No you aren't Sue. You're just so damned busy!!

Sent from my iPhone

> On Feb 11, 2014, at 3:42 PM, Susan <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hey Toochis,
>   Thank you...also, I realize I said "LIttlest Colonel" above my bed and 
> meant to say "Littlest Rebel"....I have The Little Colonel as a French 47x63 
> above my fireplace....I'm getting old.......Sue
>  
> Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2014 12:37:03 -0800
> From: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [MOPO] RIP Shirley Temple
> To: [email protected]
> 
> Wow Susan.  You have that three-sheet!  How cool!!!!!  If you sell any of 
> your collection, I hope you have a exhibit first.  It certainly sounds 
> gallery worthy.  I'd be there!  I'd certainly buy too!  You are an impressive 
> woman for sure.  What an inspiration you are to all of us.
> 
> Toochis
> 
> 
> From: Susan <[email protected]>
> To: [email protected] 
> Sent: Tuesday, February 11, 2014 10:49 AM
> Subject: Re: [MOPO] RIP Shirley Temple
> 
>     You are so right Toochis...what an amazing person.  I have collected 
> Shirley Temple posters since I first began  collecting over 40 years ago.  
> Those posters will be the hardest to let go of when I finally get around to 
> selling off my collection.  I have the Littlest Colonel framed above my bed 
> and Curly Top and Bright Eyes in my hallway.  I have never had room to put up 
> my Stowaway 3 sheet that is shown in the previous email, but I look at it 
> often and it is one of the most beautiful of her film posters. 
>  
>       I get asked all the time what my favorite Temple movie is and it is 
> hard to say as, while I know all the individual plots, they sort of all blend 
> together in a child's mind of laughter and joy.  Sounds a bit corny now, but 
> I needed those movies as much as a child of the 50's as the people of the 
> country needed them in the 30's when they were originally shown.  There are 
> certain scenes from her movies that are so vivid in my head, like the scene 
> in Bright Eyes where her mother is running across the street with the 
> birthday cake and gets hit by a car.  That scene where David Butler cuts to a 
> closeup on that smashed birthday cake is a killer.... anyway,  she had an 
> amazing life and I'm thankful for all those wonderful memories that she left 
> us...
>  
> Sue
> www.hollywoodposterframes.com 
> Date: Tue, 11 Feb 2014 12:23:56 -0500
> From: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [MOPO] RIP Shirley Temple
> To: [email protected]
> 
> What a terrific life. She's delighting in heaven now. What a great poster 
> Bruce!
> 
> Toochis
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
> On Feb 11, 2014, at 7:02 AM, Bruce Hershenson <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> RIP Shirley Temple. She was born in Santa Monica, California in 1928. Her 
> mother quickly saw her remarkable talent, and did all she could to develop 
> it, and to get her noticed. She enrolled her in a dance school, where she 
> amazed everyone with her dancing and singing abilities at such a young age.
> 
> Her mother gave her a hair style imitative of that worn by Mary Pickford, 
> with exactly 56 "ringlets". She appeared in her first movies starting when 
> she was just shy of four years old, in a series called "Baby Burlesks" (she 
> had apparently failed an audition for the Our Gang series). She was paid $10 
> a day.
> 
> In 1934, she signed a contract with Fox, and her career really took off. Her 
> big breakthrough came with Stand Up and Cheer!, where her singing and dancing 
> amazed the nation. But she proved she was a remarkably poised actress that 
> same year in Little Miss Marker and Baby Take a Bow, and Fox rushed her into 
> as many movies as they could.
> 
> That same year she was in Now and Forever with Gary Cooper and Carole Lombard 
> (reportedly Cooper asked for her autograph when he met her!), and soon after 
> she starred in the series of juvenile musicals she is best remembered for, 
> films like Bright Eyes, The Little Colonel, Curly Top, Poor Little Rich Girl, 
> Wee Willie Winkie, Heidi, and many more.
> 
> In the late 1930s, Fox (now 20th Century Fox) still had her in little girl 
> roles, even though she was rapidly maturing, and in 1939 MGM badly wanted her 
> for the lead in The Wizard of Oz, but 20th Century Fox refused to loan her 
> out, and instead put her in The Blue Bird, which did not do well.
> 
> She left Fox, and began playing "teen" roles for various studios, but none 
> were very successful, and she made far fewer movies. In 1945, she married 
> actor John Agar, and they were married four years and had a child. In 1949, 
> they divorced, and a year later she married businessman Charles Black, and 
> retired from movies forever.
> 
> She saved the Fox studio after the death of its previous greatest star, Will 
> Rogers in 1935. She was merchandised in a zillion ways, and countless girls 
> born in the late 1930s were named "Shirley".
> 
> She became active in politics (she was a Republican, and was appointed to 
> several posts in the 1960s to 1990s). There has never been another child 
> actor with so much talent at such a young age, and she was surely the number 
> one child star of all time!
> 
> 
> -- 
> Bruce Hershenson and the other 29 members of the eMoviePoster.com team
> P.O. Box 874
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> Phone: 417-256-9616 (hours: Mon-Fri 9 to 5 except from 12 to 1 when we take 
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