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Jean Harlow (1911-1937), American actress, c1930s-c1940s. Harlows big break in Hollywood came when Howard Hughes cast her in his sound remake of Hells Angels (1930)
Jessie Matthews (1907-1981), English actress, dancer and singer, c 1930s-c1940s. Signed photograph. Matthews became a big stage star in the late 1920s and 1930s
Jean Parker (1915-2005), American actress, c1930s-c1940s. Among Parkers film output are titles such as The Ghost Goes West (1935, with Robert Donat), Sequoia (1934), Little Women (1933)
Mary Pickford (1892-1979), Canadian actress, c1930s-c1940s. Pickford began her film career in 1909 working for DW Griffith
Dorothy Lamour (1914-1996), American actress, c1930s-c1940s. Lamour is perhaps best known for her roles in the Bob Hope and Bing Crosby Road films - a strange combination of adventure, slapstick
Joan Fontaine (b. 1917), American actress, c1930s-c1940s. Fontaine established her reputation in two films by director Alfred Hitchcock
Olivia de Havilland (b. 1916), American actress, c1930s-c1940sOlivia de Havilland (b.1916), American actress, c1930s-c1940s. De Havilland made her stage debut in 1935 as Hermia in A Midsummer Nights Dream; the following year she made her film debut in the same
Jeanette MacDonald (1903-1965), American singer and actress, c1930s-c1940s. Signed photograph. In 1929 Ernst Lubitsch saw MacDonald and cast her opposite Maurice Chevalier in The Love Parade
Constance Cummings (1910-2005), American-born British actress, c1930s-c1940s. Coming from a musical family (her mother was a concert soprano)
Bonita Granville (1923-1988), American actress, c1930s-c1940s. A child star, Granville was regularly cast as a naughty little girl, as in These Three (1936) where she played Mary
Wallace Beery (1885-1949), American actor, c1930s-c1940s. A star of many silent Hollywood films, the arrival of sound saw Beery as one of the victims of the wholesale studio purge
Henry Fonda (1905-1982), American actor, c1930s-c1940s. Fonda is perhaps best remembered for his roles as Abe Lincoln in Young Mr Lincoln (1939), Tom Joad in The Grapes of Wrath (1940)
Charles Laughton (1899-1962), English actor and director, c1930s-c1940s. Laughton starred in films such as The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933), for which he won a Best Actor Oscar
Ronald Colman (1891-1958), English actor, c1930s-c1940s. The star of films such as Lost Horizon and the Prisoner of Zenda (both 1937), Colman was nominated four times for the Best Actor Oscar
Brian Donlevy (1901-1972), American actor, c1930s-c1940s. Donlevy began his Hollywood career with the silent film A Man of Quality (1926) and went on to appear in over 80 films
Warner Baxter (1889-1951), American actor, c1930s-c1940s. Baxter starred in In Old Arizona (1929), the first talking Western, a role which won him the Best Actor Oscar
Robert Montgomery (1904-1981), American actor and director, c1930s-c1940s. Signed photograph. In 1937 Montgomery was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor as a psychopath in the chiller
Jack Holt (1888-1951), American actor, c1930s-1940s. Holt was a prominent leading man in silent and early talking films
Melvyn Douglas (1901-1981), American actor, c1930s-c1940s. Born Melvyn Edouard Hesselberg, Douglas often played the suave sophisticate in pursuit of a beautiful woman
Robert Donat (1905-1959), British actor, c1930s-c1940sRobert Donat (1905-1958), British actor, c1930s-c1940s. Signed photograph. Born Friedrich Robert Donath, Donat made his film debut in 1932
Walter Pidgeon, Canadian actor. Walter Pidgeon (1897-1984) began his Hollywood career in silent pictures in the 1920s. His career reached its peak in the 1940s when he starred opposite Greer Garson
ZaSu Pitts, American actress, 1934-1935. A successful film actress of the silent era, ZaSu Pitts greatest fame came in talking picture comedies in the 1930s
Evelyn Venable, American actress, 1934-1935. Evelyn Venables Hollywood career began in 1933. Her best known performance was in Death Takes a Holiday (1934)
