I echo everything that has been said here about Richard C. Allen, 100 times 
over.

 

While we had the business of posters in common, my relationship with “Mr. 
Allen” (I always called him that) was so much more.  We would spend hours on 
the phone talking about anything and everything, life, family, politics, 
Montclair, NJ ( I am a Jersey girl), stories of when he was in the service, 
healthy living ( I am still sleeping on the magnetic mattress, he knew would be 
good for me).  He had such an impact on my life that I will always be grateful 
for.  Through the years, we always talked through the changes in our lives, and 
I will miss that.

 

Rest easy my friend, Mr. Allen, you made this world a special place for me.

 

Diane

Studio C

 

From: MoPo List <mopo-l@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU> On Behalf Of Posteritati
Sent: Monday, October 1, 2018 2:05 PM
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Subject: Re: [MOPO] The world's foremost movie poster collector, Richard Carson 
Allen, passed away on September 19th

 

Ditto that sentiment Kirby. Richard was as lovely a person as you are ever 
likely to encounter. His passion & enthusiasm for movie posters & their history 
was inspiring & a pleasure to be around. I always felt very privileged to have 
the opportunity to talk to him or listed to him discuss our shared passion. 

 

I am deeply sorry to hear of his passing. He will most certainly be missed by 
everyone  in the movie poster word.

 

Bruce, please send Barbara & his family my condolences.

 

Regards,

Sam sarowitz

 

 <https://posteritati.com> posteritati.com
239 Centre St FL 4 | New York, NY 10013 | 212.226.2207
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On Oct 1, 2018, at 3:04 PM, Kirby McDaniel <ki...@movieart.com 
<mailto:ki...@movieart.com> > wrote:

 

Hello, All:

 

First of all, thank you, Bruce, for reporting this.

 

I am greatly saddened to hear of Richard Allen’s death.  He was a wonderful 
man, and he was so kind to me in the beginning days of my career selling film 
posters.  He was encouraging.  He genuinely loved film posters, and your 
assessment of his influence on the hobby is spot-on.  The book he created with 
Stephen Rebello is a wonderful book, and I’m sure that it helped to spawn the 
many books that now exist on the subject, some of which are quite fine, but 
none better than REEL ART.

 

You are quite right about his personality, which was warm, friendly, inviting, 
curious, genial, patient.

 

I was lucky to have known him.  My dad died when he was 97 also, and I can tell 
you that that in itself is an accomplishment.

 

Rest In Peace, Richard.

 

Kind Regards to all on this list, and to you, Bruce,

 

Kirby McDaniel

MovieArt Austin

 

 





On Oct 1, 2018, at 1:35 PM, Bruce Hershenson <brucehershen...@gmail.com 
<mailto:brucehershen...@gmail.com> > wrote:

 

It is with much sadness that I report that the world's foremost movie poster 
collector, Richard Carson Allen, passed away on September 19th. He was 97 years 
old, and he lived a remarkably full life, both personally and professionally. 
You can read much about him here:  
<https://obituaries.pressherald.com/obituaries/mainetoday-pressherald/obituary.aspx?n=richard-carson-allen&pid=190354169>
 
https://obituaries.pressherald.com/obituaries/mainetoday-pressherald/obituary.aspx?n=richard-carson-allen&pid=190354169

I first learned of Richard Allen in 1988 when I saw the massive coffee table 
book he had just co-authored with Stephen Rebello, Reel Art. Great Posters From 
the Golden Age of the Silver Screen. In the mid-1980s I resumed collecting 
movie posters (after having stopped for a decade), and it was this amazing book 
that propelled my collecting into a much higher gear (and I have heard the same 
from many, many, other collectors over the years since).

After buying the book, I very much wanted to meet Mr. Allen in person, and I 
did so the following year (legendary movie poster dealer Jose Ma Carpio set it 
up). Upon meeting Richard (as he insisted I call him!), I was at once struck by 
how humble he was, in spite of his many business accomplishments. And I also 
met his wonderful (and very supportive) wife, Barbara, whom he had married in 
1943, and who was by his side when he passed away, after a 75 year marriage and 
three children. 

Over the next few years we had many business dealings, with my first auctioning 
much of his remarkable collection, and later we co-authored a large number of 
movie poster books, and later still we formed a partnership in leasing images 
of classic movie posters (the Hershenson/Allen Archive), and through it all, we 
never had a single disagreement.

I have accomplished much during my career in the movie poster hobby, and 
whenever people ask me how I did it, I remember the words of Isaac Newton, who 
said, "If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants", 
and I say that in my case, "If I have done more in this hobby than others, it 
is by standing on the shoulders of Richard Allen"!

Incidentally, Richard did not come first come into the movie poster hobby 
around the time of Reel Art. Growing up in Montclair New Jersey, he would 
attend great 1930s movies, and sometimes he asked the theater for a poster from 
a particular favorite, and he still had those when I visited him for the first 
time in 1989! When dealers first appeared on the collecting scene in the 1960s 
and 1970s, Richard was one of their best customers, searching out the finest 
posters from the finest movies. This is why Reel Art contained the most amazing 
assemblage of movie posters ever seen, because the collection had been formed 
over many decades.

It is impossible to overstate how influential Richard's book, Reel Art, has 
been on the movie collecting hobby. It was the first to treat them as an art 
form rather than a collectible, and it is no coincidence that less than two 
years after the publication of this book the world's foremost auction houses 
were regularly holding major movie poster auctions, and that this little hobby 
grew from a few hundred people to many thousands. And for decades after its 
publication, Richard remained a "good will ambassador" for the hobby, traveling 
all over the country, telling everyone he could about this wonderful hobby.

So thank you very, very much Richard, for all you did for the movie poster 
collecting hobby. You absolutely were the world's number one movie poster 
collector, and every collector the world over owes you a great debt of 
gratitude for all you did for our hobby!

 

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