Saturday, February 18, 2012

Movie Star paper dolls




Rudolph Valentino by Tom Tierney,  1979.  Tom was a fashion illustrator when he put together a book of paper dolls for his mother featuring stars from the 1930s. It was a hit with her and others who saw it--including a literary agent. And so in 1976  "Thirty from the '30's" was published by Prentice-Hall for a wider audience. A star was born! And the King of the Paper Dolls was on his way. Soon Dover Publications came calling, and they have published his books ever since.

Regarding "Thirty from the 30's": The art was black and white, another tribute to the era, and Tom scattered trivia questions throughout. If you see this oversized book anywhere, grab it. Highly collectible, hard to find.


 Marie Dressler, just one of the stars in the book. You'll also find Cary Grant, Fay Wray, Tyrone Power, Jeanette MacDonald, Fred Astaire, Anna May Wong...


For Valentine's Day, my husband bought me Tom's latest, "Life's a Drag!" a tribute to the cross-dressing stars of film and TV, everyone from Kate Hepburn to Ru Paul!

You can read more about Tom Tierney and his paper dolls, on his web site .
Dover has a full line of Tom Tierney books, of course. And you can find many other classic movie star paper dolls at Paper Studio Press.

Tom Tierney has inspired many others. Ralph Hodgdon, Gregg Nystrom, Marilyn Henry, David Wolfe, Brenda Mattox, Jim Howard, Sandy Vanderpool and Norma Lu Meehan are just a few of the current artists who study classic films and bring the stars and their costumes to life via paper dolls. I'll post more of their work in the days leading up to the Academy Awards.

Joan Crawford by Gregg Nystrom

Also highly collectible but hard to find are the movie star paper dolls that appeared during the stars' heyday. The movies of many of these stars are lost to us, and their names are only faintly remembered.

UPDATE: Lila Lee may not be well known to most people, but here's a strange coincidence: She starred opposite Valentino and Nita Naldi (see above) in Blood and Sand. But more fantastically, she had a son, James Kirkwood Jr., (his father, Sr., was also a silent film star). Young Kirkwood wrote the play, A Chorus Line, for which he was awarded the Tony and the Pulitzer Prize in 1976. That is some fantastic show biz legacy. Also, Jr.  wrote books that I read in high school (Good Times/Bad Times, There Must Be a Pony) that I will have to revisit. What would we do without Wikipedia?


UPDATE: Helen Mack was Molly Malloy in His Girl Friday. One of my favorite movies. Once again, Wikipedia sets me straight.

Other stars have endured...no Wikipedia research necessary for the Garbo.


The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center has an excellent exhibit up, now extended through March 10, about film promotion in the silent era. Here's the front page of the exhibit brochure, actually a broadsheet.



Here's a video preview of the exhibit:


For more fabulous flickers, click the logo below. The gentleman pointing the way is a young Claude Rains!

16 comments:

  1. I didn't even know there was such a thing as movie star paper dolls. They are gorgeous!

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  2. I really like the older ones--Movie Dressographs and Movie Star Cutouts.

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  3. My dad talks about going to the "picture show" when he was a boy. I love the clothes for Helen Mack.

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  4. I love the Lila Lee doll, though I have no idea who she is. Helen Mack is also wonderful.

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  5. wikipedia has an excellent bio on helen mack, who I have seen in a movie, just didn't know it: She was Molly Malloy in His Girl Friday.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Mack

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  6. Such wonderful paper dolls. Some of my favorite paper dolls growing up were Natalie Wood and the Lennon Sisters.

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  7. The Lennon Sisters have re-issued their paper dolls. You can find them at Paper Studio Press.

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  8. Cigarette cards of film stars I remember but I never heardof paper dolls.

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  9. These dolls are gorgeous. I can’t imagine anyone wanting to actually cut them out and play with them but I suppose they must have. Thank goodness you can still buy them intact.

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  10. These movie star paper dolls are amazing - I'm continually amazed from your blog how many great paper dolls were produced. Love the first one where the man on the left looks quite put out that the other gut is getting the girl!

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  11. Well, well, this theme certainly worked out fine for you, and it's right up your alley. While not a collector, I must say this seems fascinating in the details. I love fashion!! I would love to see that first book. Will you be seeing this exhibit?
    :)~
    HUGZ

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  12. Yes, I saw the exhibit shortly after it opened. It was wonderful to see so much memorabilia from the silent era, and to consider how publicists had to work to entice an earlier generation to the moving pictures.

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  13. I gave one of the Tierney books to friends, Ronald and Nancy Reagan cutout dolls. Also a similar one of the Prince and late Princess of Wales. Very clever artist.

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  14. You Have To Admire The Patience & Dedication It Must Have Taken Fans To Assemble These Lovely Prints.

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  15. I bet it was wonderful.
    Good for you!!

    But you can only smile at what our forefathers did, as most likely, future generations will smile [kindly hopefully] on our time.
    :)~
    HUGZ

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  16. What a great blog!

    I would like to share two scans of a paper doll with five costumes for silent movie actress Claire Windsor. They are from a July 1927 movie magazine. Claire signed with Goldwyn and then with M-G-M when they were formed in 1924. She appeared in 38 films of which only a handfull were "talkies." She has a star on the Hollywood walk of fame and still shines bright here in her home town of Cawker City, Kansas! Here are the scans: [IMG]http://i546.photobucket.com/albums/hh407/aejayks/paperdollpageCalire.jpg[/IMG]
    [IMG]http://i546.photobucket.com/albums/hh407/aejayks/paperdollpage.jpg[/IMG]

    And here is a photo of the finished dolls which I recently used to decorate a banquet table: [IMG]http://i546.photobucket.com/albums/hh407/aejayks/emailfinishedpaperdolls.jpg[/IMG]

    You can see more of Claire on YouTube by searching her name.

    By the way, Claire and Lila Lee were WAMPAS baby stars in 1922.

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