Gertrude Lawrence

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STAR! - SET OF 9 ORIGINAL 10x8 STILLS - JULIE ANDREWS AS GERTRUDE LAWRENCE
STAR! - SET OF 9 ORIGINAL 10x8 STILLS - JULIE ANDREWS AS GERTRUDE LAWRENCE
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Gertrude Lawrence, Charlie Ruggles, The Battle of Paris, 1929 ~ ORIGINAL photo
Gertrude Lawrence, Charlie Ruggles, The Battle of Paris, 1929 ~ ORIGINAL photo
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Vintage GERTRUDE LAWRENCE NOEL COWARD
Vintage GERTRUDE LAWRENCE NOEL COWARD "TO-NIGHT AT 8.30" UK Prog 1930s
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STAR! Sheet Music JULIE ANDREWS Gertrude Lawrence 'N EVERYTHING 1918 Al Jolson
STAR! Sheet Music JULIE ANDREWS Gertrude Lawrence 'N EVERYTHING 1918 Al Jolson
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GERTRUDE LAWRENCE & NOEL COWARD, Private Lives, RARE RCA Vic. X-Mas 45 !
GERTRUDE LAWRENCE & NOEL COWARD, Private Lives, RARE RCA Vic. X-Mas 45 !
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Rembrandt DVD 1936 Charles Laughton Gertrude Lawrence Biopic
Rembrandt DVD 1936 Charles Laughton Gertrude Lawrence Biopic
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1938 Press Photo Actress Gertrude Lawrence
1938 Press Photo Actress Gertrude Lawrence
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NOEL COWARD GERTRUDE LAWRENCE UK LP Noel & Gertie Played Once MINT
NOEL COWARD GERTRUDE LAWRENCE UK LP Noel & Gertie Played Once MINT
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1940's Playbill/Program Gertrude Lawrence in Lady In The Dark
1940's Playbill/Program Gertrude Lawrence in Lady In The Dark
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GERTRUDE LAWRENCE AS MRS
GERTRUDE LAWRENCE AS MRS "A" by RICHARD STODDARD ALRICH 1954 BOOK
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Broadway Playbill - THE KING AND I,1952,Gertrude Lawrence,Yul Brynner,VG
Broadway Playbill - THE KING AND I,1952,Gertrude Lawrence,Yul Brynner,VG
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Music from LADY IN THE DARK - THREE RECORD SET - GERTRUDE LAWRENCE
Music from LADY IN THE DARK - THREE RECORD SET - GERTRUDE LAWRENCE
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Gertrude Lawrence The Star Herself LP Music For Pleasure MFP1245 EX/EX 1960s
Gertrude Lawrence The Star Herself LP Music For Pleasure MFP1245 EX/EX 1960s
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Gertie Theo Phil & Me The Musical World of Gertrude Lawrence CD Benn Clatworthy
Gertie Theo Phil & Me The Musical World of Gertrude Lawrence CD Benn Clatworthy
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MEN ARE NOT GODS - 1936 DVD - MIRIAM HOPKINS, GERTRUDE LAWRENCE & REX HARRISON
MEN ARE NOT GODS - 1936 DVD - MIRIAM HOPKINS, GERTRUDE LAWRENCE & REX HARRISON
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GERTRUDE LAWRENCE LP REGAL REG 1110 British press
GERTRUDE LAWRENCE LP REGAL REG 1110 British press
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GERTRUDE LAWRENCE THE STAR LP AUDIO FIDELITY
GERTRUDE LAWRENCE THE STAR LP AUDIO FIDELITY
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A star danced by Gertrude Lawrence
A star danced by Gertrude Lawrence
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GERTRUDE LAWRENCE, AS MRS
GERTRUDE LAWRENCE, AS MRS "A", Aldrich, 1954
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Time 1941,  Feb 3,        Gertrude Lawrence     WWII
Time 1941, Feb 3, Gertrude Lawrence WWII
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Playbill LADY IN THE DARK Gertrude Lawrence @ Alvin '41
Playbill LADY IN THE DARK Gertrude Lawrence @ Alvin '41
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Life Magazine November 27 1944 Gertrude Lawrence Germany WW II Vtg Ads Car
Life Magazine November 27 1944 Gertrude Lawrence Germany WW II Vtg Ads Car
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LIFE MAGAZINE NOV 27 1944 GERTRUDE LAWRENCE
LIFE MAGAZINE NOV 27 1944 GERTRUDE LAWRENCE
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1924 Ad Bergdorf Goodman Luncheon Dress Fashion Stage Actress Gertrude Lawrence
1924 Ad Bergdorf Goodman Luncheon Dress Fashion Stage Actress Gertrude Lawrence
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1939 JUN 13 LIFE MAGAZINE - GERTRUDE LAWRENCE - WR 140
1939 JUN 13 LIFE MAGAZINE - GERTRUDE LAWRENCE - WR 140
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1951 - 45 RPM Box Set 6 Records Rodgers and Hammerstein Gertrude Lawrence The ..
1951 - 45 RPM Box Set 6 Records Rodgers and Hammerstein Gertrude Lawrence The ..
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TIME Magazine February 3, 1941 Gertrude Lawrence
TIME Magazine February 3, 1941 Gertrude Lawrence
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1928 Ad American Tobacco Co Gertrude Lawrence Star Lucky Strike Cigarettes
1928 Ad American Tobacco Co Gertrude Lawrence Star Lucky Strike Cigarettes
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GERTRUDE  LAWRENCE The Incomparable...ACE OF CLUBS
GERTRUDE LAWRENCE The Incomparable...ACE OF CLUBS
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Life Mag-June 13,1938-Gertrude Lawrence & Vintage Ads
Life Mag-June 13,1938-Gertrude Lawrence & Vintage Ads
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Gertrude Lawrence/sketch Photo Mugs Gertrude Lawrence/sketch Photo Mugs

