A Piece of Hollywood's Back Room: What Is an Exhibitor's Campaign Book?
Before a single ticket was sold, before a single child sat wide-eyed in a darkened theater, the magic of a Disney release had to be sold to the gatekeepers — the theater owners and booking managers who decided which films would play on their screens. That selling was done with the Exhibitor's Campaign Book, a trade publication sent directly from the studio to theater operators packed with advertising guidance, promotional tie-in suggestions, poster options, and publicity copy ready to drop into the local newspaper. This is one of those documents: an original 1957 Exhibitor's Campaign Book for Walt Disney's Old Yeller, produced by Walt Disney Productions and distributed through Buena Vista Film Distribution Co.
Campaign books like this one were never meant for the public. They were strictly trade items — functional, practical, designed to be scribbled in, clipped apart, and discarded once the run was over. The fact that this one survived nearly seven decades in collectible condition is itself a small miracle, and a testament to the care of the collection from which it came.
Old Yeller: The Film That Defined a Generation's Heartbreak
Released in December 1957, Old Yeller remains one of the most emotionally resonant films Walt Disney Productions ever made. Directed by Robert Stevenson — who would go on to helm Mary Poppins and The Love Bug — and based on Fred Gipson's beloved 1956 novel, the film told the story of the Coates family of frontier Texas and the stray yellow dog who wanders into their lives and their hearts.
The cast was a who's-who of mid-century Disney talent. Fess Parker, fresh off his star-making turn as Davy Crockett, played the frontier father Jim Coates with his trademark quiet authority. Dorothy McGuire brought warmth and grace to the role of mother Katie. Tommy Kirk, just beginning what would become a defining Disney career, played teenage Travis — the boy whose bond with the dog forms the emotional core of the story. And young Kevin Corcoran, the irrepressible "Moochie" of Disney television, played little Arliss with the unguarded joy only a child actor can deliver. The supporting cast included Beverly Washburn and a pre-Rifleman Chuck Connors, adding further frontier credibility to every frame.
The Technicolor photography gave the Texas Hill Country landscape a vivid, sun-drenched warmth that made the eventual tragedy land all the harder. Old Yeller did not flinch. It asked its young audience to sit with grief and love in the same breath, and generations of children — and their parents — have never forgotten it.
The Campaign Book as Artifact: What This Document Contains
This campaign book features the iconic yellow cover adorned with character illustrations and full cast and crew credits, immediately evoking the warmth and frontier spirit of the film itself. Inside, theater exhibitors would have found a complete promotional toolkit: suggested newspaper ad mats in multiple sizes, lobby card and poster options, tie-in merchandising angles, radio spot scripts, and publicity stories designed to generate local press coverage.
The inclusion of Technicolor branding throughout is a period detail worth pausing on. In 1957, Technicolor was still a prestige marker — a signal to audiences that they were getting something special, vivid, and cinematic. Disney leaned into it. The campaign book would have guided local theaters on how to position that visual richness as a selling point in their markets.
The condition of this particular copy reflects its age with honesty and grace: slight corner wear and minor edge tanning consistent with nearly seven decades of existence, but stored in a protective plastic sleeve that has preserved the colors and artwork remarkably well. For a paper ephemera item of this vintage, that level of preservation is genuinely notable. This is not a relic that looks like it survived — it looks like it was kept.
Why Collectors Prize Original Film Ephemera
In the world of Disney collectibles, original theatrical ephemera occupies a category all its own. Unlike merchandise produced for retail sale, items like exhibitor's campaign books were never intended to leave the trade. They were functional documents. Most were tossed. That scarcity, combined with the rich visual design that Disney and Buena Vista brought even to their trade materials, makes surviving examples genuinely sought after.
For Old Yeller specifically, collector demand is driven by the film's enduring emotional legacy. This is not an obscure title from the studio's archive — it is one of the foundational films of the Disney live-action canon, a movie that has introduced the concept of bittersweet love to children for generations. Serious Disney film collectors, vintage cinema ephemera enthusiasts, and fans of the 1950s golden era of American filmmaking all converge on material like this.
This copy comes from a larger Disney estate collection — a trove assembled by someone who understood the difference between a souvenir and a document of history. The campaign book joins that tradition: not a reproduction, not a later reissue, but an original piece of the 1957 film industry, when Walt Disney himself was still walking the lot at Burbank and a yellow dog named Yeller was about to break America's heart for the very first time.
Thinking of selling? Get a free, no-obligation offer.
One direct offer on your entire Disney collection — no commission, no auction wait. We handle the shipping.