✦ Posters & Prints

Vintage 35mm Film Negative — Disneyland Golden Horseshoe Revue Poster, Circa Late 1950s–Early 1960s

A Sliver of Frontierland History

Before the age of digital photography, before smartphones and instant uploads, the story of Disneyland was told one frame at a time — in silver halide crystals suspended on acetate, coaxed into existence in darkrooms that smelled of developer and fixer. This original 35mm black-and-white film negative is one of those quiet artifacts: a single strip, frame 19A/20, capturing the Golden Horseshoe Revue sign at Disneyland, complete with the unmistakable silhouette of Slue Foot Sue. It is, in the most literal sense, a negative impression of the park's early golden years.

Surface dust, minor scratches, and light fogging speak honestly to its age — this strip has lived a life. The sprocket holes remain intact, meaning the negative could, in theory, still be printed. But for collectors of early Disneyland ephemera, its value lies not in what it could produce, but in what it already is: physical evidence of a place and an era that existed before the world fully understood what Walt Disney had built on a converted orange grove in Anaheim, California.

The Golden Horseshoe Revue: Disneyland's Longest-Running Show

When Disneyland opened on July 17, 1955, the Golden Horseshoe Saloon in Frontierland was among its original venues — and the Golden Horseshoe Revue quickly became one of the park's most beloved live performances. The show was a raucous, good-natured send-up of the Wild West variety show tradition, featuring cowboys, cancan dancers, and comedic frontier antics delivered with the polish only Disney could provide. By the time it closed its run in 1986, it had been performed over 47,000 times, earning a place in the Guinness Book of World Records as the longest-running stage show in history — a record that stood for years.

At the center of the show's visual identity was Slue Foot Sue, the larger-than-life frontier heroine drawn from Disney's 1948 animated short Pecos Bill (part of the anthology feature Melody Time). Sue's image — bold, brash, and utterly charming — graced the Golden Horseshoe's signage and promotional materials throughout the park's earliest decades. Seeing her rendered on a period sign, captured on actual photographic negative from sometime in the late 1950s or early 1960s, connects you directly to those first years of Disneyland's operation.

Why This Negative Matters to Collectors

Original photographic negatives from early Disneyland are among the rarest categories of Disney ephemera. Unlike printed postcards, souvenir programs, or merchandise, negatives were working tools — used once or twice, then filed away or discarded. That this strip survived intact, with sprocket holes undamaged and the image still legible, is genuinely remarkable. It almost certainly originated with either a park photographer, a commercial photographer documenting signage, or an exceptionally well-equipped early guest. The film stock appears consistent with Kodak or a similar professional-grade emitter of the period, though the specific manufacturer is not positively identified.

For the collector focused on Frontierland history, on early Disneyland signage and park documentation, or on the Golden Horseshoe Revue specifically, this is the kind of find that does not surface often. It is not a reproduction. It is not a scan printed on modern stock. It is the original negative — acetate material, silver-based emulsion — from the era when the park itself was still new and the world was still discovering what it meant to visit Disneyland.

Slue Foot Sue, as a character, occupies a fascinating corner of Disney's mid-century animated catalog. Her appearance in Melody Time gave her a relatively brief screen presence, yet the Golden Horseshoe Revue transformed her into a Disneyland institution far more durable than many characters with far longer filmographies. Collectors who focus on underrepresented Disney characters — those who appreciate the depth of the studio's output beyond the headline names — find Sue especially compelling.

From an Estate Collection to Your Hands

This negative comes to us as part of a larger Disney estate collection — an accumulation of decades, assembled by someone who understood that Disney history was worth preserving before the broader market fully agreed. Estate collections like this one surface periodically and represent some of the most authentic material available: items acquired close to the source, stored rather than displayed, and passed down without the commercial pressure that can sometimes alter or distort provenance.

Condition is consistent with its age and origin: surface dust, minor light scratches, and some fogging are present and expected for acetate film of this vintage. These are honest marks of time, not damage from neglect. The integrity of the negative — sprocket holes intact, image readable — is what matters most, and on that count this strip remains sound.

If you are building a collection around early Disneyland history, Frontierland and the Golden Horseshoe, or simply the remarkable material culture of mid-century theme park documentation, this 35mm negative offers something genuinely difficult to replicate: a direct, unmediated window into the park as it looked and felt in its earliest years. Frame 19A/20. The Golden Horseshoe sign. Slue Foot Sue, rendered in silver and shadow, waiting to be found again.

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