Gertrude Lawrence, actress .

Noel Coward a Gertrude Photo Mugs Noel Coward a Gertrude Photo Mugs

Noel Coward a Gertrude Lawrence in the musical The Red Peppers, 1936. NC, English actor, playwright, a composer 16 December 1899 - 26 March 1973. GL, English actress a musical performer 4 June 1898 - 6 September 1952. Top hats..

Ultimate Broadway Ultimate Broadway
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Broadway - The American Musical (PBS Series) Broadway - The American Musical (PBS Series)
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Star Star
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Made and printed in England, 1991

Funny Girl [VHS] Funny Girl [VHS]
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Ah, Barbra. Of all her onscreen personas, she sparkles in none as she does in her role as 1930s comedian Fanny Brice in the musical Funny Girl. Portraying the life of this star of stage and radio, Brice preens and prances and sings, captivating her audience both onscreen and off. Fanny Brice started life on the Lower East Side of New York, the daughter of a Jewish saloon owner. Not the prettiest girl around, Brice still managed to quickly rise to stardom as a performer in the Ziegfield Follies. A shrewd, obstinate woman, Brice dictated her own success story on stage; things were a different matter in romance. Falling hard for the stunning Nick Arnstein (suavely played by Omar Sharif), Brice must navigate a difficult marriage. While kids may love the tunes (which include the now-infamous "People," as in "People who need people are the luckiest people in the world"), the plot is definitely adult-oriented. Enjoy this one, but don't go too far out of your way for the sequel, Funny Lady. --Jenny Brown

Bulldog Drummond [VHS] Bulldog Drummond [VHS]
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Bulldog Drummond [VHS] Bulldog Drummond [VHS]
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Funny Girl Funny Girl
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Sale Price: $3.87

Barbra Streisand took home a Best Actress Oscar for her role as singer-comedienne Fanny Brice in this classic musical comedy. Follow the ups and downs of Brice's personal and professional lives, from her days as a rollerskating chorus girl to a star-making turn in "Ziegfeld Follies" and her marriage to dashing gambler Nicky Arnstein (Omar Sharif). With Kay Medford, Anne Francis, Walter Pidgeon; songs include "People" and "Don't Rain on My Parade." 155 min. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtracks: English Dolby Digital 5.0, Dolby Digital Surround, French Dolby Digital stereo Surround; Subtitles: English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean, Thai; filmographies; theatrical trailers; featurettes.

