Published by T. B. HARMS, NEW YORK, 1935
Seller: Rose City Books, Portland, OR, U.S.A.
Sheet Music
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. Not Stated/assumed First Edition. Nice illustrated cover with just very light wear. About 11-3/4 x 9 with 7 pages. Scarce! Size: 4to - over 9¾ - 12" tall. Sheet music.
Paperback. Condition: Very Good. 1st.
Published by Chappell & Company, 1949
Seller: ALEXANDER POPE, Kent, CT, U.S.A.
Sheet Music
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. "A Cow, a Plough, and a Frau" is a song by composers Dorothy Fields and Morton Gould from the 1950 Broadway musical Arms and the Girl! 6 pages. Clean sharp bright unmarked. ". the character singing the song is a Hessian who is beginning to see that he?s fighting on the wrong side ? it would be better to be a young immigrant in a new country than a soldier-for-hire working for a troubled and troubling British Empire in a foreign land. He muses on it all, from the point-of-view of a European farmer in the late 1700s. He expresses himself with an ever-clarifying point of view, gaining confidence as he goes, and that makes this a very classical and theatrical ?I Want? song. He is charming. The song is charming. " Jack Viertel.
Softcover. Condition: Very Good+. Green background with images of Lena Horner, Fats Waller, Bill Robison, Cab Calloway and others from the 1943, all black cast musical, Stormy Weather. The only date on this sheet music is 1928, the original copyright, but, since the movie that this comes from was produced in 1943, this probably comes from that year. There is a stamp on the front that reads, "Al Salomon representing Jimmy McHugh" and an address. This may have come from the files of composer, Jimmy McHugh. Otherwise, this copy has only light, general wear and aging. VG to VG+. Lena Horne's image is stunning, though racially ambiguous, while the other cast members are in the background. Great bit of African-American movie ephemera. ; Photographic Images of Lena Horne et. al.; 4to 11" - 13" tall; 6 pages.
Soft cover. Condition: Good. Softcover 8 by 8 inches, 22 pages, program for performance at The Palace Theater in New York. Cover has photo of Verdon bearing a prescient tattoo. Two sharp creases to lower corner of cover at foldover, contents are clean.
Published by Williamson Music, Inc., 1945
Seller: Manian Enterprises, Nashua, NH, U.S.A.
Sheet Music
No Binding. Condition: Good. Vintage sheet music from musical "Up in Central Park", presented by Michael Todd; cover art work: mustard color border with black and white "Currier & Ives" style scene of carriages in Central Park in center; some yellowing, signature of prior owner in upper right hand corner on front cover. SALE PRICE.
First Edition. Sheet music. Very good+ in oversize pictorial printed wrappers. (11" X 13") (6pp.) (1/2"-inch tear at fore edge affecting all pages. Previous owner's inked name on front cover. Faint ink stamp on front cover as well.) Images of the actors in the MGM classic film depicted at lefthand edge of front cover. (G).
Language: English
Published by Random House, New York, 1966
Seller: Mountain Books, Kent, CT, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. Book Club (BCE/BOMC). Hardcover, dust jacket has a few nicks and light age toning on the spine. Slightly cocked. One of the great musicals of the 1960's, adapted from Federico Fellini's film "Nights of Cabiria." A triumph for choreographer Bob Fosse on the stage, less so in his 1969 screen adaptation (which substituted Shirley MacLaine for Gwen Verdon). We ship fast.
Published by Shawnee Press inc, USA
Seller: Leura Books, Bowral, NSW, Australia
Softcover. Condition: Very Good. Waring Choral Series. 16 pages. Previous owners name on top of front endpaper. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 500 grams. Category: Music::Sheet Music::Vocal; Music Sheets & Scores; Music::Sheet Music::Piano, Keyboard, Organ. Inventory No: 269406.
Published by Chappell
Seller: GridFreed, San Diego, CA, U.S.A.
Sheet Music
Sheet Music. Condition: Good. Good condition with wear and markings.
Published by Chappell & Co. Inc.
Seller: GridFreed, San Diego, CA, U.S.A.
Sheet Music
Sheet Music. Condition: Good. Good condition with wear and markings.
Sheet Music. Condition: Good. Good condition with wear and markings.
Sheet Music. Condition: Good. Good condition with wear and markings.
Published by Al Greenstone / Artcraft Litho, New York, 1943
Seller: 32.1 Rare Books + Ephemera, IOBA, ESA, Princeton, NJ, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
Softcover. Condition: Near Fine. 4to. 16 pp. in color pictorial wraps. With black and white photographs throughout. Uncommon item. **OCLC** lists two [2] holdings, one at Brown University and one at the Uniersity of Calgary. Near Fine with a tiny bit of handling. In fresh condition.