Kent Taylor, American actor, 1934-1935. Born Louis William Weiss, Taylor appeared in over 110 films, mostly 1930s and 1940s B movies. Taken from Meet the Film Stars, by Seton Margrave
Elissa Landi, Italian born actress, 1934-1935Elissa Landi, Italian born actress, 1933. Landi (1904-1948) was a popular star of Hollywood films of the 1920s and 1930s. Born Elisabeth Marie Christine Kuhnelt
Robert Donat, English actor, 1934-1935. Born Friedrich Robert Donath, Robert Donat made his film debut in 1932. He is best remembered for his performances in The Ghost Goes West (1935)
Grace Bradley, American actress, 1934-1935. Grace Bradley made her name playing femme fatale roles in low budget Hollywood movies in the 1930s and 1940s
Cary Grant, English born film actor, 1934-1935. Born Archibald Alexander Leach, Cary Grant emigrated to the United States in 1920
Billie Seward, American actress, 1934-1935. Bille Seward appeared in 25 films between 1934 and 1944. Taken from Meet the Film Stars, by Seton Margrave. (London, 1934-1935)
Lewis Stone, American actor, 1934-1935. Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor in 1929 for his performance in The Patriot
Jane Wyatt, American actress, 1934-1935. Jane Wyatt is best remembered for her performances in Lost Horizon (1937) and the 1950s television series Father Knows best
Richard Dix, American actor, 1934-1935. Born Ernest Carlton Brimmer, Dix began his Hollywood career in Westerns. One of the few actors to successfully bridge the transition from silent films to
Irene Dunne, American film actress and singer, 1934-1935. Dunne was a film actress of the 1930s and 1940s. She was nominated five times for the Academy Award for Best Actress
James Dunn, American actor, 1934-1935. Dunn started his entertainment career in vaudeville before moving into film in the early 1930s
Shirley Temple, American actress, 1934-1935. Shirley Temple was a huge box office draw as a child actress in the 1930s. She retired from film acting in 1949
Warner Oland, Swedish actor, 1934-1935. Born Johan Verner Olund, he is best remembered for his screen portrayals of Doctor Fu Manchu and Charlie Chan
Ronald Colman, English actor, 1934-1935. Colman won the Best Actor Oscar in 1948 for his role in A Double Life. Taken from Meet the Film Stars, by Seton Margrave. (London, 1934-1935)
Marion Davies, American actress, 1934-1935. Marion Davies started out in show business in the chorus line of the Ziegfeld Follies on Broadway
Pat Paterson, British actress, 1934-1935. Married to the French actor Charles Boyer, Pat Paterson appeared in both British and Hollywood films in the 1930s
James Cagney, American actor, 1934-1935. Cagney is most associated with playing gangster roles but his Oscar for Best Actor that he won in 1942 was for his portrayal of the Irish-American Broadway
Constance Bennett, American actress, 1934-1935. Constance Bennett was one of the highest-paid Hollywood actresses of the early 1930s
Warren William, American Broadway and Hollywood actor, 1934-1935. William played Julius Caesar opposite Claudette Colbert in Cecil B DeMilles Cleopatra (1934)
Claudette Colbert, French born American actress, 1934-1935. A star equally adept at romantic comedy and dramatic roles, Colbert won a Best Actress Academy Award for her performance in It Happened One
Clark Gable, American actor, 1934-1935. Known as the King of Hollywood Gable was the biggest box office star of the early sound film era
Carole Lombard, American actress, 1935-1935. Born Jane Alice Peters, Carole Lombard was one of Hollywoods top comedy stars of the 1930s
Joan Crawford, American actress, 1934-1935. Crawford was an acclaimed Academy Award winning film actress and one of Hollywoods biggest stars in the 1930s
Robert Montgomery, American actor and film director, 1934-1935. In 1937 Montgomery was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor as a psychopath in the chiller Night Must Fall
Lionel Barrymore, American actor, 1934-1935. Lionel Barrymore was an actor of stage, radio and film. A versatile actor who played a wide range of characters