Ah, Barbra. Of all her onscreen personas, she sparkles in none as she does in her role as 1930s comedian Fanny Brice in the musical Funny Girl. Portraying the life of this star of stage and radio, Brice preens and prances and sings, captivating her audience both onscreen and off. Fanny Brice started life on the Lower East Side of New York, the daughter of a Jewish saloon owner. Not the prettiest girl around, Brice still managed to quickly rise to stardom as a performer in the Ziegfield Follies. A shrewd, obstinate woman, Brice dictated her own success story on stage; things were a different matter in romance. Falling hard for the stunning Nick Arnstein (suavely played by Omar Sharif), Brice must navigate a difficult marriage. While kids may love the tunes (which include the now-infamous "People," as in "People who need people are the luckiest people in the world"), the plot is definitely adult-oriented. Enjoy this one, but don't go too far out of your way for the sequel, Funny Lady. --Jenny Brown

Mae West - The Glamour Collection (Go West Young Man/ Goin' To Town/ I'm No Angel/ My Little Chickadee/ Night After Night) Mae West - The Glamour Collection (Go West Young Man/ Goin' To Town/ I'm No Angel/ My Little Chickadee/ Night After Night)
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The triumph of personality is beautifully demonstrated in Mae West: The Glamour Collection, a bundle of five comedies featuring the never duplicated (if often imitated) Ms. West. Never altering her insouciant, sexed-up persona, Mae West sashays through these films like a tour guide in a well-lit bordello, cheerfully cracking herself up with a series of perfectly-timed one-liners. Since she wrote her own material, there was no separation between the lady (what a feeble word) and her scandalous dialogue. If you doubt this, check out Night After Night, her film debut. The first half of the picture is an unremarkable gangster comedy: George Raft in his usual inert form, Constance Cummings the good girl, capable comic support from Roscoe Karns and Alison Skipworth. Then West blowses in, and it's all over. Within a minute she's tossed off an eternal signature line (hatcheck girl: "Goodness, what beautiful diamonds." West: "Goodness had nothin' to do with it, dearie") and disrupted the high-class aims of gangster Raft. The other actors look agog at this unapologetic force of libido. Watching this, you might recall the first time you ever saw Groucho Marx or Bill Murray on film--the movie itself disappears, replaced by gratitude that someone like this exists. I'm No Angel followed her first starring vehicle (She Done Him Wrong, not included here), and its lunatic plot--Mae as a lion tamer taken up by New York society--does nothing to slow the barrage of sexual innuendo. West hums her way through the film with the kind of confidence that must have inspired countless fans to try something disreputable. Cary Grant is the bemused recipient of West's attention. Goin' to Town is nearly as good, as dance-hall gal Mae inherits an oil fortune, then sets her cap for the haughty Englishman working on her, uh, wells. West's style is undiminished (she was in her mid-forties already), although by this time the Production Code--concocted in part as a horrified response to her first films--was trimming her entendres. Tamer still is the tongue-in-cheek Go West Young Man, although the spectacle of West (playing a "temperamental" movie star) leering after hunky Randolph Scott is pleasant. My Little Chickadee, made at Universal after her run at Paramount ended, is the legendary pairing with W.C. Fields. It's full of great bon mots from both drawlers, even if the sum is less than its parts. Disapproving Margaret Hamilton tells Fields of West, "I'm afraid I can't say anything good about her." Fields replies, "I can see what's good, tell me the rest." These five films are a good introduction to the rest. Beulah, peel me a grape. --Robert Horton

