RARE SPOOK SHOW ITEMS,VINTAGE COMIC BOOKS,SCI FI AND HORROR SEXPLOITATION ORIGINAL MOVIE POSTERS,8MM FILMS,NON SPORTS TRADING CARD WAX PACKS,KING KONG,BURLESQUE,LON CHANEY,VINTAGE MENS STAG MAGAZINES,DVD'S, VIDEOS, AND MORE IN THE UPCOMING WEEKS SO STAY TUNED, AND CHECK OUT OUR MANY OTHER FINE STUFF!!! PLEASE E-MAIL WITH ANY QUESTIONS AND QUERIES
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