Clip sheet (2 resultados)
Más imágenes- Tapa blanda
- Publicación periódica
Librería: Max Rambod Inc, Woodland Hills, CA, Estados Unidos de AmericaMax Rambod Inc
Contactar con el vendedorVendedor de 5 estrellasCondición: Usado
EUR 3115,29
Envío por EUR 8,64Se envía dentro de Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
TV Clip-Sheet gathered mainstream newspaper and magazine clippings on cross dressing, female impersonation, passing, theatrical performance, arrest and public scandal for readers already connected to Chevalier Publications' transvestite print network. These six issues preserve the publication's method of reprinting sensational p…ress language, with headlines including "Princeton Lads Put Show On The Road," "The Amazing Dilemma of Kenneth Johnson," "Men Were Girls!," "A Tale of Two Sexes," "He Got Idea From Mother," "He Was a Man All the Time," and "The Lady Is an Undercover Man." The sheets record how mid century newspapers described gender nonconformity through entertainment, crime, deception, medical curiosity, and nightclub publicity, while Chevalier repackaged that coverage for a specialized readership. The group links the broader press record to the same Los Angeles publisher behind Transvestia, placing mass media accounts beside the private mail circulation through which cross dressing readers followed public cases and underground performance. TV Clip-Sheet. Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, 1960s to 1970s. Archive of 6 issues: Nos. 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 38. [1] TV Clip-Sheet. No. 1. Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, 1962. Two full pages. Opens with "Princeton Lads Put Show On The Road" and includes a "Personality Parade" feature naming "some of America's foremost female impersonators," along with clippings headed "I Tried Both Sexes," "Dennis Day as Sophie Tucker," "Dual Role for Alastair Sim," and "Nellee's No Lady But He Wears Long Skirts." [2] TV Clip-Sheet. No. 4. Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, circa 1960s. Includes "The Amazing Dilemma of Kenneth Johnson," a large feature on Kenneth Johnson, plus additional clippings headed "This Beautiful Gal, Her 'Girl' Pal Was Really a Man," "Women's Clothes Were His Disguise," "The Model Who Fooled London," and "A Feminine Man." The sheet centers on press accounts of passing, exposure, and feminine presentation framed as mystery or deception. [3] TV Clip-Sheet. No. 5. Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, circa 1960s. Includes "American Male Has Donned Ugly Look," "Men Were Girls!," and additional small clippings on masculine and feminine appearance. The issue preserves the period's tabloid vocabulary around gender presentation, including the recurrent treatment of clothing as both social evidence and comic spectacle. [4] TV Clip-Sheet. No. 6. Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, circa 1960s. Includes "A Tale of Two Sexes," "Victoria is Victorious," and a boxed Chevalier Publications announcement titled "Look Sisters," offering book and magazine material through the publisher's mail order network. The issue ties press clippings to Chevalier's direct circulation of transvestite reading material. [5] TV Clip-Sheet. No. 7. Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, circa 1960s. Includes "He Got Idea From Mother," "News of Transvestia, Female Impersonators and Related Fields," and a notice for "All Points West" in Los Angeles. The issue combines syndicated human interest clippings with Chevalier's own announcements for readers following transvestite and female impersonator culture. [6] TV Clip-Sheet. No. 38. Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, circa 1970s. Includes "The Lady Is an Undercover Man," "Here's the Oddest Turn in Showbiz!," "Mr. or Should I Say Mrs. La Rue Adds a Touch of Culture," and clippings on stage performers, disguise, and theatrical impersonation. The issue continues the series' later focus on press coverage of performers and public exposure narratives. TV Clip-Sheet occupied a different function from Transvestia's essays, fiction, advice, and letters: it collected outside press coverage and made it legible to a readership already negotiating secrecy, public curiosity, and the risks of being named in print. The repeated newspaper language of masquerade, disguise, "really a man," and "undercover man" records the terms through which American popular media framed cross dressing before later transgender vocabulary gained wider public circulation. Folded as issued with light toning, minor edge wear, and handling creases; overall good condition. A compact run of Chevalier's serial preserving the press record that surrounded, distorted, and publicized cross dressing and female impersonation in mid century American print.