Smart, seductive and undeniably funny, Mae West is one of cinema's most enduring comedy legends. Now this larger-than-life buxom beauty charms fans all over again in an amazing 5-movie collection of some of her most wildly popular films. Revel in Mae's breakout performance in Night After Night; join her as a bewitching lion (and man) tamer in I'm No Angel; lasso up some fun with the wealthy and the wicked in the rags-to-riches tale of Goin' To Town; delight in a comic country romance in Go West Young Man; and see how wild the West can really get in My Little Chickadee. It's a must-own salute to one of Hollywood's most outrageous and hilarious leading ladies.

Star! Star!
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Lavish musical biography of Gertrude Lawrence starring Julie Andrews as the legendary British stage performer whose life was devoted to entertaining people. Robert Wise's sumptuous production looks at Lawrence's early days, her friendship with Noel Coward and her romances. Songs include "Piccadilly" and "Someday I'll Find You." With Richard Crenna, Daniel Massey. AKA: "Those Were the Happy Times." Restored version; 173 min. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital 5.0; Subtitles: English, Spanish; audio commentary; theatrical trailers; TV spots; featurettes; screen tests.

For Julie Andrews fans, Star! will be something more than just a legendary albatross around Old Hollywood's neck--after all, Julie is onscreen virtually every minute of this film, singing and dancing and flouncing around in an endless parade of over-the-top costumes. Seeing her tackle a variety of Noel Coward tunes and a nicely understated "Someone to Watch Over Me" is pleasant, but it's easy to see why this three-hour musical failed to click with 1968 audiences. A biopic of the celebrated stage star Gertrude Lawrence (puckish Daniel Massey plays Coward, Lawrence's childhood chum), the movie staggers around between the big production numbers. Its social message--independent Lawrence just needed a man to boss her around--was just as grating in the age of The Graduate as it is now. "Isn't this kind of thing a little out of date?" someone asks the aging Lawrence; Star! provides its own answer. --Robert Horton

Photo Jigsaw Puzzle of Gertrude Lawrence wearing Hartnell from Mary Evans Photo Jigsaw Puzzle of Gertrude Lawrence wearing Hartnell from Mary Evans
Sale Price: $29.99

Photo Puzzle, Gertrude Lawrence wearing Hartnell. Miss Gertrude Lawrence appearing in Noel Cowards Tonight at 8 30 is seen wearing a black crepe dress with quilted gauffre taffeta round the hem and the cape designed by Norman Hartnell. Worn in The Astonished Heart, a one-act play. Chosen by Mary Evans. 10x14 Photo Puzzle with 252 pieces. Packed in black cardboard box of dimensions 5 5/8 x 7 5/8 x 1 1/5. Puzzle image 5x7 affixed to box top.

Photo Jigsaw Puzzle of Advert For Whitbread Pale Ale from Mary Evans Photo Jigsaw Puzzle of Advert For Whitbread Pale Ale from Mary Evans
Sale Price: $29.99

Photo Puzzle, ADVERT FOR WHITBREAD PALE ALE. WHITBREADS PALE ALE featuring Gertrude Lawrence and Douglas Fairbanks Jnr at Grosvenor House . Chosen by Mary Evans. 10x14 Photo Puzzle with 252 pieces. Packed in black cardboard box of dimensions 5 5/8 x 7 5/8 x 1 1/5. Puzzle image 5x7 affixed to box top. Puzzle pieces printed on RA4 paper at 300 dpi. This item is shipped from our American lab.

