Yul Brynner/The Magnificent Seven

Details
Yul Brynner/The Magnificent Seven
A stetson of black wool labelled inside Gelot...Paris, made for Yul Brynner in the leading role of Chris in the 1960 U.A. film The Magnificent Seven; accompanied by a letter from the vendor concerning the provenance and a corresponding still (3)
Literature
CineBooks' Motion Picture Guide Review
Further details
See colour illustration p.


Photograph courtesy of United Artists and BFI Stills, Posters and Designs

Lot Essay

The Magnificent Seven, 1960, was the first of several westerns to be based on Kurosawa's The Seven Samurai. The action is set in a small Mexican village plagued by a bandit called Calvera and his band of cutthroats. The villagers hire ...seven of the toughest hombres on that side of the Rio Grande.. for protection. The Seven, led by Brynner, train the townspeople to fight alongside them and although the Seven are eventually captured by Calvera, the bandit makes the fatal error of allowing them to escape. The Seven return to the village and in the final battle, Calvera is killed as are four of the Seven. Chris (Yul Brynner) and Vin (Steve McQueen) however survive to ride off into the sunset. ...Perhaps the ultimate testimony to the excellence of 'The Magnificent Seven' is the sword that Akira Kurosawa presented to director John Sturges after seeing the film...Sturges assembled a flawless cast and skillfully put them through their paces.... When considering actors who played members of the Seven alongside Brynner such as Steve McQueen, James Coburn and Charles Bronson, it is surprizing to think that at the time the film was made Yul Brynner was the only well known name in the cast.
The vendor worked for Yul Brynner in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, until Brynner left for London to open The King and I in the summer of 1979. She remembers Brynner wearing this particular hat in both The Magnificent Seven, 1960 and Westworld, 1973 apparently ...it was a permanent part of his everyday wardrobe. I have fond memories of his "King and I" dresser steaming the hat each evening (and also ironing all his paper currency)...

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