Editore: Six-Fourteen-Seventy, Inc, Buffalo, NY, 1971
Da: Walkabout Books, ABAA, Curtis, WA, U.S.A.
Trade paperback, 72 pp. Fine. A detailed analysis of clashes between police and crowds attending an arts festival in the Allentown neighborhood of Buffalo, NY on June 14, 1970. Sources differ on who started the incident, but it is clear that spectators to the arrest of a disorderly person threw rocks and bottles at the police and the police responded with extensive use of tear gas, sending many people -- including small children -- to the hospital and leaving the community outraged at what was perceived as an excessive response. The authors combed through approximately 200 affidvits from people who were present as well as extensive media coverage of the incident and concluded that both police and politicians refused to concede that mistakes had been made and that the news media unquestioningly accepted the official narrative.
Script Format, reprint. Condizione: As New. / 161 PGS. / 1945 DRAFT / I HAVE MORE TITLES, LET ME KNOW IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR OTHER TITLES /THE SCRIPT IS PRINTED ON THREE-HOLE PUNCHED PAPER AND BOUND WITH 2 BRASS BRADS /.
Editore: Universal Pictures, Universal City, 1930
Da: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, U.S.A.
Manoscritto / Collezionismo cartaceo
Vintage program for the 1930 film. With the stamp of Beltonian Theatre in Belton, Texas on the verso of the final leaf, along with contemporary manuscript pencil annotations noting showings on two Saturdays in October. Based on the 1919 play by Langdon McCormick, about a love triangle between two adventurers and a woman who is stranded in their cabin during a blizzard. One of John Huston's first jobs in film, as a screenwriter and extra. 3.5 x 5.5 inches. Bifold. Very Good plus, with light wear and creasing.
Editore: Universal Pictures, Universal City, 1930
Da: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, U.S.A.
Fotografia
Vintage reference photograph of actress Lupe Vélez on the set of the 1930 film, wearing a fur coat and playfully posing with a large sno-cone made with director William Wyler's megaphone. Stamp of still photographer Bert Anderson on the verso, along with a printed mimeo snipe. Based on the 1919 play by Langdon McCormick, about a love triangle between two adventurers and a woman who is stranded in their cabin during a blizzard. 8 x 10 inches. Lightly faded on the edges, else Near Fine.