Photo Jigsaw Puzzle of Gertrude Lawrence in Hartnell from Mary Evans Photo Jigsaw Puzzle of Gertrude Lawrence in Hartnell from Mary Evans
Sale Price: $29.99

Photo Puzzle, Gertrude Lawrence in Hartnell. The actress Gertrude Lawrence wearing a suit she took with her on a trip to New York. Designed by Norman Hartnell, it is black with a white jumper and white plaster tassels. Chosen by Mary Evans. 10x14 Photo Puzzle with 252 pieces. Packed in black cardboard box of dimensions 5 5/8 x 7 5/8 x 1 1/5. Puzzle image 5x7 affixed to box top. Puzzle pieces printed on RA4 paper at 300 dpi. This item is

Desert Queen: The Extraordinary Life of Gertrude Bell: Adventurer, Adviser to Kings, Ally of Lawrence of Arabia Desert Queen: The Extraordinary Life of Gertrude Bell: Adventurer, Adviser to Kings, Ally of Lawrence of Arabia
List Price: $16.00
Sale Price: $7.69

A biography of the woman who, indirectly, was the catalyst for many of the troubles in the Middle East, including the Gulf War. In 1918, Gertrude Bell drew the region's proposed boundaries on a piece of tracing paper. Her qualifications for doing so were her extensive travel, her fluency in both Persian and Arabic, and her relationships with sheiks and tribal and religious leaders. She also possessed an ability to understand the subtle and indirect politeness of the culture, something many of her colonialist comrades were oblivious to. As a self-made statesman her sex was an asset, enabling her to bypass the ladder of protocol and dive into the business of building an Empire.

Turning away from the privileged world of the "eminent Victorians," Gertrude Bell (1868—1926) explored, mapped, and excavated the world of the Arabs. Recruited by British intelligence during World War I, she played a crucial role in obtaining the loyalty of Arab leaders, and her connections and information provided the brains to match T. E. Lawrence's brawn. After the war, she played a major role in creating the modern Middle East and was, at the time, considered the most powerful woman in the British Empire. In this masterful biography, Janet Wallach shows us the woman behind these achievements–a woman whose passion and defiant independence were at odds wit the confined and custom-bound England she left behind. Too long eclipsed by Lawrence, Gertrude Bell emerges at last in her own right as a vital player on the stage of modern history, and as a woman whose life was both a heartbreaking story and a grand adventure.


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Gertrude Lawrence

Musical fans are likely to know that this is a special year for the industry as 2010 marks the 25th anniversary of Les Miserables.

And one way that many are choosing to commemorate the birthday is by visiting the capital and attending one of the many events being held in London.

One such spectacle is the special performance of the Boublil & Schonberg production, taking part in the Barbican Centre from September 14th to October 2nd 2010.

This one-off stint will feature Pop Idol 2002 runner-up Gareth Gates as he takes the role of Marius in the story about his wife-to-be Collette and her adopted father Jean Valijean - a lawbreaker in the 19th French revolution.

Visitors can sit in the same seats that Les Mis' first audience members sat in when it opened in the Barbican Theatre in 1985, going on to become the world's longest-running musical.

As such, while Les Mis is performed in theatres all around the world, visitors are expected to flock to the capital this month as this is where the legacy began.

There will only be a limited 22 performances of Cameron Mackintosh's anniversary production, which will feature new set designs, costumes and a whole new production team.

For theatre-goers who are interested in something different, they can experience anniversary celebrations of a different kind - the special Les Miserables In Concert performance on October 3rd.

Taking place in the iconic O2 arena on the River Thames, visitors can make the most of the occasion by catching a boat to the venue.

High speed catamarans travel from Waterloo Pier to The 02's QEII in under 30 minutes, allowing passengers to wind down London's famous river on their way to an evening out.

But that is not likely to be the only reason to remember this October evening as the Les Miserables In Concert is the ultimate commemorative event of the musical, featuring guest performances from the original 1985 cast members.

Celebrities will also be involved in the production, including Little Britain star Matt Lucas and Nick Jonas from the American pop group Jonas Brothers.

For those planning a trip to the capital after October 3rd, there is still the chance to see the original concert of Les Miserables at the Queen's Theatre, where it has been running since 2004.

Located in the heart of the capital, on Shaftesbury Avenue, the Queen's Theatre rubs shoulders with other theatrical venues in London including the Apollo Theatre, famous for featuring Rain Main starring Hollywood star Josh Hartnett in 2008.

