Oscar Hammerstein and Jerome Kern, NYPL Digital Gallery Image ID: TH-26107

Not so much around here, but maybe where you are.

Time is running out to catch the 42nd Street Moon staging of the Jerome Kern – Oscar Hammerstein II musical, Very Warm for May (1939).  Although the show boasts a great score (including the standard, “All the things your are”),  it eked out a run of only 59 performances on Broadway.

The San Francisco company also announced recently that it had received a grant from the NEA to restore the script and score from another Kern-Hammerstein rarity, Three Sisters (1934).

If you can’t make it to the Bay Area now, pencil in a trip for the future.  If you do find yourself in San Francisco this weekend, scurry over to the Eureka Theater, where Very Warm for May runs through May 23.

Album cover image for the Jefferson Starship's "Blows Against the Empire"

Album cover image for the Jefferson Starship's "Blows Against the Empire"

The Museum of Performance and Design opens a major exhibition today tracing the vibrant Bay Area rock and roll scene, circa 1969-1973.

From the MSD Web site:

Co-curators Melissa Leventon and Alec Palao evoke this rich era using a wealth of rarely seen footage, posters, images, and costume from private and other public collections and the artists themselves.  Completing the picture is rarely heard audio, some of it drawn from the archive of vintage KSAN recordings recently added to MPD’s permanent collection.

The exhibition runs from September 25, 2009-August 2010, so there should be  ample opportunity for a trip to San Francisco.  Have you seen the stars tonight?

Herewith the first in what probably will be a (disjointed) series of posts on the 2008 SAA Annual Meeting:

In spite of the early time slot, a capacity crowd filled the recently-relocated reading room of the library at San Francisco’s Museum of Performance & Design. Following the arrival of the contingent ferried over from the Hilton by co-chairs Susan Brady and Adriana Cuervo, paper ballots were distributed for the election of the two open positions on the Performing Arts Roundtable – co-chair and steering committee member (1-year term). More about the results of the election in a separate post (I’m trying to recreate the suspense here). After introductions were made and announcements given by the representative for SAA’s 2009 Program Committee and our Council Liaison, Susan solicited input and ideas from those gathered for future Roundtable projects. As noted in the last issue of the newsletter, Susan is very interested in working on an initiative in which the Roundtable would coordinate an effort to identify and contribute form and genre terms for materials documenting costume, lighting, and scenic design (most likely to the Art & Architecture Thesaurus). If you are interested in participating, please contact Susan directly.

Session proposals for next’s year’s conference were briefly discussed. Susan mentioned that she already has had preliminary conversations with Helen Adair, Associate Curator of the Performing Arts at the Harry Ransom Center, UT Austin about some possibilities. With the extra-early October 8 deadline looming, your ideas for proposals for Roundtable-sponsored programs or requests for PAR endorsement of sessions from other groups are actively sought. Read the formal call for session proposals here. Look for more discussion via the listserv (and possibly this blog) on this topic in the coming weeks. As always, feel free to contact anyone in a PAR leadership role directly with your suggestions or concerns. The business segment of the meeting came to a close as those PAR members in attendance were given time to fill out their ballots, which then were collected to be tallied.

The program portion of the meeting began with a presentation by our generous host, Kirsten Tanaka, Head Librarian / Archivist of the Museum of Performance & Design. Kirsten provided us with an informative history of the development of the museum — which has involved many shifts in location, name, and mission over the years — and its current plans for the future. Also on the bill was Joe Evans, archivist of the San Francisco Symphony, who shared with us the special challenges of setting up a brand new archives program. Records formerly held by the Museum of Performance & Design were transferred back to the Symphony recently and Joe has been hard at work trying to collect other relevant materials. At this stage, the collection better documents special events and educational programs of the Symphony, rather than its performances. Still without an actual facility, Joe came up with a uniquely Californian solution to his storage situation — records are being kept temporarily in wine storage vaults!

