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Disney Tinker Bell 1950s original Production cel ART CORNER cel SIGNED New Frame

$ 833.01

Availability: 100 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Condition: Used
  • Character/Story/Theme: Tinker Bell
  • Franchise: Disney

    Description

    Toon-city
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    1950's Original Production cel of Tinker bell. One-of-a kind,
    Autographed
    from Walt Disney's Disneyland TV show of the 1950s
    Visit the
    Toon-City
    Gallery Store
    Here
    An amazing Vintage image of Tinker bell from the 1950s. This is an Original Production cel of Tinker bell as she appeared mid-1950's. The Art Corner label on the back, hints that this piece is from 1955-57.     Margaret's signature is on the main cel. Tinker bell first appeared in
    Walt Disney's Peter Pan 1953
    This Set-up is all hand painted. Ink lines are all HAND INKED.  Cels size is about 8 x 6.5 inches, with Tink measuring about 5.5 x 4 inches.  Paint is in near perfect condition. Beautiful. A samll harp cut-out has been placed on top of the cel.
    BONUS
    - This is a Art Corner Set-up, original SOLD at Disneyland in the 1950's.  Art Corner Pieces are Premium pieces to collect as it was the Only Official Disney Art Program from 1955 to the mid 1970s.
    BONUS #2
    - We recently had this piece
    autographed
    by the Original Tinker Bell model/actress, Miss Margaret Kerry.  All Black Paint on the cel of Tink. This piece is a treasure in
    anybody's
    animation or Disneyana collection.
    BIO
    : Margaret Kerry (born Peggy Lynch, circa 1930, Los Angeles)
    is an American actress, motivational speaker and radio host best known for her 1953 work as the
    model for Tinker Bell in the Walt Disney Pictures animated feature, Peter Pan.
    Kerry answered an audition call during the planning stages of the film. The audition, supervised by Disney animator Marc Davis, required her to pantomime the motions that would eventually be animated as Tinker Bell, such as preening in a mirror at her feet. She won the audition and spent the next six months at the Disney Studios on a mostly empty sound stage pantomiming the role on film. The studios provided props as well, notably a giant keyhole mounted on a stand as well as a pair of giant scissors, later used in the scene in which Tinker Bell became trapped in a jewelry box.
    Kerry also provided the basis of the red-haired mermaid in the Neverland lagoon scenes, with spoken lines.
    Since Disney released the film at about the time Marilyn Monroe had begun to make an impact, an urban legend immediately sprung up attributing the role to her.
    Certificates of Authenticity
    Disneyland Art Corner
    Cel