Weill-Lenya Research Center collection of performance history records of Happy end, 1929-[ongoing] (1929, 1958-9999).

ArchivalResource

Weill-Lenya Research Center collection of performance history records of Happy end, 1929-[ongoing] (1929, 1958-9999).

Includes programs, press clippings, photographs, and related materials for stage productions, broadcasts, and film or video adaptations (if any) of the work, beginning with the September 1929 premiere at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm in Berlin, Germany. Posters, photographic prints (for productions prior to 1983), and recordings are filed in other series.

<63> folders (<.7> linear ft.).

ger,

eng,

fre,

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

Weill, Kurt

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6rr1x51 (person)

As a result of the success of his Broadway musical Lady in the dark in 1941, German-born composer Kurt Weill and his wife, the singing actress Lotte Lenya, were able to buy "Brook House," in Rockland County, New York, moving there during their sixth year in the United States. From Brook House, and a couple of addresses in Los Angeles during his trips there, Weill kept in touch, until a month before his death, with his parents, who had emigrated to Israel in 1935. From the description...

Hauptmann, Elisabeth.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6rb777s (person)

Brecht, Bertolt, 1898-1956

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w67082kg (person)

Brecht was a German dramatist and poet. Karl Korsch was a Marxist theoretician. From the description of Correspondence with Karl Korsch, 1934-ca.1954. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 122556373 From the guide to the Bertolt Brecht correspondence with Karl Korsch, ca. 1934-1954., (Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, Harvard University) Reyersbach was a pediatrician with special training in endocrinology and rheumatic diseases; she came to the U.S. in ...