Tom
 
Ed and I have been gathering information on the "founding fathers" of our
great hobby with the intent of having a section on LAMP dedicated to these
pioneers.  We just haven't had the time to set it up formally.  Ed spoke
with Mr. Carpio many years ago and found him to be very nice, extremely
knowledgeable, and he helped answer questions that we had about the hobby.
 
We don't have enough information about his history in movie posters to write
a bio fitting of his contribution.  HOWEVER, if someone would submit one to
us, we will be happy to put it on the site, with authorship recognition.  We
will put an entry to the article on the home page.
 
My condolences to his family and friends.
 
Sue
LearnAboutMoviePosters.com <http://www.LearnAboutMoviePosters.com> 

  _____  

From: MoPo List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tom
Martin
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2008 11:15 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Jose' Carpio Was A Very Kind Man!


Maybe Ed an Sue  Poole  could have a Bio area devoted to all these Poster
people  Icons and Collectors/dealers like Jose. Carpio and the like.
It would give collectors a idea of how the hobby was started.evolved, and
who the players where
If each persons story was told.. Imagine the understanding we may have of
the Hobby, and how
it was formed and by whom.

When I hear these storys told,,, its cool as I see a thread.  And while many
are still alive it would be good to chronical .. perhaps a Book could come
off it,

Or what about a documentry... visiting the Homes and seeing the Collections
On a DVD, wow

a  tape featuring interviews and  eye candy///   PLUS  more,,,

My son could shoot it and edit it and we take a USA and Euro Tour.. thats a
Idea.

sponsors   anyone  ?  :)

Tom

Susan Heim wrote:


I am so sad to hear the news of Jose. I have known him since the early
1980's. In fact, in those days I worked in film and had access to many
"newer" posters. Most of my vintage collection is due in large part to
trading original rolled Star Wars posters and related material to Jose. I
traded 7 original Star Wars posters for my Rebecca one sheet. That was one
of my first trades with him. My Rear Window, Bond material and many of my
original 40's and 50's vintage one sheets came directly from Jose. He was
the nicest man and funny. I loved the shop in San Francisco as there just
wasn't anything like it at the time in L.A. Channing was there too. I use to
go to San Francisco all the time in those days as it was only about a 4+
hour drive up the coast and the first thing I did was go to see Jose. I
still have all my original Cinemonde catalogs. Jose was the one who turned
me onto foriegn posters beginning with many of my Belgian Hitchcock's and
then the French grandes. He was a wonderful and generous person and he will
be missed yet remembered, as Bruce said, with fondness as one of the
pioneers of this hobby. 
 
Sue
www.hollywoodposterframes.com



  _____  


Date: Mon, 8 Sep 2008 04:28:26 -0500
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Jose' Carpio Was A Very Kind Man!
To: [email protected]



Tom. Great story! Channing DID run Cinemonde for years (I first met him one
day when I went to Cinemonde and director George Cosmatos was there buying
posters!), and he is one of the many many old-timers who were connected to
Jose. You also are very correct about his connection to foreign posters.
Back in those pre-Internet days, many of us (myself included) knew nothing
about non-U.S. posters, and Jose would travel to Europe and come back with
all kinds of treasures from movies we all knew, but in other languages and
sizes I had never seen (his catalogs were always filled with words like
"affiche" and "locandina" and it all sounded so mysterious and exotic to me!
 
He carried around an address book that had the names and phone numbers of
everybody who was anybody in the hobby, and he knew exactly what everyone
had and what they wanted, and if you called him that you had some great
poster, or were looking for some great poster, chances were decent he could
make a few phone calls and get a deal going. He used to joke that his
address book was worth more than his gallery.
 
Glenn, he was such a force in the hobby! In the first years of live auctions
(including my own) he would request a dozen extra catalogs, and he would
mail them to his best customers and would show up at the auctions with lots
of bids from wealthy clients. There is so much more I didn't mention. One of
the greatest early collectors was Steve Shapiro, who did the first real
movie poster book (after the spiral bound Kobal book) in 1979, called The
Movie Poster Book. He had purchased a lot of his posters from Jose, and when
he decided to sell, he consigned his entire incredible collection to Jose. 
 
There are so many people in the hobby who were closely associated with Jose.
People like Channing, Kirby, Gary Vaughn, Tony Nourmand, Joe Burtis, Crowell
Beech (another major collector/dealer who recently passed on), myself, and
so many others. I doubt there was anyone who was very active in the 1980s or
early 1990s who did not have dealings with the man.
 
Bruce


On Mon, Sep 8, 2008 at 2:38 AM, Glenn Taranto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


I must say, after collecting posters for 10 years now, this is the first
I've ever heard of the man and it sounds as if it were entirely my loss.
 
My sincere condolences to all who knew him.
 
Glenn T.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Tom A.  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Pennock 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Sunday, September 07, 2008 11:40 PM
Subject: [MOPO] Jose' Carpio Was A Very Kind Man!


Back in 1984 I talked with Jose' on the phone about a possible James Bond
trade. I told him I was coming out to California to visit my brother there.
I told him I would like to possibly work a James Bond trade with him. I told
him I had an extra one sheet from "Thunderball" and a rolled 30" x 40" from
"Diamond's Are Forever". I was interested in a MINT set  of 1964 lobby
card's from "Goldfinger" that he had.  I only had about $50.00 in both of
those poster's. I set up a time after the holiday's to come up to San
Francisco to meet with him and discuss a trade.  I remember looking for the
shop in San Francisco. I think Channing was the manager of Jose's store
"Cinemonde" at the time. I found the shop and Jose' was the only one there.
It was the day after New Year's. The prices were so low back in 1985. I
still have the catalog I got from him. Anyway he looked over my one sheet
and 30" x 40" cardboard stock poster and said "these look fine to me". He
went back into the other room and brought out a "pristine" set of lobby
card's from "Goldfinger". I thanked him very much for trading. He also
unfolded a 1964 47" x 63" French one panel from "Goldfinger" to let me see
it. At that time I had zero money and I wish I could go back now. I remember
the "Thunderball" 1965 "advance quad" he had for ONLY $190.00!!! He was very
kind to do this 007 trade with me. I have the "set of eight" lobby card's
from "Goldfinger" framed in gold sectional frames now. Everytime I look at
them on my wall I think of Jose and how thoughtful and kind he was to me. An
even trade with no money involved. Very kind and rare. He also deserves a
lot of credit for identifying the foreign artist's and making the foreign
poster's popular. Liza Minnelli was one of his customer's and yes the French
one panel from "Gigi" is far superior to any other paper on this title. She
purchased her Mom's poster's as well as poster's from film's her Dad
directed. Jose' did a lot to make these foreign poster's popular. The book
"Reel Art" is a perfect example of this. 
 
Jose' Carpio was definitely a true legend in the hobby and yes we ALL should
be grateful for the awareness he brought about in the hobby. For what he did
for movie poster's in general. He will be missed!!!
 
--Tom Pennock 
 
  
 
 




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