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ARCHIVE: Collection of 10 Archival Documents: Remembering Zero Mostel to Ben Raeburn. [Letters, Postcards, Legal Carbon, and Exhibition Program]

ARCHIVE: Collection of 10 Archival Documents: Remembering Zero Mostel to Ben Raeburn. [Letters, Postcards, Legal Carbon, and Exhibition Program] by Mostel, Zero (1915-1977) ; Ben Raeburn (Publisher) ; Aaron Siskind, Stanley Moss, et al.

4 to 8 days for delivery
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$1,250.00
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Seller: Blind Horse Books [ABAA - FABA]
Title
ARCHIVE: Collection of 10 Archival Documents: Remembering Zero Mostel to Ben Raeburn. [Letters, Postcards, Legal Carbon, and Exhibition Program]
Author
Mostel, Zero (1915-1977) ; Ben Raeburn (Publisher) ; Aaron Siskind, Stanley Moss, et al.
Seller
Blind Horse Books [ABAA - FABA] (United States)
Condition
Near Fine
Description
Near Fine. THE ZERO MOSTEL CONDOLENCE ARCHIVE (SEPTEMBER 1977-APRIL 1978) THE DEATH OF TEVYE: THE PRIVATE CONDOLENCE ARCHIVE OF HORIZON PRESS PUBLISHER BEN RAEBURN. A profoundly intimate, self-contained manuscript and ephemera archive documenting the immediate shock, private grief, and permanent institutional legacy following the sudden death of theatrical legend Zero Mostel on September 8, 1977. PRESERVED BY A FRIEND. Comprising 10 pieces of correspondence/legal papers, plus a memorial program preserved in the private files of Mostel's closest friend and publisher, Ben Raeburn of Horizon Press, the collection bridges the gap between the post-war New York artistic avant-garde and the formal establishment of Mostel's public memory. A COMMUNITY IN MOURNING. The archive features deeply personal correspondence from photography titan Aaron Siskind, poets and publishers Coburn Britton and Stanley Moss, philosopher James K. Feibleman, intellectual critic Manny Geltman, author Morris Lurie, and music editor Rose N. Rubin. Crucially, the collection includes the private legal files of Mostel's personal attorney, Harold Cande, mapping out the behind-the-scenes funding and design of the permanent Zero Mostel Study Carrels at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law Library. FROM LOSS TO LEGACY. The archive culminates in the rare, unmailed official program for the first-anniversary retrospective at Lincoln Center, featuring cover art by Al Hirschfeld. An irreplaceable, primary research assemblage documenting the final earthly footprint of a mid-century cultural icon. KEY FEATURES +++ GRIEF FROM PARIS: Original postcard sent from Paris by legendary photographer Aaron Siskind, signed 'Aan,' dated September 11, 1977, balancing professional obligations with heavy personal grief. +++ VOICES OF A CREATIVE CIRCLE: Highly expressive, urgent condolence letters from major independent publishing and literary figures including Coburn Britton (on 'PROSE' letterhead), philosopher James K. Feibleman, poet Stanley Moss, Australian author Morris Lurie, and 'Dissent' editor Manny Geltman. +++ AN INTIMATE VOICE: A rare, emotionally raw handwritten note from prominent music editor and folk song authority Rose N. Rubin speaking directly to the internal family dynamic of the estate. +++ FROM PRIVATE LOSS TO PUBLIC MEMORY: Three detailed legal documents from Brooklyn Counselor Harold Cande and Yeshiva University outlining a $10,000 memorial library tribute funded in Mostel's honor. +++ THE CULMINATION The official four-page Lincoln Center exhibition invitation from September 1978, complete with Al Hirschfeld's definitive caricature of Mostel as Tevye. +++ SPECS: 11 distinct archival items including 1 postcard, 6 letters (handwritten and typed), 1 legal carbon copy, and 1 exhibition program. Sizes vary from standard postcard dimensions to 8.5 x 11 inches. +++ Provenance: Retained intact within the private estate files of Horizon Press founder Ben Raeburn and Pat Pearcy. CONDITION +++ Memorial Announcement: The card block is crisp, structurally sound, and entirely free of postal cancellations or addresses. Shows light, uniform hand-soiling throughout the pale-green cardstock. While typically a detraction, within the context of this specific provenance, this gentle patination strongly suggests intimate, repeated handling by Raeburn in the years following his friend's passing-a moving physical testament to a lifelong association. +++Letters and Notes: Some were folded for mailing. All remain in fine to near fine condition. HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE : THE PRIVATE RECORD - While the public record documents Zero Mostel as a towering, mercurial force of the American stage, this private archive captures the immediate, unvarnished shock of his sudden passing within the elite nucleus of the post-war New York avant-garde. Horizon Press, under the visionary direction of publisher Ben Raeburn, served as a vital sanctuary for mid-century modernism, fostering deep, cross-disciplinary alliances between theatrical icons, abstract photographers, independent poets, and political critics. MEMORY BECOMES LEGACY. This collection is far more than a repository of grief; it is a primary document charting how a close-knit artistic community mobilized to transform raw loss into permanent legacy-moving from intimate private condolences to formal legal advocacy, and ultimately to public institutional commemoration at Lincoln Center. Preserved intact within Raeburn's estate files, it stands as an irreplaceable testament to the profound, unspoken bonds that underwrote twentieth-century American cultural history. SCHOLARLY FEATURES +++ PRIVATE VOICES: Offers unedited, raw insights into how the post-war Manhattan intellectual crowd experienced a sudden, monumental loss. +++ AN INTACT PUBLISHER'S FILE: Represents a cohesive, unculled sub-file from an elite independent publisher's estate, guaranteeing authentic historical context. SUBJECTS: Zero Mostel, Ben Raeburn, Horizon Press, Aaron Siskind, Al Hirschfeld, Performing Arts History, New York Publishing History, Mid-Century Intellectuals. GENRES: Archival Collections, Correspondence, Ephemera, Memorial Programs. FULL ANALYTICAL OVERVIEW, TRANSCRIPTIONS with IMAGES Available via PDF HERE
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[MANUSCRIPT LETTER, SIGNED, FROM JOHN AVERY TO JACOB GERRISH, CONFIRMING HIS APPOINTMENT AS COLONEL OF A REGIMENT OF LIGHT INFANTRY "TO BE RAISED FOR THE DEFENSE OF THIS AND THE OTHER NEW-ENGLAND STATES"]. by [American Revolution]: Avery, John:

