Mae West Very Rare Very Early Large Autographed Page From’36 She Done Wrong

Mae_West_Very_Rare_Very_Early_Large_Autographed_Page_From_36_She_Done_Wrong_01_bvk
Mae West Very Rare Very Early Large Autographed Page From'36 She Done Wrong
Mae West Very Rare Very Early Large Autographed Page From'36 She Done Wrong
Mae West Very Rare Very Early Large Autographed Page From'36 She Done Wrong
Mae West Very Rare Very Early Large Autographed Page From'36 She Done Wrong
Mae West Very Rare Very Early Large Autographed Page From'36 She Done Wrong
Mae West Very Rare Very Early Large Autographed Page From'36 She Done Wrong
Mae West Very Rare Very Early Large Autographed Page From'36 She Done Wrong

Mae West Very Rare Very Early Large Autographed Page From'36 She Done Wrong
Autograph of actor Adolphe Menjou on the back. Her nearly single-handed sexual revolution took Hollywood by surprise in the early 1930s, when West starred in such films as Night After Night (1932) and She Done Him Wrong (1933), the film version of Diamond Lil, in which she uttered her famous line, “Come up and see me sometime” (to co-star Cary Grant). Although she made only 12 films, most of them have become classic comedy hits, including Klondike Annie (1936) and My Little Chickadee (1940), which co-starred the inimitable W. The talented lady from Brooklyn also directed some of her plays, such as Drag (1927), and wrote most of her own nightclub material and scripts. Very rare this early.
Mae West Very Rare Very Early Large Autographed Page From'36 She Done Wrong