Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Lee Furman, New York, 1935
Librería: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, Estados Unidos de America
Miembro de asociación: IOBA
Original o primera edición
EUR 296,11
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Very Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. 518 Pp. Red-Brown Cloth Lettered In White. First Printing, 1935. Slight Usage, No Marks Or Stains, Clean, Would Be Near Fine But White Spine Lettering Has Mostly Popped Out (Not Worn) With Embossed Lettering Very Strong. Published Inauspiciously In 1935, When Philosophy Was The Least Of People's Concerns.
Publicado por Stella Holt-Roscius Productions, New York, 1963
Librería: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, Estados Unidos de America
Manuscrito
EUR 154,69
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoDraft script for the 1963 play. Laid in is a playbill for the show. With a single notation in manuscript pencil to the title page. Based on the 1948 novel of the same title by Hans Habe. To escape the injustices of Harlem, a black man enlists in the United States Army and is sent to occupied West Germany, where he impregnates and falls in love with a local girl. Without army consent, he marries her and deserts the army when he is to be sent back to America without her. He becomes the head of a gang of criminals and soon escapes to America with his bride, who leaves him because she only married him to get to America. Set in Germany. Black titled wrappers, with credits for screenwriter William Hairston. Title page present, dated October 28, 1963, with credits for playwright William Hairston, and author Hans Habe. 106 leaves, with last page of text numbered 18. Mechanical duplication. Pages Near Fine, wrapper Near Fine bound with two gold brads.
Publicado por Stella Holt-Roscius Productions, New York, 1963
Librería: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, Estados Unidos de America
Manuscrito
EUR 243,08
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoDraft script for the 1963 play. Laid in are a number of contemporary documents relating to the production, including playwright William Hairston's business card and resumé, a playbill for the show, two reviews by Maxine Keith and John Wingate, two advertisements for the show, and a photocopied article from the "New York Times" about the show. Based on the 1948 novel by Hans Habe. To escape the injustices of Harlem, a Black man enlists in the United States Army and is sent to occupied West Germany, where he impregnates and falls in love with a local woman. Without army consent, he marries her and deserts the army when he is to be sent back to America without her. He becomes the head of a gang of criminals and eventually escapes to America with his bride. Set in Germany. Black titled wrappers, with credits for playwright William Hairston. Title page present, dated October 28, 1963, with credits for playwright William Hairston, and novelist Hans Habe. 105 leaves, with last page of text numbered 18. Mechanical duplication, rectos only. Pages Near Fine, wrapper Near Fine, bound with two gold brads.
Publicado por Film-Makers' Cinematheque New York, NY, 1965
Librería: Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 132,59
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carrito[2] pp.; 27.8 x 21.5 cm.; black-and-white & color; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; mimeograph; Double sided program for films presented at Film-Makers' Cinematheque from April - March, 1965. Films presented include "Forty Guns" and "Shock Corridor" by Samuel Fuller; "The Frantic, Pedantic, Semantic, Antic," by Ira Schneider; "A Fall Trip Home," by Nathanael Dorsky; "Ningen Dobutnen," by Yoji Kuri; "Love," by Takahiko Iimura; a new film by Andy Warhol; "Gardens of Tivoli," by Arthur Tress; the premiere of "The Lark" by Rudy Burkhardt; "Fireworks," "Eaux d' Artifice," "Inaugeration of the Pleasure Dome," "Scorpio Rising," by Kenneth Anger; Mike and George Kuchar retrospective including "A Reel of Home Movies," "The Slasher," "The Naked & the Nude," "The Thief and the Stripper," "I was a Teenage Rumpot," "Pussy on a Hot Tin Roof," "The Lurk," by Rudy Burckhardt; the premiere of "Sins of the Fleshapoids," by Mike Kuchar; Harry Smith retrospective; films of Jerry Joffen; Sidney Peterson retrospective including "Cage," "Lead Shoes," "Mr. Frenhofer & the Minotaur," "Petrified Dog," "Potted Psalm,"; "O, Dreamland," by Lindsay Anderson; "Guernica," by Alain Resnais; "Nu," by Anonioni; "Opera Mouffe," by Agnes Varda; "Pacific 231," by Jean Mitry, "Symphony in No B Flat," by Rudolfo Khun; "World of Paul Delvaux," by Henri Storck; "Hallucinations," by Peter Weiss; "As is Played Today," Joseph Anderson; "The Path," by Richard Meyers; "Private Life of A Cat," by Alexander Hammid; "Object Lesson," by Ch. Young; Odds & Ends," by Jane Belson Conger; "Smoke," by Joseph Kramer; "Krushchev," by Robert Lebar and Howard Kaplan "Metanoia," by Ilya Bolotowski, and Herbert Vessely. Recto contains text of program, verso printed with blue monochrome advertisement for soundtracks by mimeograph design company The Verbatim Service Company, owned and operated by Dick Kern. Good. 1 cm. loss to lower right corner; 1.2 cm. loss to upper left corner; 9 mm. loss to upper right corner; 4 mm. tear to lower left corner. Paper yellow and brittle with age.