It is currently showing All My Sons with actors David Suchet, of Poirot fame, and Zoe Wanamaker, who has been a regular on television screens for years, starring in BBC One comedy My Family.

The Queen's Theatre was built in the 1950s and depicts the classic era of acting, marking its opening with the presence of 1920s and 30s stars Fred Astaire and Gertrude Lawrence.

Now, it remains one of the most iconic venues in the West End.

A stone's throw away from Covent Garden, theatre-goers can immerse in the atmosphere by walking around the famous courtyard, do a spot of shopping at the area's popular under-cover market or have dinner at one of its many al fresco restaurants.

Covent Gardenis also the perfect place to people-watch, taking in the sights of couples after their trip to the opera or families after a full day's shopping in nearby Oxford Street.

Whatever your reason to visit the capital, London is likely to remain one of the most popular places to experience Les Mis, despite being available in more than 38 countries around the world.

And with its 25th anniversary, This Year is the perfect time to become one of the 54-million crowd who has watched the spectacle and take part in its homecoming.

The London Pass is a sightseeing city card designed to help tourist save time and money at top London Attractions such as Windsor castle and Tower of London.

New Paradigms in Publishing - Why Literature Must be Free

The age-old vision of the artist or writer toiling away at his craft, alone and hungry and living in compromised conditions, is certainly an enduring one, and it is also one that most artists and writers readily reject if given the opportunity. Unfortunately, most developing artists must endure at least a period of abject poverty as they hone their craft and struggle for recognition. The public, rather than support society’s creative brain trust, customarily engages in mocking those who have not yet achieved notoriety, while often lavishing ridiculous rewards on those who are fortunate enough to be underwritten by large publishing and promotion interests. The late (and beloved) writer Kurt Vonnegut often reiterated the sentiment that he considered himself incredibly lucky, because he personally knew at least a dozen writers who were every bit as talented, or perhaps more so, than he was and had achieved no recognition whatsoever (not to mention no financial rewards).

Without a doubt, a certain amount of luck is involved when a writer signs a contract with a major publisher. Many aspire to such recognition (worthy or not), because what artist does not wish his work to be exhibited to a large audience? In this age of high budget promotion, mass media, and instant gratification, it is easy to forget that such works as Lady Chatterley’s Lover by D. H. Lawrence and Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen were originally private publications for the benefit of the authors and their friends and families. In fact, the list of self-published titles, and writers who acted as their own publisher, is quite longer than one might expect:

Remembrance of Things Past by Marcel Proust Ulysses by James Joyce
The Adventures of Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter
A Time to Kill by John Grisham
The Wealthy Barber by David Chilton
The Bridges of Madison County by James Waller
What Color is Your Parachute by Richard Bolles
In Search of Excellence by Tom Peters
The Celestine Prophecy by James Redfield
The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr.
When I Am an Old Woman I Shall Wear Purple by Jenny Joseph

And here are a few other now famous authors who have self-published their work:

Deepak Chopra Gertrude Stein
Zane Grey
Upton Sinclair
Carl Sandburg
Ezra Pound
Mark Twain
Edgar Rice Burroughs
Stephen Crane
George Bernard Shaw
Anais Nin
Thomas Paine
Virginia Wolff
e. e . cummings
Edgar Allen Poe
Rudyard Kipling
Henry David Thoreau
Benjamin Franklin
Walt Whitman
Alexander Dumas

Even though it is easy to see from this list of well-known titles and esteemed authors that the so-called industry has often overlooked books that it should have embraced, there is perhaps a single overriding reason for this negligence, and that reason is not ignorance or lack of editorial insight, it is strictly financial.

