We are offering a original vintage 8 x 10 black and white glossy movie still photograph. 
This shot is from the 1933 movie Footlight Parade which starred James Jimmy Cagney, Joan Blondell, Rick Powell & Ruby Keeler.  This is from the 'By The Waterfall' production in the movie which featured choreographed swimmers forming the famous human waterfall!  There is a 'FP 89' in the corner of the image.
This original photo actually hung in the home of a movie/tv actor! There are multiple tack holes in the corners of the white border. Any/all blemishes, holes, aging/wear - if any - appear in the white border around the image.  

Side note: We obtained this photo and others from a storage locker purchase from a family member of 1950/60's 'B' movie and tv actor Tony George.  Following is his IMDB Mini Bio
Virile-looking, hairy-chested actor Anthony George is best remembered for a couple of popular TV crime series back in the early 1960s. Born Octavio George in Endicott, New York, he began in small roles in motion pictures and TV in the 1950s. Picked up by 20th Century-Fox he was sometimes billed as Tony George or Ott George in such "B" movies as You Never Can Tell (1951)Three Bad Sisters (1956)Chicago Confidential (1957) and Gunfire at Indian Gap (1957). More often than not, however, he appeared uncredited and his dark, swarthy features usually had him typed as minor heavies (convicts, thugs, mobsters, etc.). The fast pace and expectations of making movies proved too much for the actor, however, and he suffered a nervous breakdown during one such filming. Traveling back East to recover, TV ended up being a more adaptable medium. He finally hit pay dirt in 1960 when he was cast as a tough-talking good guy, agent Cam Allison, alongside Robert Stack's Eliot Ness in The Untouchables (1959). He abruptly left that series to head up his own cast as investigator Don Corey in the detective drama Checkmate (1960). The show lasted two seasons and made him a familiar face, if not a household name. Following this peak, he became a steadfast presence in daytime soaps with regular roles on Dark Shadows (1966)Search for Tomorrow (1951) and One Life to Live (1968). On occasion he would appear on stage and in 1966 had a chance to play Nicky Arnstein in "Funny Girl" at Los Angeles' Ahmanson Theatre opposite singing comedienne and impressionist Marilyn Michaels, who was known for her dead-on impersonation of Barbra Streisand. Other productions would include "The Front Page," "Winterset," "Come Blow Your Horn" and "Cactus Flower." A voice-over actor in commercials as well, Anthony George died of complications from lung disease in Los Angeles, California on March 16, 2005.