Walt Disney

Disney, Walt

Motion picture producer, animator and entrepreneur (1901-1966). Exquisite signed and inscribed vintage matte-finish 8 x 10 inch photo of Disney in his studio . no place, no date. 8 x 10 inch.
12.000 € (91985)

Exquisite vintage matte-finish 8 x 10 inch photograph of Disney in his studio with concept artwork tacked up on the wall behind him, boldly signed and inscribed in thick black felt tip, "To Ashrae, My best wishes, Walt Disney.” In very good to fine condition, with tack holes to the top and bottom borders, and moderately heavy silvering to the image.

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Disney, Walt

Motion picture producer, animator and entrepreneur (1901-1966). Vintage signed and inscribed matte-finish 8 x 10 photo of Disney. no place, no date. 8 x 10 inch.
12.000 € (92017)

Remarkable vintage matte-finish 8 x 10 photo of Disney in a magnificent seated pose, signed and inscribed in bold fountain pen, "To Dr. Lucinda de Leftwich, with my best wishes, Walt Disney.” Another hand has annotated the lower portion in white ink. In very fine condition. A fabulous early portrait of the man behind the mouse.

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Disney, Walt

Portraitphotographie mit eigenh. Widmung und Unterschrift.
Autograph ist nicht mehr verfügbar

Herrliches Kniestück, Walt Disney zusammen mit einem Hund zeigt. Magnificent vintage matte-finish 11 x 14 photo of Disney seated next to a large bloodhound, boldly signed and inscribed in black felt tip, „To Dan, Walt Disney”. In very fine condition. A large and wonderful signed photo of Disney posing with a dog breed featured in many of his classic films—in addition to the canine pose and immense signature makes this a truly remarkable Disney-signed portrait.


Disney, Walt

An autograph album page signed by Disney with a pen and ink sketch of Mickey Mouse’s head.
Autograph ist nicht mehr verfügbar

An autograph album page signed by Disney with a pen and ink sketch of Mickey Mouse’s head. The album leaf is additionally signed by British Liberal Party leader Archibald Sinclair (1890-1970); British peer and Rudyard Kipling biographer Frederick Smith, 2nd Earl of Birkenhead (1907-1975); British peer who died in a plane crash enroute to visit William Randolph Hearst Terence Cunningham Plunket, 6th Baron Plunket (1899-1938); and on the verso, influential English conductor Thomas Beecham (1879-1961); Polish pianist Arthur Rubinstein (1887-1982); British actress Violet Vanbrugh (1867-1942); American harmonica player Larry Adler (1914-2001); Australian baritone Peter Dawson (1882-1961); English conductor Adrian Boult (1889-1983); and English stage actress Lilian Braithwaite (1873-1948). After several false starts, Walt Disney and his brother Roy started an enormously successful Hollywood production company featuring Walt’s cartoon character Mickey Mouse, whose name became synonymous with Disney’s. During the summer of 1935, Walt and Roy, accompanied by their wives, took a six-week grand tour through Europe. On June 12, they arrived in Plymouth, England aboard the French liner Normandie. A short film entitled “Mickey Mouse Presents: Walt Disney: A Visit to Britain,” shows footage of Disney on the ship’s deck looking out at the sea and then cuts to an animated sequence of Mickey Mouse traversing choppy waves on a raft. Near the end of the film, Disney is shown signing his autograph for a fan. Mickey Mouse was already enormously popular throughout Europe and during “very public visits to the London Zoo, Oxford, the Elstree film studios, the English countryside, lunch with H.G. Wells, a drive to Scotland, a visit to a children’s hospital, and other activities, the Disney’s” were mobbed by fans and reporters, (“Walt Disney’s European Tour in 1935: Germany, Austria, and Switzerland,” The German Way Expat Blog, https://www.german-way.com/walt-disneys-european-tour-in-1935-germany-austria-and-switzerland/). After leaving England, the Disney’s toured France, Switzerland, Italy, and Germany where, notably, they drove near but did not visit Neuschwanstein Castle in Bavaria, the very castle on which the one at Disneyland would be modeled decades later after a 1955 visit, (Inspiring Walt Disney: The Animation of French Decorative Arts, Burchard). Upon their return to California, the party was again mobbed by autograph seekers, but Disney compared the American variety favorably to those in England, stating “This isn’t bad. You ought to see ‘em in England. There they go after them on bicycles.” (“A Day in the Life: Disney, June 12, 1935,” http://www.michaelbarrier.com/Essays/Disney1935/Disney1935.html). Show through at the edges from tape affixed to the verso. With some staining, creasing and wear. In very good condition. A remarkably rare and desirable piece of animation and motion picture history.