Consider the fact that for the past several hundred years (more or less) book publishing (and most other art forms as well) has operated on the royalty system, whereby publishers pay authors or producers a percentage of revenues derived from the sale of the published work, the production cost of which is originally, and customarily, underwritten by the publisher. But this has not always been the dominant system by which writers and other artists have been paid for their work. In times past, patrons were the customary financiers of artistic works, commissioning artists to create a specific work for a particular purpose. Most of the great art produced over the past millennium in Europe was produced under the system of patronage; and therefore it can be acknowledged that the so-called royalty system is, for all intents and purposes, a relatively new one, and also one which has emerged largely since the emergence of democratic and capitalistic societies.

As a result of the system of royalty publishing, never have so few artists been paid so well, while the rest of the field (whether their efforts are noble or feeble) are condemned to obscurity, silence, poverty, and even scorn. For those lucky enough to sign a contract with a major publisher that is willing and able to finance a significant promotion campaign to drive book sales, rewards can be staggering, offering writers who were recently unknown and toiling away in their garrets (or in Stephen King’s case, his trailer) millions literally overnight. Consider the good luck (and good fortune) of authors such as J. K. Rowling and Dan Brown.

This system (now consolidated into a consortium if not a virtual monopoly), which necessarily celebrates the few and condemns the rest to relative obscurity, defends its exclusionary practices by telling one and all that only the best writers and the best literary works manage to make it through the hierarchy of the screening system (beginning with literary agents who are in many cases only slightly more literary minded than used car salesmen and ending with accountants – not editors – who ultimately determine which titles might have a chance for financial success, and therefore which titles a publisher shall ultimately publish and offer to the public as the best and most worthy literary art of the times). But does this system accomplish such a worthy purpose, or has it now been thoroughly corrupted by the motive of profit and left the public with offerings that merely pretend to aspire to a lofty plane?

One of the chief reasons that the current system of publishing and distribution has evolved into a clumsy and distended financial machine (often short-sighted and usually self-righteous) that often rewards mediocrity by targeting the lowest common denominator and while ignoring, if not purposely bypassing, inspiration, is its tenacious effort to maintain exclusivity. However, in keeping with the trends of modern-day capitalism, the once fiercely independent publishing industry has subjected itself to concentric consolidation, thereby standardizing editorial policies to conform to the marketing strategies of bean counters and PR men. Twenty years ago, there were about thirty frontline publishers in the United States; today (by my count) there is but one. The rest have been swallowed up – one by one – into the A. E. Bertlesman publishing consortium, where objectives are global, and where the bottom line rules.

In a system that methodically turns art into a commodity – quality be damned if sales are brisk – supporting entities quickly learn how to feed off the all-powerful, all-consuming giant. Consider that Barnes & Noble, once a corner bookshop in New York City, now operates a thousand stores nationwide selling not only the day’s best selling Bertlesman titles, but a wide range of coffee drinks as well, the latest self-help sold with a complimentary double latté grandé, while James Joyce’s classic, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, is now stocked in the store’s darkest corner, or is perhaps only available in Cliff’s Notes. On the Internet, Amazon.com stocks every title ever printed on a printing press – or so they maintain – even as the price of a less than venerable title has been reduced to virtually zero! Indeed, Oscar Wilde’s novel, The Portrait of Dorian Grey, may have achieved negative value in today’s publishing and book retail system – two entities that are joined at the hip. And when art itself is devalued to the level of a widget sold on a late night infomercial, then society and culture are themselves degraded, and we are all poorer for that degradation, and perhaps all responsible for it, too.

