Treasures, Oddities and Ephemera: 3-D Objects from Billy Rose Theatre Division’s Theatre Cabinets
The Theatre Cabinets (or T-Cabinets as we call them) of the Billy Rose Theatre Division are packed full of objects large and small. The cabinets are a repository for all the three-dimensional items that have accompanied our larger collections or have been given to the division separately as a gift. I absolutely love the T-cabinets. Being hidden in the back of a locked cage and full of mysterious items is only part of the allure. The other part is the extreme variety of the items themselves.
I have tried to highlight this diversity in a two-case exhibit entitled Treasures, Oddities and Ephemera: 3-D Objects from Billy Rose Theatre Division's Theatre Cabinets located on the third floor of the Library for the Performing Arts. I was familiar with a few items from the cabinets as we had used them in a 2006 exhibit celebrating the 75th anniversary of the Theatre Division and while we have a basic inventory of the contents, I soon found out that what sounded interesting on paper was not and vice versa! I realized I had to go through the cabinets piece by piece in order to discover the true nature of the objects and the exhibit is the result of my treasure hunt.
I was already aware of the more priceless objects of the cabinets including:
Aside from the treasures, I never knew what I would pull out from the archival envelopes and was delighted to discover:
And then there were the more unusual objects such as:
Finally, the last object I found was the best of all. Wrapped up in the very back of a cabinet, was a huge, tarnished, silver platter. No one knew it was there, in fact no one knew it existed at all. The inscription was the clue: "To Brooks Atkinson With Love March 2, 1958." But what was the plate in honor of? That date was not significant in Atkinson's long career as a theatre critic and columnist.
I turned to the Theatre Division's massive clippings files and found a delightful Time magazine article in Atkinson's own file describing a surprise party for Atkinson "given with love, to let Brooks know what theater people think of him." Helen Hayes presented the plate to Atkinson, Mary Martin sang "A Wonderful Guy" to him accompanied by Richard Rodgers on the piano, and the 130 guests (all of their signatures are on the plate) read like a Who's Who of theatre. Even Marilyn Monroe's name is there, as she was married to playwright Arthur Miller at the time. We surmise that the plate came to us with the Brooks Atkinson Papers and after years of being hidden away, it is now polished and hanging on the wall over the exhibit cases. This exhibit is but a small sampling of the many three-dimensional objects the Theatre Division holds. Please visit the Library for the Performing Arts—you never know what you will find!
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Comments
Great post! The exhibit is
Submitted by Daisy (not verified) on October 18, 2013 - 3:15pm
What a rug for Zero! Love the
Submitted by Pilara (not verified) on October 18, 2013 - 4:08pm
What A Fabulous Job!
Submitted by Michael Hearn, LPA (not verified) on October 19, 2013 - 11:31am
Billy Rose
Submitted by Fritzi Huber (not verified) on January 31, 2014 - 5:56pm
Billy Rose
Submitted by Chris Kaufmann (not verified) on November 10, 2016 - 2:23pm