Published by Random House (c.1966), New York, 1966
Seller: ReadInk, ABAA/IOBA, Los Angeles, CA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine dj. Book Club Edition. [a touch of wear to base of spine, one-time owner's address label on front endpaper; jacket slightly browned along spine, minor wear to extremities]. (B&W photographs) One of the great musicals of the 1960's, adapted from Federico Fellini's film "Nights of Cabiria." A triumph for choreographer Bob Fosse on the stage, less so in his 1969 screen adaptation (which substituted Shirley MacLaine for Gwen Verdon).
Published by Published by Francis Day & Hunter Ltd., 138-140 Charing Cross Road, London . 1935., 1935
Seller: Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
Sheet Music
Condition: Very Good. Vintage piano sheet music in colour paper covers with photograph of George Raft and Alice Faye to the front cover. 11'' x 8½''. Contains 4 printed pages of score for the piano and voice with words. Without any tears and in Very Good clean condition. Member of the P.B.F.A. SHEET MUSIC.
Published by Published by Keith Prowse & Co. Ltd., 42-43 Poland Street, London . 1930., 1930
Seller: Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
Sheet Music
Condition: Very Good. Vintage piano sheet music in colour illustrated paper covers with photograph of Marion Harris to the front cover. 12'' x 9¾''. Contains 6 pages including the covers. Scored for the pianoforte and voice with lyrics. In Very Good condition. Member of the P.B.F.A. SHEET MUSIC.
Published by Philip Trachtman, Theatrical Publications, Philadelphia, PA, 1961
Seller: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, U.S.A.
First Edition
Wraps. Condition: Good. 12 pages, plus covers. Illustrations (some color inside). This production was staged and directed by Richard Barstow. A rare item of Phyllis McGuire stage and musical career. Annie Get Your Gun is a musical with lyrics and music by Irving Berlin and a book by Dorothy Fields and her brother Herbert Fields. The story is a fictionalized version of the life of Annie Oakley (18601926), a sharpshooter who starred in Buffalo Bill's Wild West, and her romance with sharpshooter Frank E. Butler (18471926). Songs that became hits include "There's No Business Like Show Business", "Doin' What Comes Natur'lly", "You Can't Get a Man with a Gun", "They Say It's Wonderful", and "Anything You Can Do (I Can Do Better)". The principal performers were:Phyllis McGuire, Walter Farrell, Lulu Bates, Ned Wertimer, Edgar Daniels, Robert Bernard, Cherry Davis, Gene Foote, and Daniel Keyes. This program includes The History of the Show. With narratives on the producers, director, choreographer, musical director, and production designer, there is a synopsis of the show. The last page and inside the back cover are photographs of the General Manager, Lighting Director, and a large ensemble cast. This production toured: Valley Forge Music Fair, Devon, Pa; Camden County Music Fair, Haddonfield, NJ; Westbury Music Fair, Westbury, L.I.; Storrowton Music Fair, West Springfield, Mass.; and Painters Mill Music Fair, Owings Mills, Md. Ms. McGuire, with her older sisters Christine and Dorothy, shot to success overnight after winning the televised "Arthur Godfrey Talent Scouts" contest in 1952. Over the next 15 years, they were one of the nation's most popular vocal groups, singing on the television variety shows of Ed Sullivan, Milton Berle, Andy Williams and Red Skelton, on nightclub circuits across the country and on records that sold millions. The sisters epitomized a 1950s sensibility that held up a standard of unreal perfection, wearing identical coifs, dresses and smiles, moving with synchronized precision and blending voices in wholesome songs for simpler times. Their music, like that of Perry Como, Patti Page and other stars who appealed to white, middle-class audiences, contrasted starkly with the rock 'n' roll craze that was taking the world by storm in the mid-to-late '50s. In 1965, as the trio's popularity began to fade, The McGuire Sisters retired from public appearances in 1968, Christine and Dorothy to raise families, Phyllis to continue as a soloist. She appeared regularly in Las Vegas, where she lived for the rest of her life in a mansion with a swan moat and a replica of the Eiffel Tower rising through the roof. In 1985, the sisters reunited for a comeback and performed for almost two decades at casinos and clubs in Las Vegas, Atlantic City and elsewhere. They sang their own hits, 1950s pop hits and Broadway show tunes, and Phyllis did impersonations of Peggy Lee, Judy Garland, Pearl Bailey and Ethel Merman. Presumed First Edition, First printing thus [presumably for a Summer Stock tour].
Published by Published by Chappell & Co. Ltd., 50 New Bond Street, London . 1936., 1936
Seller: Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
Sheet Music
Condition: Very Good. Piano sheet music in plain white paper covers with black lettering. 11'' x 8½'' with 4 pages of score and lyrics. In Very Good clean condition and without any use or tears. Front cover states 'The Radio release date for this number is 2nd November 1936.' Member of the P.B.F.A. SHEET MUSIC.
Stapled Wrappers. Condition: Fine. First Edition. Sheet music for the classic MGM film. Cut autograph of Academy Award winning actress Marie Dressler on plain white index card laid-in loosely. Fine in tall pictorial covers. (4 pp. ) (9" X 12") Features the portraits of the film's all-star cast in vignettes. (BC).
