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BETTY GRABLE -
The Girl With the Million
Dollar Legs
Signed Post Card with famous
photo shot.

Original signature no reprint.
Double
mat
with cut design, in non glare
uv glass.
Frame
size is: 14 x 18" in a
dull
black metal frame.
Signed
Post card is 4 x 7 " with the
promo
photo
8
x 10 glossy black and white.
Mounted in uv non glare glass.
Signed
on promo post card in red
ink
Best wishes always to John
From Betty
Very clear and clean
Betty
Grable (December
18,
1916 – July 2,
1973) was an
American dancer,
singer, and
actress.
Her sensational
bathing suit photo,
with her head
looking over her
right shoulder,
became the numbering
pin-up girl of the
W.W.II era. It
was later included
in Life 100 Photos
that Changed the
World. Actually
the picture was
heavily retouched as
Betty was pregnant
at the time
(thus a rear view),
and the bathing suit
airbrushed to look
more
"modest"

Promo Photo
not included
Grable was best
known for her
shapely legs, which
were showcased in
all
of her 20th Century
Fox Technicolor
musicals and were
famously insured
by her studio for
$1,000,000 per leg
at Lloyds of London.
She was born
Elizabeth Ruth
Grable in St. Louis,
Missouri to John C.
Grable (1883-1954)
and Lillian Rose
Hofmann (1889-1964).
Betty was the
youngest of three
children.

Most of Grable's
recent ancestors
were American, but
her distant
heritage included
Dutch, Irish, German
and English.[1][2]
She was
propelled into
acting by her
mother, who insisted
that one of her
daughters become a
star. For her first
role, as a chorus
girl in the
movie Happy Days
(1929), Grable was
only 13 years old
(legally underage
for acting), but,
because the chorus
line performed in
blackface, it
was impossible to
tell how old she
was. Her stage
mother Lillian gave
her a make-over
which included dying
her hair platinum
blonde. She also
encouraged her
daughter to sleep
with powerful men
who could help her
on the road to
stardom.

For her next film,
her mother got her a
contract using false
identification. When
this deception was
discovered, however,
Grable was
fired. Grable
finally obtained a
role as a 'Goldwyn
Girl' in Whoopee!
(1930), starring
Eddie Cantor. Though
Grable received no
billing, she
led the opening
number, "Cowboys."
Grable then worked
in small roles at
different studios
for the rest of the
decade, including
the Academy
Award-nominated The
Gay Divorcee (1934),
starring Fred
Astaire and
Ginger Rogers.
In 1937, she
rebelled against her
controlling mother
and married
another
famous former
child-actor, Jackie
Coogan, but Coogan
was under
considerable stress
from a lawsuit
against his parents
over his
earnings, and the
couple divorced in
1940. During this
period – after
small parts in over
fifty Hollywood
movies throughout
the 1930s –
Grable finally
gained national
attention on stage
for her role in the
Cole Porter Broadway
hit Du Barry Was a
Lady (1939).
The same year that
she divorced Coogan,
Grable obtained a
contract with
20th Century Fox,
becoming their top
star throughout the
decade, with
splashy Technicolor
movies such as Down
Argentine Way
(1940), Moon Over
Miami (1941) (both
with Don Ameche),
Springtime in The
Rockies (1942),
Coney Island (1943)
with George
Montgomery , Sweet
Rosie O'Grady (1943)
with Robert Young,
Pin Up Girl (1944),
Diamond Horseshoe
(1945) with
Dick Haymes, The
Dolly Sisters (1945)
with John Payne and
June Haver,
and her most popular
film Mother Wore
Tights (1947), with
favorite
costar Dan Dailey.

Promo Photo not
included
It was during her
reign as box office
champ (in 1943) that
Grable posed
for her iconic
pin-up photo, which
(along with her
movies) soon became
escapist fare among
GIs fighting
overseas in World
War II. The image
was taken by studio
photographer Frank
Powolny, who died in
1986. [3]
Despite solid
competition from
Rita Hayworth,
Dorothy Lamour,
Veronica
Lake, Carole Landis
and Lana Turner,
Grable was
indisputably the
number
one pinup girl for
American soldiers.
She was wildly
popular at home as
well, placing in the
top ten box-office
draws each year for
ten years.
By the end of the
1940s Grable was the
highest-paid female
star in
Hollywood.

Her postwar musicals
included That Lady
in Ermine (1948)
with Douglas
Fairbanks Jr., When
My Baby Smiles at Me
(1948) again with
Dailey,
Wabash Avenue (1950)
(a remake of
Grable's own Coney
Island) with
Victor Mature, My
Blue Heaven (1950),
and Meet Me After
the Show
(1951). Studio chief
Darryl F. Zanuck
lavished his number
one star with
expensive
Technicolor films,
but also kept her
busy — Grable made
nearly twenty-five
musicals/comedies in
thirteen years.
Grable's last
big hit for Fox was
How to Marry a
Millionaire (1953)
with Lauren
Bacall and Marilyn
Monroe.
In 1943, she married
jazz trumpeter and
big band leader
Harry James.
The couple had two
daughters, Victoria
and Jessica. They
endured a
tumultuous
22-year-long
marriage that was
plagued by
alcoholism and
infidelity. Betty
finally divorced
Harry in 1965. She
soon started
seeing a male dancer
half her age.
Grable's later
career was marked by
feuds with studio
heads, who worked
her to exhaustion.
At one point, in the
middle of a fight
with Darryl
F. Zanuck, she tore
up her contract with
him and stormed out
of his
office. Gradually
leaving movies
entirely, she made
the transition to
television and
starred in Las
Vegas.
She died of lung
cancer at age 56 in
Santa Monica,
California. Betty
had been a heavy
smoker, and often
smoked three packs
of cigarettes a
day. Her funeral was
held July 5, 1973,
thirty years to the
day after
her marriage to
Harry James -- who,
in turn, died on
what would have
been his and
Grable's 40th
anniversary, July 5,
1983. She is
interred
in Inglewood Park
Cemetery, Inglewood,
California.
Betty Grable has a
star on the
Hollywood Walk of
Fame at 6525
Hollywood
Boulevard in
Hollywood. She also
has a star on the
St. Louis Walk of
Fame.
Hugh Hefner, founder
of Playboy noted on
National Public
Radio's
Morning Edition on
April 23, 2007, in
an interview with
Terry Gross
that Betty was his
inspiration for
founding the Playboy
empire.
Betty was known by
many nicknames
including
"Box-Office Betty"
and "The
Girl With The
Million Dollar
Legs".
What a
great piece
this will make in
your office, home
theater or
den.

TOLL FREE EAST COAST TIME:
1-800-706-1088
If in our neck of the woods
please visit our studio at:
Movies Music
and Things
182 West 6th St.
Rutherfordton, NC 28139
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forms of payment
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