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MAN FROM YESTERDAY ('32) MAN FROM YESTERDAY ('32) herald OR search current auctions Auction History Result 1x155 MAN FROM YESTERDAY Uruguayan herald '32 Claudette Colbert, Clive Brook & Charles Boyer! Date Sold 10/11/2015Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Theatrical Uruguayan Movie Herald (measures 4 1/2" x 6 1/4" [11 x 16 cm]; 4 pages) (Learn More) Man from Yesterday, the 1932 Berthold Viertel post-World War I (WWI) romantic love triangle melodrama (made during the Depression, a VERY depressing story of an English soldier who marries an American woman near the end of World War I; they are together briefly before he is sent back to the war, and he is reported missing, and she is pregnant; a friend of hers, a French doctor, helps her, and they fall in love, but they don't marry, because they never had proof of her husband's death; it turns out that, like Enoch Arden, her husband was in a hospital with major injuries, and he returns years later, and, for the sake of their child, his wife tries to resume their marriage, but he realizes she no longer loves him, and he drinks himself to death, which leaves her free to marry the French doctor) starring Claudette Colbert, Clive Brook, Charles Boyer, Andy Devine, Alan Mowbray, Greta Meyer, and Barbara Leonard, and Yola D'Avril. Note that Charles Boyer was a college graduate with a philosophy degree, and he appeared in a few movies in his early 20s. He had greater success in talking movies, thanks to his distinctive French accent (which Chuck Jones "borrowed" for his character Pepe Le Pew), but he had his greatest success in Hollywood in the early 1940s, when many of the top U.S. stars were away in World War II. NOTE: Click on linked names to see a biography. Important Added Info: Please note that Uruguayan heralds, like Spanish heralds, were printed in large quantities, and then sent to individual theaters in Uruguay, and they would have the backs of them overprinted or stamped with their theater name and specific play dates. But because a movie might play in Uruguay for a period of a year or two (traveling from theater to theater), there is no guarantee that the date overprinted on the back of the herald is the same as the date that the herald was first printed (and the date that the movie first played in Uruguay). We strongly suspect that most movies did not reach Uruguay until a year or two after their first release in other countries, but we can't say for certain. Therefore, we don't list the date overprinted on the back of a herald as the date of the herald (or the date of the movie's first release in Uruguay) unless we know from some other source that the later year was when the movie first played in Uruguay. If it is important to you that the date on the herald is the same date as when the movie first played in its country of origin, then please look at our image of the back of this herald to see if there is a different date printed on it. Condition: very good. Learn More about condition grades
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