Following the talks, Kirsten led a tour through the museum galleries, which also included a sampling of treasures specially selected for our group, which fellow librarian, Samantha Cairo-Toby, had guarded assiduously during our meeting. The special exhibition that was running at the time, Art & Artifice: 75 Years of Design at San Francisco Ballet (which may get its own post) also was available for viewing.

Many thanks must go to our hosts and presenters, as well as to our organizers, for this wonderful opportunity to have our meeting in one of the premier performing arts collections in this country.

The last notes have sounded and the 2008 Society of American Archivists Annual Meeting in San Francisco officially came to its conclusion. Rest assured that the Performing Arts Roundtable played its part. Presentations were presented, candidates elected, and other business duly conducted. Watch this space in the coming days (weeks?) for all the news as soon as I get my notes, etc. together.

Image credit: The city of San Francisco, California seen from the first street ramp of the San Francisco Oakland Bay Bridge. Nitrate negative of photograph by Dorothea Lange, April 1939. Library of Congress P&P Online Catalog Digital ID (intermediary roll film) fsa 8b33314 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/fsa.8b33314.

At the very beginning of his quest to discover the “truth” in Alfred Hitchcock’s film, Vertigo, the main character, Scottie, asks his friend Midge’s advice:

Scottie: Not that kind of history. The small stuff! About people you never heard of!

Midge: Oh! You mean the Gay Old Bohemian Days of Gay Old San Francisco. The juicy stories? Like who shot who in the Embarcadero August, 1879?

She directs him to Pop Leibel, the owner of the mythical Argosy Book Shop, where he receives an answer that may be helpful or not.

While I can’t guarantee that all of your burning questions will be answered, I do predict you will have a good time if you come to the SAA Performing Arts Roundtable meeting this Wednesday at 1:00 at San Francisco’s Museum of Performance and Design.

For now, this blog takes a brief nap. But all too soon we shall return with fresh reports from the 2008 SAA Annual Meeting.

And if I don’t run into you at the meeting, you probably can find me lurking by the Shubert Theater.

Image credit: Book Harbor exterior, San Francisco Historical Photograph Collection, San Francisco Library, Photo ID# AAC-6432.

Don’t say we didn’t warn you. SAA now reports that the room block at the conference hotel has sold out. If you are still contemplating attending the annual meeting in San Francisco, you probably should make your arrangements for accommodation as soon as possible.

Image credit: The 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire Digital Collection, California Historical Society, North Baker Research Library, FN-33967

Yuan Shih-kai is flanked by 2 soldiers with guns and 4 other men

Well, if we have received ours in the mail, it seems pretty likely that by now most everyone will have gotten their hands on the preliminary program for the 2008 Society of American Archivists Annual Meeting. Of course, you also can read it online, but its annual arrival in our mailboxes serves as a handy reminder to all who are planning to attend to register, or, certainly, to at least secure a hotel room at the conference rate as soon as possible.

Happily, this year’s conference will offer quite a few sessions of interest to performing arts archivists, including one sponsored by the SAA Performing Arts Roundtable, “Getting to the Heart of Performance: Archivists as Creative Collaborators” (406) on Friday, 29 August, as well as the PAR meeting itself, which will help kick things off on Wednesday, 27 August (we hope many of you will be in town that early). More about those events and other programs of interest to come soon (maybe we can even get some of the participants to contribute a few blog posts).

Disappointingly, the preliminary program itself gives surprisingly short shrift to San Francisco’s fabulous performing arts history (and those individuals, institutions and organizations that have helped to preserve and provide access to it). We hope to rectify that situation a little bit, by occasionally bringing to you some images of material from these collections. The original photograph above (of a 1920s stage production) is from the Collection of Chinese Theater Images in California, held by the Museum of Performance & Design (formerly SF PALM).

Image credit: A bomb throwing revolutionary confronts warlord Yuan Shih-kai, staged at the Great Star Theatre / [ID# ark:/13030/kt0g5014tw; Digital Archive of Chinese Theater in California, Online Archive of California]

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