110 résultats
195464261Cleveland Ohio: The Press of The World Publishing Company. Very Good. 1954. Hardcover. Typography by Jos. Trautwein with decorations by Ismar David. #148 of 1250 copies Produced by The Press of The World Publishing Company Cleveland Ohio. Christmas 1954. Red cloth with gilt printing spine ends and corners are just a bit scuffed- otherwise this is a clean bright nice copy. Very Good. . The Press of The World Publishing Company hardcover books
19081331028Chicago: The Reilly & Lee Co 1908. Hardcover. Octavo; Fair-; Hardcover; Spine tan with red print; Boards in tan illustrated cloth tattering to spine caps worn exposed corners tears to hinges stain to rear top edge shelfwear; Text block has cracked hinges front and rear intermittent spine breaks inscriptions in ink on front flyleaf tanning to endpapers mild age-toning to paper; 312 pages illustrated color.<br /> <br /> <p> This book is part of the overstocked 15's kept in Room X. 1331028. FP New Rockville Stock. The Reilly & Lee Co hardcover books
195649504Knoxville: S. B. Newman Printing Co 1956. 32p. wraps illustrated by humorous line drawings colored-in; light external soiling. S. B. Newman Printing Co unknown books
1931205528London: B. Feldman & Co 1931. Sheet_music. 4p. 9.75x12 inches excerpts from several other songs offered by the company large ad on rear for Roland's Pianoforte Tutor very good sheet music in beautiful striking illustrated covers. Also includes ukelele chord fingering by R. S. Stoddon. Cover depicts a crowd around a bonfire tossing in cards titled "Rates" "Taxes" "Demand Note" etc while a figure in top hat labeled Kill Joy burns in the blaze. Uplifting song written to combat the Great Depression in the UK. These music sheets were sold at Feldman's Blackpool summer shows which were also titled "Blaze Away B. Feldman & Co unknown books
1973142419New York: Wroderick Productions 1973. Draft script for a 1973 Roderick Cook adaptation of the 1929 Noel Coward musical likely written after Cook's 1972 musical review of Coward's work entitled "Oh Coward!" <br/><br/>A three act operetta in which a wealthy young woman elopes with her music teacher. Coward's original script was basis for the 1933 film directed by Herbert Wilcox and the 1940 film directed by WS Van Dyke. The Van Dyke film was so disliked by Coward that he vowed to never let Hollywood adapt one of his works again. <br/><br/>Adaptation writer/actor Roderick Cook worked extensively with Coward's material his best-known work being a highly well-received 1972 musical review of Coward's work entitled "Oh Coward!" While it is believed that Cook's adaptation of "Bitter Sweet" was never performed professionally and the material in this script was not utilized in "Oh Coward!" it was likely written after Cook's considerable success with the review encouraged him to take another look at Coward's oeuvre. <br/><br/>Set in London and Vienna. <br/><br/>Pink titled wrappers with credits for playwright Noel Coward and adaptation writer Roderick Cook. Title page present dated September 1973 noted as REVISED with credits for screenwriter Coward and adaptation writer Cole. 96 leaves with last page of text numbered III-1-18. Mimeograph duplication. Pages about Fine wrapper Near Fine bound with two gold brads. Wroderick Productions unknown books
19719007144New York: Schirmer 1971. paperback. Fine Condition. Bound in publisher's original wrappers. Text is in French and English. <br/><br/> Schirmer paperback books
1928140906Beverly Hills CA: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer MGM 1928. Archive of material from the 1928 film. From the estate of actor Monte Blue who starred in the film. <br/><br/>Included in the archive are a carbon typescript draft script here under the working title "Southern Skies" four vintage photographs each with a mimeo snipe on the verso one with a press stamp as well and a later 1921 edition of the 1919 travel book by Frederick O'Brien which served as the source material for the film signed and dated by Blue with his bookplate on the front pastedown. <br/><br/>MGM's first film with a fully prerecorded soundtrack comprised of music and sound effects including most notably the first time the company's mascot Leo the Lion roared at the film's start White Shadows in the South Seas doesn't quite classify as a "talkie" as only the single whispered word "hello" appears in the soundtrack. Winner of an Academy Award for Best Cinematography. <br/><br/>Set on a Polynesian Island shot on location in Tahiti at the time an ambitious endeavor to shoot a Hollywood film on location among native islanders using many of them as extras in the film. <br/><br/>Carbon typescript draft:<br/><br/>Cream colored titled wrappers rubber-stamped copy No. 5046 and production No. 338 dated November 29 1927 with credits for screenwriter Jack Cunningham and adaptation writer Ray Doyle. Title page integral with the first page of the text dated November 161927 with credits for Cunningham and Doyle. 146 leaves with last leaf of text numbered 146. Carbon typescript on onionskin stock. Pages Near Fine wrapper Poor bound with two gold brads. <br/><br/>1921 copy of "White Shadows in the South Seas:"<br/><br/>Early The Century edition from 1921 first edition was originally published by The Century in 1919. Very Good lacking jacket. Front hinge split with light rubbing to the cloth at the extremities. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer [MGM] unknown books
1956147087Los Angeles: Twentieth Century-Fox 1956. Final draft script for the 1956 film. Wrappers trimmed to conform to text block separating spine from wrapper abd cropping copy number stamp "650" and re-written in holograph ink. Production number adjusted in holograph pencil with ."5." "#3" in holograph in on edge of spine.<br/><br/>Based on Marcelle Maurette's 1952 stage play about a scheme to conspiracy to extort ten million pounds from a bank by teaching a homeless girl to impersonate the missing Russian princess Anastasia.<br/><br/>Ingrid Bergman won an Academy Award for her lead role. <br/><br/>Blue titled wrappers noted as FINAL on the front wrapper rubber-stamped copy No. 650 and production No. 2677 dated June 7 1956. Title page present dated June 7 1956 noted as Final Script with credits for screenwriter Arthur Laurents. 139 leaves with last page of text numbered 136. Mimeographed rectos only. Pages Near Fine wrapper Very Good plus trimmed to conform to text block with spine separate bound with two gold brads.<br/><br/>Twilight Time 203. Twentieth Century-Fox unknown books
177748508London: Printed for T. Lowndes T. Caslon C. Corbett and S. Bladon 1777. Disbound now housed in an archival mylar sleeve. Age-toning. Very Good. 76 pp. Lacks plate. 8vo. <br/><br/>Based on the plays by Plautus and Molière. Also published in The New English Theatre Vol 9 No. 1 1776-1777. Printed for T. Lowndes, T. Caslon, C. Corbett, and S. Bladon unknown books
1962148916New York: Random House 1962. First Edition. First Edition. <br/><br/>Harry Kurnitz's adaptation of Marcel Achard's play "L'Idiote" which in turn became the basis for the 1964 Blake Edwards film "A Shot in the Dark" starring Peter Sellers as Inspector Jacques Clouseau and Elke Sommer as the Swedish gal who can't resist him. <br/><br/>Probably one of five funniest films of the 1960s and the defining installment in the well-loved Pink Panther series. While "A Shot in the Dark" was ably preceded by "The Pink Panther" in 1963 it was the first to feature the series' underrated maestro Herbert Lom as Chief Inspector Dreyfus. <br/><br/>Very Good in a Very Good dust jacket. Several pages with evidence of erasure. Jacket lightly soiled and rubbed overall with two small dampstains to the rear panel. Random House unknown books