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ITEM: This is a sensational 1932 vintage and original Golden Age of Hollywood glamour photograph of Polish actress Lyda Roberti. A publicity photo for the Paramount release "Dancers in the Dark", this item has a studio stamp and press snipe on verso. The Hollywood import is a dazzling art deco glamour girl in this close up portrait that highlights her striking platinum blonde locks and dazzling smile. A wonderful old pre-Code silver screen treasure!

Measures 8" x 10" on a glossy single-weight weight paper stock.









CONDITION: Very fine condition. Please use the included images as a conditional guide.

Guaranteed to be 100% vintage and original from Grapefruit Moon Gallery.

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Lyda's father was German clown Roberti, her mother a Polish trick rider. As a child performer, she toured Europe and Asia with the Circus in which she was born, leaving it (and her reportedly abusive father) in Shanghai, China. In this truly international city, Lyda became a child cafe entertainer and learned the fractured English that became her trademark. Around 1927, she emigrated to California, finding work in vaudeville, where she was "discovered" in 1930 by Broadway producer Lou Holtz and became an overnight star in his 1931 show 'You Said It'. Lyda's unforgettable stage and screen character was a sexy blonde whose charming accent and uninhibited man-chasing were played for hilarious laughs. From 1932-35 she made 8 comedy and musical films mainly at Paramount, with Fields, Cantor, and other great comedians; her unique singing style was also popular on the radio and records. Her health declining from premature heart disease, she briefly replaced the late Thelma Todd in Hal Roach comedy shorts with Patsy Kelly and appeared in 3 features for MGM and Columbia, then retired from film work a few months before her fatal heart attack at age 31.

- IMDb Mini Biography By: Rod Crawford

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