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by David Lee Guss
$26.00
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Bottom Style
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Product Details
Dress it up, dress it down, or use it to stay organized while you're on the go. Our zip pouches can do it all. They're crafted with 100% poly-poplin fabric, double-stitched at the seams for extra durability, and include a durable metal zipper for securing your valuables.
Our zip pouches are available in three different sizes and with two different bottom styles: regular and t-bottom.
Design Details
The first man in black in show business was Lash LaRue (1921-1996), not Johnny Cash. The oft married (12 times) LaRue had a burst of B-movie cowboy... more
Care Instructions
Spot clean or dry clean only.
Ships Within
2 - 3 business days
The first "man in black" in show business was Lash LaRue (1921-1996), not Johnny Cash. The oft married (12 times) LaRue had a burst of B-movie cowboy fame in the late 1940's which crashed soon, after as his cheaply made films had no place to go, as the movie houses in rural towns which showed them closed because of the explosive growth of TV.
Peter Bogdanovich's nostalgic masterpiece "The Last Picture Show" (1971) ends with a small town movie theater closing after screening the Hawks/Wayne "Red River."
The actor in the middle is Charles King (1895-1957) who was staple of 1930's Westerns shown on the tube in the 1950's. That was when I first became aware of him. Like LaRue his career tanked about 1950.
Charlie plays a sheriff in PRC's "Law of the Lash" (1947).
King appeared in three Duke pictures: "The Hurricane Express" (1932), "The Lawless Nineties" (1936) and "The Lonely Trail" (1936).
"Blackie," as he was called, appeared uncredited i...
I first became obsessed with photography and motion pictures while growing up in post WW2 Manila in the Philippine Islands in the late 1940's/early 1950's. Film noirs were a particular influence. But my first love remains the theater. I acted in numerous amateur productions from 1958 to 1978. In 1979 I earned a MA in drama from the University of Arizona; earlier getting a BA in English from the University of Minnesota, where I co-founded the first film society on campus and ran it for four years. While at the U of A, I studied with the master black and white photo essayist W. Eugene Smith (1918-1978) the last year of his life. I am the last person cited in Jim Hughes' definitive biography of Gene, as I wrote about attending his final...
$26.00
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