Book, Exhibition
Hollywood Unseen: A book and an exhibition

Mickey Rooney & his first wife, Ava Gardner (ph Eric Carpenter, MGM 1942)

Joan Crawford helping celebrate Fourth of July (US Independence Day) (ph CS Bull/MGM, 1927)

Laurel & Hardy signing autographs on set "Pack Up Your Troubles" (MGM, 1932)

Cary Grant & Randolph Scott (ph-Jerome Zerbe/Paramount, 1935)

Clark Gable projecting a macho image (MGM, 1931)

Jean Harlow (ph Virgil Apger/MGM, 1934)

Olivia de Havilland for New Year 1937 (Warner Bros)

Boris Karloff as Frankenstein resting between takes of Bride of Frankenstein, Universal 1935

Peter Lorre & Sidney Greenstreet celebrating Christmas (Warner Bros, 1942)

Rita Hayworth advertising perfume (Columbia, 1941)

Dick Powell & Ruby Keeler promoting their upcoming appearence in "FootLight Parade", Warner Bros 1933

Greta Garbo, MGM 1925

Humphrey Bogart on the backlot at Warner Brothers c1942

Bing Crosby watches Fred Astaire rehearse some dance steps for "Blue Skies"/Paramount 1946

Henry Fonda & James Stewart ,Paramount 1937

Jayne Mansfield celebrating Fourth of July (US Independence Day), (20th Fox, 1955)
With a foreword by screen legend, Joan Collins, Hollywood Unseen: photographs from the John Kobal Foundation will be published worldwide in October by ACC Editions. There is also an accompanying exhibition featuring images from the book which will be at the Getty Images Gallery, London from October 10th to November 2nd.
The latest book to be drawn from the archive of the John Kobal Foundation, Hollywood Unseen is a showcase for, and tribute to, the incredible inventiveness and ingenuity of the marketing and publicity departments of the great Hollywood Film Studios - MGM, Paramount, 20th Century Fox, Columbia, Universal, Warner Brothers & RKO - from the late 1920s to the early 1950s. The stunning and familiar portraits of Hollywood's leading men and ladies and the scene stills from their classic movies are even today, all around us - in books, documentaries, posters, postcards & modern brand advertising. The iconic images of Greta Garbo or Humphrey Bogart or Marilyn Monroe are still instantly recognisable today more than many of their actual movies. But these images were just one part of a continually ongoing stream of publicity materials being disseminated on a daily basis by the Hollywood Studios to publications worldwide. The marketing departments used many other different photo-publicity angles to promote their stars and films. These photos - documenting the ordinary life of the Stars - were nothing less than a publicity department's creation of how they wanted the public to perceive, behold and worship their talent roster. So the hobbies, husbands, wives, children, homes, pets, parties, premieres, etc of the Stars were paraded before fans who could never get enough of them. But, however they might appear, there was nothing instantaneous or casual about them. They were as prepared and as carefully constructed as any classic portrait or scene still even though most of those photos were used once or twice and then never seen again. This book is a display of those hidden unseen photographic gems.
Book
Hollywood Unseen
Photographs from the John Kobal Foundation
Author: Robert Dance
ISBN: 9781851496808
Publisher: ACC Editions
300 mm x 237 mm
Pages: 244
Illustrations: 200 b&w
Hardback
Exhibition
Hollywood Unseen:
Photographs from the John Kobal Foundation
From October 10th to November 2nd
Getty Images Gallery
46 Eastcastle Street, London, Greater
London W1W 8DX, Royaume-Uni
Links
http://www.johnkobal.org
http://www.antiquecollectorsclub.com/uk
www.gettyimagesgallery.com
Contributors