12 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $10.00
Details
$1,250.00
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Seller: William Reese Company
Title
[MANUSCRIPT LETTER, SIGNED, FROM JOHN AVERY TO JACOB GERRISH, CONFIRMING HIS APPOINTMENT AS COLONEL OF A REGIMENT OF LIGHT INFANTRY "TO BE RAISED FOR THE DEFENSE OF THIS AND THE OTHER NEW-ENGLAND STATES"].
Author
[American Revolution]: Avery, John:
Seller
William Reese Company (United States)
Description
[Boston]. , April 24, 1779.. Appointment a Lexington Minuteman to Lead a New Regiment An interesting letter confirming a position as an officer in a new regiment for Jacob Gerrish of Massachusetts during the Revolutionary War. Gerrish (ca. 1739–1817) was the captain of a company of Minutemen in the Lexington Alarm in April 1775 and was commissioned as captain in Colonel Little's Massachusetts Regiment the following month, serving through the end of 1776. From 1777 through the end of the war he served in the Massachusetts militia. John Avery was an active member of the Sons of Liberty and served as the deputy secretary of the Province of Massachusetts Bay under Samuel Adams from 1776 to 1780. The letter reads in full: "Sir, I am directed to inform you of your appointment yesterday by the General Court as Col. of the Re't of Light Infantry to be raised for the Defence of this and the other New-England States agreeable to a resolve passed the 16th inst. The other officers are Joseph Durfee, Lieut Col., Habin Mann Major. You will be kind enough to inform me of your Determination upon the matter without loss of time." Staining, remnants of prior mounting on verso of conjugate leaf. Small hole and wax seal remnants from opening, without loss. About very good.