_http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/business/la-ca-cinefile8jul08,1,662
5288.story?coll=la-headlines-business-enter&ctrack=1&cset=true_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/business/la-ca-cinefile8jul08,1,6625288.story?col
l=la-headlines-business-enter&ctrack=1&cset=true) 

Lost art of movie-house posters
The vintage lobby illustrations had to be done on the  quick, but a new 
coffee-table book and exhibit preserves their timeless  allure.
Susan King
July 8, 2007 

FOR decades, it was assumed that studio-produced lithograph  posters were 
used by theaters around the U.S. to promote the latest movies. But  that wasn't 
the case.

"Hundreds and hundreds of theaters throughout the  United States and all the 
various theater chains had their own in-house poster  artists who created 
posters designed to interest a local audience," says film  historian Anthony 
Slide, whose latest book, "Now Playing: Hand Painted Poster  Art From the 1910s 
Through the 1950s" (Academy Imprints), shines the spotlight  on this long-lost 
chapter in Hollywood entertainment history.

The  vibrant, colorful posters are on display in the lobby of the Linwood 
Dunn  Theater at the Pickford Center for Motion Picture Study and are available 
for  viewing whenever there is a program at the Dunn. They were culled from the 
 Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Science's collection at the Margaret 
Herrick  Library. Out of the thousands that were created over the decades, only 
about 100  survive in the collection.

Among the films featured are "Son of the  Sheik," "King Kong" and "The Black 
Pirate." The posters were to advertise a film  for one week and then they were 
discarded, says Slide, who co-wrote the coffee  table book with Jane Burman 
Powell and Lori Goldman Berthelsen. "It wasn't a  matter of throwing them out 
but painting over and putting a new poster on top of  the old one."

The majority of the posters in the exhibit and book were  done by Batiste 
Madalena. It was sheer serendipity that the posters were found.  Madalena 
worked 
at the Eastman Theatre in Rochester, N.Y., says Slide. In 1928,  George 
Eastman gave up running the theater and handed it over to Paramount to  run, 
and the 
posters were thrown out, according to Slide.

By  happenstance, Madalena was bicycling by the theater one day and saw the  
discarded posters in the rubbish.

"He made many journeys to and from home  and the theater [on his bike] and 
saved them all," says Slide. 

Slide  says it's still something of a mystery why theaters hired their own 
artists  instead of using the far less expensive posters supplied by the 
studios.  "Obviously, the local management thought these posters were better 
than 
what the  studios were sending out."

Because they worked in advance, the artists  never saw a movie before 
designing a poster. All they got were production stills  from the studios and 
the 
exhibitors' campaign books, says Slide. "Usually they  were sort of spot-on 
[about the movie's theme]…."

Remarkably, Slide says,  these artists would have to paint a poster in an 
hour or less. "And they were  not creating one poster for the lobby," he says. 
"Most lobbies had six or eight  [posters], and they were all of different 
designs."

Because so little is  known about the artists, including Madalena, O.M. 
(Otto) Wise and Edwin Isaac  (Ike) Checketts, Slide is hopeful that the book 
and 
exhibit will bring forth  relatives with information about them.

— Susan King 





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