Exclusive coverage of amazing Ray Harryhausen exhibit at A.M.P.A.S.

 

  

  

The Golden Voyage of Sinbad(1974) 

  

Kali 

 

Centaur 

 

  

Figurehead 

 

The Mysterious Island (1961) 

The Cephalopod 

 

First Men in the Moon (1964) 

The Moon Calf 

 

The Valley of Gwangi (1969) 

Gwangi 

 

Pteradactyl 

 

Eohippus 

« 1 2 3 4 View All»

Similar posts plugin not found.
13 Comments
  • LarryBarnes
    May 20, 2010
    #1

    All I can say is I don’t believe it.

    I never thought Harryhausen would ever have such a comprehensive exhibition here in the U.S.

    Your coverage of the show is so complete and the photos are great. I’ve never seen so many of Harryhausens puppets anywhere.

    I love this kind of story.

  • scottlukaswilliams
    May 21, 2010
    #2

    Amazing! Thanks so much for posting this!

  • grecodan
    May 21, 2010
    #3

    This exhibit is fantastic. Anyone who is anywhere near the L.A. area MUST go see it. To see the models up close is an unforgettable experience!

  • GregC.
    May 23, 2010
    #4

    Times may change, and as well they need to, but somethings never get old, and to see this display as if I was really their beside you seeing this amazing. Great insightfuness.

  • WilliamMathews
    May 24, 2010
    #5

    Like the article, nice pictures.

    I wish Ray would auction a few of those figures so he could raise funds for his foundation, and give a few fans a chance to own one of them. Then again, Peter Jackson would outbid everyone, so no regular fans would stand a chance, lol.

  • Arnold Kunert
    May 25, 2010
    #6

    Thank you for mentioning the two-disc DVD “Ray Harryhausen: The Early Years Collection,” which I produced for Sparkhill Productions in 2005. The DVD is available from Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk and other sources. Ray and I are very proud of the DVD because, for the first time, virtually all of his tests, experiments, Fairy Tales and Mother Goose Stories, and other rare items were made available in one place. I have admired Harryhausen’s great work since the early 1950s and was responsible for the successful campaigns to get Ray his Oscar (the Gordon E. Sawyer Award) in 1992 (thanks to letters of support from several dozen film industry supporters) and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in June of 2003. Your images of Ray’s AMPAS exhibit are wonderful. Congratulations.

  • J.A. Manning
    May 25, 2010
    #7

    I really appreciate the responses from everyone, as I am happy to share Ray’s great work with others.

    Mr. Kunert, I also thank you very much for taking the time to respond to my article. I am glad that you saw my coverage and enjoyed it. I hope Ray did as well.

    Ray’s body of work is amazing to me and millions of others, around the world.

    Thanks again.

  • sebnutt
    July 10, 2010
    #8

    hi, would you allow us to use your pics on our french portal dedicated to props ?

  • J.A. Manning
    July 11, 2010
    #9

    As long as you credit where the photos came from and link back to the article, feel free to 🙂