52 résultats
1939873421939. OCEAN LINERS Osaka Shosen Kaisha. UMI Vol. 9 #11. Osaka Showa 15 1939. 36 pp. 25.6 x 18 cm. Though OSK was later bought out by Mitsui after the war at the time they published "THE SEA" as their monthly magazine they had routes girdling the world. As a rival of NYK Lines they filled its pages with travelogues as well as images of the ships and the well-heeled passengers. This issue was published while war raged in China but at least some of the paper is still glossy and the message upbeat. Very good. unknown books
192442801New York: The White Star Line 1924. 1st printing. List with printed glossy stock covers stapled. Map to rear cover. Curl to List fore-edge. Newspaper offset to pp 10-11. Plan with stamped manicule indicating the assignment of passenger cabin C99 as well as an agent stamp McGrade & Benton Kansas City MO to Plan title panel. Both - VG. Passenger List: Unpaginated though 20 pp. Cabin Plan: one sheet printed both sides folded 5x to form an 18 panel brochure. Accompanied by numerous newspaper extracts most documenting the trip including one New York Herald Paris edition Friday August 29 1924 in 5 copies announcing the arrival of Ms Talley in Cherbourg announcing her destination as Milan. Passenger List illustrated with 2 photographic images both of the Olympic. Cabin Plan with five colored deck plans. List: 7-5/8" x 5-1/4". Plan: 21-7/8" x 22-3/4"unfolded; 7-1/4" x 3-13/16" folded. <br/><br/>Marion Nevada Talley was an American opera coloratura soprano. While her first audition in 1923 for the Metropolitan Opera was unsuccessful the Opera's general manager Giulio Gatti-Casazza did subsequently hire Talley for the 1925/26 season. On February 17 1926 she made her debut there as Gilda the daughter of the title character in Giuseppe Verdi's Rigoletto. At the time and at the age of 19 Talley was the youngest prima donna to ever sing at the Metropolitan Opera. Her pending debut caused a media sensation contrary to Gatti-Casazza's hopes that it would remain low-key. A delegation of two hundred leading citizens of Kansas City her home town arrived via a special train. Tickets were being resold at astronomical prices. A telegraph was set up backstage so her father could send dispatches to the Associated Press. Her performance prompted multiple ovations from the crowd but critics were less enthusiastic. While they thought her debut promising it did not live up to the expectations caused by the media frenzy and her ensuing musical career with the company lasted but a few more years. This White Star Line ephemera no doubt retained as a souvenir of Talley's 1924 journey to Milan where Gatti-Casazza had sent her to continue her music training with Mme Marcella Sembrich 1858 - 1935. The White Star Line unknown books