Más imágenes"Turns Female": Reader Letters, Mail-Order Drag, Trans News in Femme Mirror, TV Clip-Sheet, and Queens Publications, 1962-1975
Chevalier Publications; Femme Mirror; TV Clip-Sheet; Queens Publications
Librería: Max Rambod Inc, Woodland Hills, CA, Estados Unidos de AmericaMax Rambod Inc
Contactar con el vendedorVendedor de 5 estrellasCondición: Usado
EUR 787,72
Envío por EUR 8,64Se envía dentro de Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Femme Mirror no. 7, TV Clip-Sheet nos. 1 and 16, and a 1974 to 1975 Queens Publications catalog or advertising booklet carry Chevalier and Queens Publications' trans and cross-dressing print culture from early-1960s reader correspondence and press clippings into a later mail-order market for magazines, fiction, books, clothing,…and body-form products. Femme Mirror no. 7 prints letters from readers seeking contact and recognition. TV Clip-Sheet nos. 1 and 16 gather press stories under headlines such as "A Tale of Two Sexes," "He Was a Man All the Time," "Arrest Ends Nine-Year Masquerade as Woman," "Turns Female," "Widowed Mother of Two Was Really Boy Aged 15," and "Personality Parade: Here are some of America's Foremost Female Impersonators." The Queens Publications catalog advertises Drag, Astounding Transvestite Tales, Female Mimics, latex breast forms, skirts, gloves, and books on drag, gender identity, and female impersonation. Archive of four trans and cross-dressing publications. Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications and Queens Publications, 1962 to 1975. Four items comprising Femme Mirror: Reflections of Femme-Personators no. 7, TV Clip-Sheet no. 1, TV Clip-Sheet no. 16, and one Queens Publications catalog or advertising booklet dated 1974 to 1975. [1] TV Clip-Sheet. No. 1. Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, 1962. Two full pages. The issue opens with "Princeton Lads Put Show On The Road" and includes a "Personality Parade" spread naming "some of America's foremost female impersonators," including Jackie Maye, Dale Roberts, Robbi Ross, Ricki Raymond, Fin Olsen, Chunga Ochoa, Tom Harbin, Lynn Carter, Jan Britton, Storme De Larvarie, Ken Renard, Sandy Rogers, Bobbie Johnson, Dodi Daniels, Gene Avery, Dori Dor, Bob Lake, Viki Vogue, Sonny Teal, and Lynn Roberts. Other clippings include "I Tried Both Sexes," "Dennis Day as Sophie Tucker," "Dual Role for Alastair Sim," and "Nellee's No Lady But He Wears Long Skirts." [2] Femme Mirror: Reflections of Femme-Personators. No. 7. Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, July 1962. Seven pages folded into a small booklet, with pen numeral "7" at the upper right corner. The issue includes reader letters and "Just Chatter" by Barbara Elin Stevens, with references to Phi Pi Epsilon, Contact correspondence, femvisits, corset shops, readers in Idaho, Poughkeepsie, New York, Texas, London, and South America, and a reader who writes, "I have acquired skirts and blouses, dresses, etc. which I wear at home when everyone is out, or on weekends when I am away with my girl friend who is understanding." [3] TV Clip-Sheet. No. 16. Los Angeles: Chevalier Publications, 1963. Four full pages. The issue includes Scott Young's "A Tale of Two Sexes," stamped or annotated "Toronto Globe & Mail 11 04, 1963," and a publisher's notice explaining that material was submitted by readers from many sources and reprinted as a clearinghouse. Other clippings carry headlines including "He Was a Man All the Time," "Arrest Ends Nine-Year Masquerade as Woman," "Turns Female," "Transvestite," and "Widowed Mother of Two Was Really Boy Aged 15," with another item quoting Jack Lemmon in relation to Some Like It Hot. [4] Queens Publications catalog or advertising booklet. [New York or Los Angeles]: Queens Publications, 1974 to 1975. Advertising booklet for drag, transvestite, female impersonator, and related mail-order publications and goods. The booklet advertises Drag, Rag, Astounding Transvestite Tales, Drag Life, TV Swingers, Drag Scene, Female Mimics, Female Impersonator's Handbook, Peter Underwood's Life's a Drag! Danny La Rue and the Drag Scene, Richard Green's Sexual Identity Conflict in Children & Adults, "Treasure Chest" latex breast forms, polyester skirts, gloves, and other clothing items. Chevalier Publications, associated with Virginia Prince and Transvestia, created a print network for cross-dressing and trans readers who often relied on mail, pseudonyms, reader letters, and small-circulation publications for contact. The Chevalier issues record an early 1960s readership still organized around secrecy, marriage, femme names, person-to-person correspondence, and clipped evidence from the outside press, while the Queens Publications booklet records a later commercial network of magazines, fiction, books, clothing, and body-form products marketed to drag, transvestite, and female impersonator readers. The Femme Mirror issue bears a pen "7" at upper right; the group shows folds from booklet format, toning, and light handling wear, with text complete and legible. Overall very good condition.