Published by Random House (c.1966), New York, 1966
Seller: ReadInk, ABAA/IOBA, Los Angeles, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good+ dj. 1st Edition (see note). [a very nice copy, tight and clean with just a touch of wear at the spine ends; jacket a little rubbed on the front panel, very light wear to extremities, tiny closed tear at upper left of front panel]. (B&W photographs) One of the great musicals of the 1960s, adapted from Federico Fellini's film "Nights of Cabiria." It was a triumph for choreographer Bob Fosse on the stage, but a little less so in his 1969 screen adaptation (which substituted Shirley MacLaine for Gwen Verdon). [NOTE: Although there is no "first printing" or "first edition" statement in this copy of the book, I believe it to be such, and to therefore constitute an exception to the usual Random House practice for their published plays. The printed price ($3.95) is present on the front jacket flap, along with the printing code 10/66 at the bottom corner of the flap. In addition, this was part of a collection in which nearly all the published plays were review copies, with publisher's slips to document the fact; although there is no slip present in this copy, I believe it to also be a review copy. If someone can show me evidence of a copy that states "first printing," however, I will happily stand corrected.].
Published by N.p., N.p., 1984
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
Four vintage scripts for multiple stagings of the off-Broadway play. Two scripts dated 1970 and noted as First Draft and Revised, and two scripts undated, one circa 1970 and one circa 1984. Copies belonging to playwright Jerome Coopersmith, with his occasional annotations in manuscript ink and pencil to two scripts. Laid in with the Revised Draft are three manuscript leaves in Coopersmith's hand, noting editorial thoughts and revisions to dialogue. The play was first staged at Massachusetts State College in 1967, then in a musical version at Hunter College in 1974, and finally, in 1984, at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington DC, in conjunction with the Eleanor Roosevelt Centennial. A dramatization of the early life of Eleanor Roosevelt, focusing on her romance and eventual marriage to Franklin and her attempts to balance motherhood with political involvement and a career. Coopersmith's first venture into writing for the stage, following a successful career writing for television. First Draft: Green untitled Studio Duplicating Service wrappers. Title page present, noted as copy No. 11C in manuscript ink, dated September 1970, noted as First Draft, with credits for Coopersmith, composer Cy Coleman, and lyricist Dorothy Fields. 89 leaves, with last page of text numbered 2-6-28. Mimeograph duplication, rectos only. Pages Near Fine, wrappers Very Good plus, bound with two gold screw brads. Final Draft: Mustard titled Studio Duplicating Service wrappers. Title page present, noted as Revised and dated December 1970, with credit for Coopersmith. 80 leaves, with last page of text numbered 2-6-27. Mimeograph duplication, rectos only. Pages Near Fine, wrappers Very Good plus, bound with two gold screw brads. Undated, circa 1970: Green titled Studio Duplicating Service wrappers. Title page present, undated, with credit for Coopersmith. 89 leaves, with last page of text numbered 2-8-38. Mimeograph duplication, rectos only. Pages Near Fine, wrappers Very Good plus, bound with two gold screw brads. Undated, circa 1984: Blue wrappers with a title label crediting Coopersmith. Title page present, with a credit for Coopersmith, and a return address at the bottom right corner noting Coopersmith's name and a Rockville Centre address. 89 leaves, with last page of text numbered 2-6-37. Xerographic duplication, rectos only. Pages Near Fine, wrappers Near Fine, bound with three gold screw brads.
Published by N.p., N.p., 1969
Photograph
Vintage borderless double weight color reference photograph from the 1969 film, showing Sammy Davis Jr. surrounded by groovy dancers. French agency stamps on the verso. Based on the 1966 musical, which was loosely based in turn on Federico Fellini's 1957 film "Nights of Calabria." A happy-go-lucky taxi dancer dreams of romance, but only meets jerks as a result of her sleazy job. Set and shot on location in New York. 8 x 10 inches. About Near Fine.
Published by Le Spectacle du Monde, Paris, 1969
Photograph
Vintage borderless reference photograph from the 1969 film, showing Sammy Davis Jr. and Shirley MacLaine dancing joyfully. French agency stamps on the verso. Based on the 1966 musical, which was loosely based in turn on Federico Fellini's 1957 film "Nights of Calabria." A happy-go-lucky taxi dancer dreams of romance, but only meets jerks as a result of her sleazy job. Set and shot on location in New York. 7 x 9.5 inches. Near Fine.
Published by Universal Pictures, Universal City, 1969
Photograph
Vintage reference photograph of director Bob Fosse showing actress Shirley MacLaine how to execute a leap on the set of the 1969 film. With manuscript ink and pencil annotations to the verso. Based on the 1966 musical, which was loosely based in turn on Federico Fellini's 1957 film "Nights of Calabria." A happy-go-lucky taxi dancer dreams of romance, but only meets jerks as a result of her sleazy job. Set and shot on location in New York. 8 x 10 inches. Near Fine.