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1960 SARITA MONTIEL Israel FILM Movie POSTER Hebrew PIEL CANELA Cinnamon SKIN

$ 46.99

Availability: 60 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Religion: Judaism
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Israel
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Condition: The condition is good . Used. Two folds. Slightly stained . Printed in red and blue on white paper . ( Pls look at scan for accurate AS IS images )
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    DESCRIPTION
    :
    Up for auction is an HEBREW theatre Jewish Judaica POSTER for the ISRAELI re-release of the 1953 movie "PIEL CANELA" ( Cinnamon Skin ) Staring the legendary Spanish actress and singer SARA ( SARITA ) MONTIEL in the small rural town of NATHANYA in ISRAEL.  The cinema-movie hall " CINEMA SHARON" , A local Israeli version of   " Cinema Paradiso "  was printing manualy its own posters , And thus you can be certain that this surviving copy is ONE OF ITS KIND. Text in HEBREW and ENGLISH. Exceptionaly amusing HEBREW advertising - promoting TEXT for the Hebrew audience
    . The Israeli distributors have given the film a brand new Hebrew name : " The TEMPTATION GIRL". S
    ize Around 31" x 28" Not accurate ).
    The condition is good . Used. Two folds. Slightly stained  . Printed in red and blue on white paper . ( Pls look at scan for accurate AS IS images ) . Poster will be sent rolled in a special protective rigid sealed tube.
    AUTHENTICITY
    : The advertising THEATRE POSTER is fully guaranteed ORIGINAL from 1960 ( Dated ) , NOT a reproduction or a recent reprint , It holds a life long GUARANTEE for its AUTHENTICITY and ORIGINALITY.
    PAYMENTS
    : Paypal.
    SHIPPMENT
    : Shipp worldwide via registered airmail is $ 25 . POSTER will be sent inside a rigid protective TUBE
    .
    Will be sent  around  5 days after payment .
    Cinnamon Skin (Spanish: Piel canela) is a 1953 Mexican drama film directed by Juan José Ortega and starring Sara Montiel, Manolo Fábregas and Ramón Gay.[1] It was set and partly filmed in Cuba. Contents  [hide]  1 Cast 2 References 3 Bibliography 4 External links Cast[edit] Sara Montiel as Marucha Manolo Fábregas as Dr. Carlos Alonso Ramón Gay as Julio Chávez Felipe de Alba as Dr. Jorge Morales Rosa Elena Durgel as Alicia Álvarez, enfermera Fernando Casanova as Paco Magda Donato as Paciente loca de Alonso Salvador Quiroz as Don Ernesto Ismael Larumbe as Antonio Salas Porras Jorge Casanova Arturo Corona as Amigo de Antonio Manuel de la Vega as Amigo de Antonio Pedro Vargas as Cantante Rosita Fornés as Cantante Julio Gutiérrez Olga Chaviano as Bailarina Victorio Blanco as Empleado casino Josefina Burgos as Mujer en casino Rogelio Fernández as Esbirro de Julio Ana Bertha Lepe as Empleada carpa Chel López as Detective José Muñoz as Cantinero Rafael A. Ortega Ignacio Peón as Hombre en casino Alicia Reyna as Mesera Joaquín Roche as Espectador gritón carpa María Antonia Abad Fernández MML (10 March 1928 – 8 April 2013) known professionally as Sara Montiel (also Sarita Montiel or Saritísima) was a Spanish singer and actress. Montiel was born in Campo de Criptana in the region of Castile–La Mancha in 1928. She worked in Europe, Latin America and United States. Her films The Last Torch Song and The Violet Seller netted the highest gross revenues ever recorded for films made in the Spanish-speaking movie industry during the 1950s/60s[citation needed]. Montiel's film Variety was banned in Beijing in 1973. She played the role of Antonia, the niece of Don Quixote, in the 1947 Spanish film version of Cervantes's novel. She was portrayed in the Pedro Almodóvar film Bad Education by a male actor in drag (Gael García Bernal) as the cross-dressing character Zahara, and a film clip from one of her movies was used, as well. Contents  [hide]  1 Acting career 2 Personal information 3 Filmography 4 Discography 5 Honours 6 Awards 7 References 8 External links Acting career[edit] This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (February 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Montiel started in movies at 15 in her native Spain where she filmed her first movie playing an Islamic princess in the 1948 film Madness for Love, released in the U.S. as The Mad Queen. Later worked in Mexico, starring in a dozen films in less than five years. Hollywood came calling afterwards, and she was introduced to United States moviegoers in the film Vera Cruz (1954), directed by Robert Aldrich. She was offered the standard seven-year contract at Columbia Pictures, which she refused, afraid of Hollywood's typecasting policies for Hispanics. Instead she freelanced at Warner Bros. in Serenade (1956), directed by Anthony Mann, and at RKO in Samuel Fuller's Run of the Arrow (1957). After The Last Torch Song (1957), she combined filming, recording songs in five languages and performing live. Almost all of her films earned high box office results. Among the films during the 1960s and early 1970s were The Violet Seller(1958), Carmen, la de Ronda (1959), Mi Último Tango (1960), Pecado de Amor (1961), La Bella Lola (a 1962 version of Camille), Casablanca, Nid d'espions (1963), Samba (1964), La Femme Perdue (1966), Tuset Street (1967), Esa Mujer (1969), Varietes (1971) and others. By then she had become dissatisfied with the movie industry when producers started offering her erotic roles in comedy films[citation needed]. In 1974, Montiel announced her retirement from movies but continued performing live, recording and starring on her own variety television shows in Spain.