medicom toy - Figure - Medicom Toy Bearbrick Betty Boop black/white set 400% 100% - Plastic
Medicom Toy Bearbrick Betty Boop black/white set 400% 100%
set of 2 characters: height 28cm and 7cm
limited edition with black white finish
NEW product never used
Betty Boop was created in 1931 by Max Fleischer, one of the fathers of animated drawing. Provocative and mischievous little woman, with an exuberant body and a little heart-shaped mouth, deep necklines, tight and very short dresses. In 1934 came the comic book publication drawn by Bud Counihan (belonging to the Fleischer's studio) in the Sunday newspaper strips published by the King Features Syndicate. Success even in the printed press is ensured by a large audience of men. The comic series was withdrawn the same year in which animated production also ceased (for which it was born) , following the moralistic and puritanical pressures that had targeted it for its amorality. Despite having "lived" so little, Betty Boop forever enters the history of comics and animated drawing as the greatest icon of the sexy vamp of the Roaring Twenties. Despite his untimely death, proof of the established myth is his appearance in Robert Zemeckis' 1988 film “Who Framed Roger Rabbit”.
View it on
Sale price
Estimate
Time, Location
Auction House
Medicom Toy Bearbrick Betty Boop black/white set 400% 100%
set of 2 characters: height 28cm and 7cm
limited edition with black white finish
NEW product never used
Betty Boop was created in 1931 by Max Fleischer, one of the fathers of animated drawing. Provocative and mischievous little woman, with an exuberant body and a little heart-shaped mouth, deep necklines, tight and very short dresses. In 1934 came the comic book publication drawn by Bud Counihan (belonging to the Fleischer's studio) in the Sunday newspaper strips published by the King Features Syndicate. Success even in the printed press is ensured by a large audience of men. The comic series was withdrawn the same year in which animated production also ceased (for which it was born) , following the moralistic and puritanical pressures that had targeted it for its amorality. Despite having "lived" so little, Betty Boop forever enters the history of comics and animated drawing as the greatest icon of the sexy vamp of the Roaring Twenties. Despite his untimely death, proof of the established myth is his appearance in Robert Zemeckis' 1988 film “Who Framed Roger Rabbit”.