Description: THIS IS A LISTING FOR ONE MINT NEVER HINGED SINGLE: THE ABOVE IMAGE(S) ARE OF THE ACTUAL STAMP(S) YOU WILL RECEIVE IF YOU ARE THE WINNING BIDDER Please peruse my other philatelic materials available for your collection! Shipping & Handling: Please pay for items within 7 days. Any items left unpaid after 11 days will be handled automaticallyby eBay according to their unpaid item policy. Each additional item combined & paid by a SINGLE transactionships at NO additional cost!!!U.S.=$1; Canada=$2;Other Intl=$3 U.S. #4340HallelujahVintage Black CinemaIssue Date: July 16, 2008City: Newark, NJReleased in 1929, “Hallelujah” was one of the first all-black major studio motion pictures. The film follows the story of a sharecropper named Zeke who falls for a seductive dancer named Chick. After Chick scams Zeke out of $100 of his family’s cotton crop money, a fight ensues and his brother Spunk is killed. Traumatized by his experience, Zeke leaves and becomes a minister. He eventually returns to find Chick still cares for him. He abandons his ministry, marries Chick, and begins working in a log mill. Zeke soon finds out, however, that Chick has been cheating on him with her former boyfriend Hot Shot. Zeke chases them as they try to leave him, but their carriage turns over. After Chick confesses for never changing her ways, she dies, and Zeke chases down and kills Hot Shot. After serving his time in prison, Zeke returns home to his family, who rejoices in welcoming him back. “Hallelujah” was director King Vidor’s (one of MGM Studio’s top directors) first sound film, which earned him an Oscar nomination for best director. The film was also one of the first film appearances of Nina Mae McKinney (who some consider the first black movie star). Director King Vidor’s groundbreaking “Hallelujah” is honored on a 2008 U.S. postage stamp in a set of five stamps commemorating Vintage Black Cinema.
Price: 0.75 USD
Location: Mandeville, Louisiana
End Time: 2025-01-12T20:54:45.000Z
Shipping Cost: 1 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Denomination: 42 Cent
Year of Issue: 2001-2010
Place of Origin: United States
Quality: Mint Never Hinged/MNH
Color: Multi-Color
Grade: GBYOE
Topic: Vintage Black Cinema, King Vidor, Religious
Certification: NAAN