Bruce:
You're right...you did miss a good dinner that night! Your friends John and 
son, and John Myhre were such good companions...smart, funny, talkative...it 
was a memorable evening for me. I'll confess I contributed a few good stories, 
too.
At least we got to see the movie together, and I must say it seemed even more 
powerful to me now than it did when it first came out.

Well, we'll see if there's another event coming up that could lure you to 
Hollywood.
In the meantime, my "sources" tell me that the new Batman movie, THE DARK 
KNIGHT, is fantastic and that Heath Ledger's work in the picture is the best he 
ever did...so there's something to look forward to. I think your son will want 
to see that one!
  Richard

Richard Del Belso

Date: Wed, 2 Jul 2008 05:59:14 -0500
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MOPO] <><><> dinner <><><>
To: [email protected]

I was real busy last night with my auctions, and am just now seeing this. 
Obviously, I am both greatly complimented and embarrassed by this sweet reply 
from Marty, and he knows I enjoy time with him just as much (or more) than he 
enjoys spending time with me (we clearly have a mutual admiration society).

 
Funny true Marty Davis story. I was passing through Cleveland like 20 years 
ago, and someone had told me of this MAJOR collector I should meet named Marty 
Davis, and I called him up and he gave me directions to his house. He said 
hello when I got there, and said, "I am sorry, but I can only talk for a few 
minutes because" (if I remember correctly) he said "I am getting married 
tomorrow and my wedding rehersal is very soon".

 
Well, Marty saw I loved posters just as much as he did, and we ended up talking 
for a couple of hours, and he showed me lots of great items from his 
collection, and I bet he got in all kinds of trouble over being so late for his 
wedding rehersal, but it showed he had his priorities in order! The last time I 
was in Columbus I spent a couple more hours talking to Marty (even though we 
both were exhausted) and in a more perfect world he would live down the block 
from me, and we would see each other frequently!

 
Speaking of celebrities, and meeting them or having dinner with them, I have 
had my fair share of encounters over the years, and I have found the ones where 
I am meeting them as a star struck fan very awkward, and I have learned to 
avoid such encounters (for example, I have a close friend who runs a comedy 
club where Jay Leno appears once a week, and every time I go there when Jay is 
there, he comes over to me and says the same few pleasant sentences, and I am 
certain he has no clue he has met me before, for he must go through the same 
process with 100 people every day!).

 
I would say my nicest celebrity encounter was with Debbie Reynolds. It was 
around 18 years ago, and she was getting ready to open her museum in Vegas, and 
she had heard of my posters and wanted to get me to display them in the museum 
for no fee (but that kind of made sense, because it would give me great free 
publicity).

 
So she wanted something from me, which is the best way to ever meet a 
celebrity. She called me and invited me to her house, and I went to this little 
house in North Hollywood, and I knock on the door, and this little old lady 
answers the door, and she has a scarf around her head and zero make-up on, and 
I truly thought it was "the maid" and it took me a minute to realize that it 
was actually Debbie! I went in and talked with her for an hour or so about the 
museum idea, and then she said she had to go, and invited me to see her again 
the next day where she was taping some kind of show.

 
I went to some studio she gave me an address to, and when I got there she was 
all made up, and looked exactly like the person I had seen so many times (an 
amazing transformation from the day before), but now that she was surrounded by 
people she had little time to talk, but she kept introducing me to everyone 
there as the "king of movie posters" (I get that sort of thing a lot!). Rip 
Taylor was there jhovering about, and he said "Give me your camera and I'll 
take a picture of you and Debbie", and he was amazed I didn't have a camera.

 
A year or so went by, and one day Debbie called me, and said she had the 
financing in place for the museum, and wanted to talk again. I had gotten 
married and thought my wife would get a big kick out of "lunch with Debbie" and 
so I suggested we meet in public, and Debbie told me to be in some fancy hotel 
lobby at some time, and we were there. She came in all decked out, and lots of 
people were staring and pointing at her. She walked over to the hotel 
restaurant and said "I want a table for three" and the restaurant guy said I am 
sorry but I have nothing for an hour, and she said, "Look, you know who I am, I 
bet anything you can find me a table if you really try", and of course he did!

 
It was a pleasant meal, and I ended up lending her a couple of six sheets, and 
when the museum closed they were carefully returned to me.
 
One meal I won't forget is one that I didn't get to have! Last year, there was 
a special AFI showing of ten movies in L.A. with intros by top stars, and one 
was Star Wars with Lucas, and one was Cuckoo's Nest with Nicholson. My oldest 
son (then 14) loved Cuckoo's Nest, and two of my best employees are Star Wars 
freaks, and I wanted to take them to see those movies, but had no clue how to 
do so.

 
I posted right here on MoPo about it, and Richard Del Belso (a MoPo member and 
poster collector) contacted me and told me he could get tickets. He came to the 
event, as did my old friend John Sawyer and HIS son, plus I called 
collector/multiple Oscar winner John Myhre (another old friend), and he came 
too.

 
We were all supposed to have dinner together before the movie, but the AFI 
pulled a scurvy trick. They had announced that the first 100 people in each 
movie would get a special program book, and my son and my employees wanted to 
be sure to get it, so they said they would skip dinner, and wait in line, and I 
reluctantly stayed with them, so they wouldn't be alone, and missed the dinner. 
I am really sorry to have done so, for Richard worked for the studios for 
years, and John works on top movies, and I am certain I missed a zillion great 
stories!

 
To make matters worse, it turned out the "special program book" was just the 
regular crappy program book everyone got, and it didn't matter if you were one 
of the first 100 people (it was just a trick to try to get people to arrive on 
time).

 
The worst part of living in a tiny town is NOT the lack of fine dining or top 
entertainment, but rather not getting to share the company of fine people (like 
the ones I mentioned above, plus many other MoPo members).

 
One of the absolute best dining companions I have ever had was Nelson Lyon, a 
semi-celebrity (and great lover of lobby cards). I had a series of dinners with 
Nelson, and I think he could easily hold his own with Orson Welles or Chaplin, 
or any of the other celebrities mentioned on this list. I wish I could 
magically join together the highlights of my dinners with Nelson, and I think 
it would be a far more entertaining movie than "My Dinner With Andre" (those of 
you who know Nelson know what I mean, and those of you who don't, do not know 
what you are missing!).

 
Enough rambling down Memory Lane!
 
Bruce


On Tue, Jul 1, 2008 at 2:25 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:






In a message dated 7/1/2008 9:43:14 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED] writes:
if you could have dinner and then chat for hours with any hollywood/movie 
person, past of present, who would it be?


I will extend the definition of "hollywood/movie person" to include those 
people professionally selling movie memorabilia.  And I would choose Bruce 
Hershenson, because he has consistently shown me over the past 20 years that he 
has more fascinating stories, accurate information, and understanding about the 
film poster world, and auction machinations that anyone else.  Time with Bruce 
just flies by!

 
Marty Davis
Vintage Film Posters
38732 N. 10th Street
Desert Hills, AZ 85086

623/551-6655 tel
623/551-6622 fax
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

OneSheet (eBay Screen Name)
www.vintagefilmposters.com





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