[1] In November 2009, Alaska from the Spanish pop group Fangoria invited Montiel to record a track sharing vocals with her for the re-release of the band's album Absolutamente. They recorded the title track "Absolutamente" as a duet. The music video for the song was released in early 2010.[2] She had no plans to retire[citation needed], and in May 2011, after almost 40 years without making a movie, she performed in a feature film directed by Óscar Parra de Carrizosa. The film title is Abrázame and was shot on location in La Mancha. Personal information[edit] Monument to Montiel in Campo de Criptana. Montiel was born María Antonia Abad Fernández (complete name María Antonia Alejandra Vicenta Elpidia Isidora Abad Fernández) in 1928 in Campo de Criptana (Ciudad Real), Spain[citation needed]. She entered films after winning a beauty and talent contest at age 15[citation needed]. In her first movie, she was credited as "María Alejandra" a shortened version of her real name. For her next film, she changed her name to Sara, after her grandmother, and Montiel after the Montiel fields in the Castile–La Mancha region of her birth. She has been married four times[citation needed]: Anthony Mann (American actor, film director); 1957-1963 (divorced) José Vicente Ramírez Olalla (attorney); 1964-1978 (annulled) José Tous Barberán (attorney, journalist); 1979-1992 (Tous's death); this union produced two adopted children: Thais (born 1979) and José Zeus (born 1983)[3] Antonio Hernández (Cuban videotape operator); 2002-2005 (divorced) In 2000, Montiel published her autobiography Memories: To Live Is a Pleasure, an instant best seller with 10 editions to date. A sequel Sara and Sex followed in 2003. In these books, Montiel revealed other relationships in her past, including one-night stands with writer Ernest Hemingway as well as actor James Dean. She also claimed a long-term affair in the 1940s with playwright Miguel Mihura and mentioned that science wizard Severo Ochoa, a Nobel Prize winner, was the true love of her life. Montiel died in 2013 at her home in Madrid at the age of 85 from congestive heart failure.[4] Filmography[edit] Year Title Role Country Notes 1943 Te Quiero Para Mí Spain Credited as "María Alejandra" 1944 Empezó en Boda Spain 1945 Bambú Spain 1945 Se le Fue el Novio Spain 1945 El Misterioso Viajero del Clipper Spain 1946 Por el Gran Premio Spain 1946 Mariona Rebull Lula Spain 1947 Confidencia Spain 1947 Don Quixote Antonia Spain Released in the U.S. in 1949 1947 Alhucemas Spain 1947 Vidas Confusas Spain 1948 Madness for Love Spain Released in the U.S. in 1949 as The Mad Queen 1948 La Mies es Mucha Spain 1949 Pequeñeces... Spain 1951 Captain Poison Spain 1951 Red Fury María Stevens Mexico / United States Stronghold is its English version with Veronica Lake in Montiel's part 1951 Necesito Dinero Mexico 1951 Women's Prison Dora Mexico 1951 Here Comes Martin Corona Rosario Mexico 1951 El Enamorado / Vuelve Martín Corona Mexico 1952 Yo soy gallo dondequiera Mexico 1953 That Man from Tangier Aixa Spain / United States 1953 She, Lucifer and I Isabel Mexico 1953 Reportaje Mexico She does not appear in the final cut 1953 Porque Ya No Me Quieres Mexico 1953 Cinnamon Skin Marucha Mexico / Cuba 1954 Frente al Pecado de Ayer / Cuando se Quiere de Veras Mexico / Cuba 1954 Yo no Creo en los Hombres Mexico / Cuba 1954 Se solicitan modelos Rosina Mexico 1954 Where the Circle Ends Isabel Mexico Circle of Death in the U.S. 1954 Vera Cruz Nina United States 1956 Serenade Juana Montes United States 1957 Run of the Arrow Yellow Moccasin United States 1957 The Last Torch Song Maria Luján Spain 1958 The Violet Seller Soledad Moreno Spain 1959 A Girl Against Napoleon Carmen Spain The Devil Made a Woman in the U.S. and U.K. 1960 My Last Tango Marta Andreu Spain 1961 Pecado de Amor Spain 1962 The Lovely Lola Lola Spain 1962 Queen of The Chantecler La Bella Charito Spain 1963 Casablanca, Nest of Spies Teresa Spain 1965 Samba Belén / Laura Monteiro Spain / Brazil 1965 La dama de Beirut Isabel Spain 1966 The Lost Woman Sara Fernán Spain 1967 Tuset Street Violeta Riscal Spain 1969 Esa Mujer Spain 1971 Variety Ana Marqués Spain 1973 Cinco Almohadas para una Noche Spain 1996 Asaltar los Cielos Herself Spain Documental 2001 Sara Una Estrella Herself Spain Documental 2002 Machin, Toda Una Vida Herself Spain Documental 2003 A Thousand Clouds of Peace Spain Montiel's recording of "Nena" used as theme song 2004 Bad Education Spain Features a couple of Montiel's songs and film clips 2011 Abrázame Spain Discography[edit] Sara Montiel en Mexico Canciones de la Película "El Último Cuple" - London 5409 La Violetera - Columbia - EX 5056 Baile con Sara Montiel Carmen la de Ronda - Columbia EX 5020 Besos de Fuego Mi Último Tango - Columbia EX 5048 El Tango Pecado de Amor - Columbia EX 5092 La Bella Lola Noches De Casablanca Samba La Dama de Beirut Canta Sarita Montiel Esa Mujer Sara Varietés Sara... Hoy Saritisima Anoche con Sara Purisimo Sara Sara De Cine Sara A Flor de Piel Amados Mios Todas Las Noches A Las Once Sara Montiel La Diva Sara Montiel La Leyenda Besame - Columbia EX 5077 (1962) Songs From The Film Besame - Columbia EX 5135