Ali MacGraw movie posters chart the career of the actress and model who became one of early-1970s Hollywood's most luminous presences — her face, her style, and her performances synonymous with a particular kind of romantic tragedy and cool American beauty that the decade's cinema made its own.
MacGraw's career was compressed but luminous. Goodbye, Columbus (1969), the adaptation of Philip Roth's novella, introduced her as a screen presence of remarkable naturalness and intelligence, earning her a Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer. Love Story (1970) — with Ryan O'Neal, the tagline 'Love means never having to say you're sorry' — made her one of the most recognisable faces in the world: the film was the second-highest-grossing of the year, and her Oscar nomination for the role placed her at the centre of Hollywood's attention.
Sam Peckinpah's The Getaway (1972), co-starring Steve McQueen — whom she married during production — brought her into a harder-edged genre context. The theatrical materials from this period capture the specific visual vocabulary of early-70s Hollywood romance and action at their intersection: warm colour, bold typography, the particular glamour of a decade before digital perfection. Original US one-sheets from Love Story and The Getaway are now scarce and seldom found in fine condition.
Find original theatrical prints from across her film career — capturing one of early-1970s Hollywood's most luminous and distinctive screen presences.
Browse alongside Love Story posters and Steve McQueen posters. All Film/Art Gallery movie posters and items are authenticated originals.