Ensconced as this system certainly is, there is a light at the end of the tunnel. Internet publishing now offers any writer a venue for his work. What’s more, the web enables anyone to promote virtually anything till the cows come home. Infinite low cost space, the possibility of infinite connections with like-minded and other interested individuals worldwide, virtual retail space and virtual meeting places, media synergies, and cheap technology all combine to provide not only writers, but artists in every discipline, with a new venue – one with seemingly endless possibilities, and one available to everybody at a cost so low it is incidental. The field is wide open, and it is vast, and it is egalitarian. Place like YouTube and Second Life offer both new artists and those long ignored a showcase for their work and their talents. The potential audience is worldwide, and it is also seemingly eager for something more than the all-too-often mediocre offerings of monolithic profiteers. The Internet is the venue of the people, and art has by its very nature always been a local expression. Except now the concept of local has been expanded – exponentially! The prospect of one’s book being stocked (among a hundred thousand other titles) in a thousand B&N stores from Miami to Seattle and from San Diego to Bangor must certainly pale in comparison with a potential worldwide Internet audience in the hundreds of millions (with Google as the head librarian). It’s a brave new world in the history of publishing, nothing less, and possibly infinitely more significant, than the invention of the printing press (which replaced the hand-tooled scroll), or the use of parchment (which replaced the stone tablet). Of course those in the conventional publishing industry will try their best to deny the impact of Internet publishing, but try as they might, they will not be able to preserve the status quo, nor will they be able to hold back the future. Some will recognize the inevitability of this transformation and try to adapt. Others will cling onto the past even as their sales figures (and their influence) steadily decrease. But whether one is an old hand at publishing, or whether one is a relative newcomer, the fact is that in Internet publishing the playing field is level, and nobody enjoys a distinct advantage simply because he is well financed. In fact, money may well be out of the picture altogether…

In a capitalistic system where supply and demand always determines availability and price, all bets may be off once Internet publishing assumes the foothold that it surely must. Assuming that the demand for media at all levels of quality continues to expand – and there is no reason to assume otherwise – and also assuming that the supply line – namely, Internet publishers in every artistic discipline – continues to expand as well, a virtual price war (similar to what has occurred in the telecommunications industry) will ensue, eventually rendering all media free to consumers. Imagine that! But if art is free (and thereby freed of the constraints of commercialism and bottom-line thinking), then how is the artist, or the producer, to be paid?

As the pendulum swings, it will be necessary for the royalty system, as we currently know it, to give way (grudgingly in many cases, we can suppose) to a much older one – namely, the age-old system of patronage. Already public television stations in the US operate largely through the contributions of those willing to finance quality programming and elevated content. Several small press publishers still publishing print on paper also operate largely through the contributions of patrons. It is a system that must re-emerge because of the dispersion possible through a new medium. Is it altogether unthinkable that instead of buying a copy of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland at a neighborhood B&N or Borders store to read to your child, you might simply contribute to its upkeep online and access it on your home computer?

At Open Books, an online publisher of classic literature, contemporary fiction and non-fiction of High Quality, and of experimental writing and multi-media presentations, we think the answer to that proposition is an obvious one. Open Books publishes its titles online, and all titles are available for anyone to read free of charge. In publishing its books online, Open Books endeavors to publish books in an environmentally friendly way, and to offer its publications to all the people of the world, regardless of location or economic status. At Open Books, we offer classics that might otherwise not be available; we showcase contemporary authors that might not otherwise be heard, and we expose artists whose work might otherwise be too far out of the mainstream for commercial enterprises to risk investment. At Open Books we believe that for art to be freed, art must indeed be free.

About the Author

David Ross is an author and publisher.
http://www.open-bks.com
http://www.happyholidayscorfu.com
http://www.corfumagazine.com

When did singers in theatre musicals start using amplification?

Were there fixed mics somewhere in the days before body mics, or could they move about? Did stars like Merman sing unamplified over an orchestra, and was their power the essence of their talent? What about Jack Buchanan or Gertrude Lawrence...those light, quavery voices surely couldn't be heard over an orchestra in a theatre in the early 1920's...and why does no one ever mention the subject?!

Like since for ever. In ancient Greece and Rome, they would specially design the theaters so the voices and music could be heard better, they're called amphitheaters. Even today with microphones, the theaters are specially designed for the sound to travel better throughout the place.

TC Reads: 'Dreamers of the Day' is 2010 choice
The historical novel is set against the backdrop of the influenza epidemic of 1917, World War I, women's suffrage and the Cairo Peace Conference of 1921.

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