Tumgik
#Carnegie Hall
Text
Tumblr media
Leonard Bernstein, music director of the New York Philharmonic, rehearses the orchestra in Arthur Honneger's Joan of Arc at the Stake in Carnegie Hall, April 22, 1958. The Chilean-born actress Felicia Montealegre is the narrator, Joan. Montealegre was then Mrs. Bernstein.
Photo: Associated Press
29 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Joni Mitchell, Carnegie Hall, New York City, February 23, 1972 © Anthony Pescatore.
125 notes · View notes
garadinervi · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
Nina Simone, Mississippi Goddam, [originally released as Mississippi *@!!?*@!], (45rpm recording and recording sleeve), from the album Nina Simone in Concert, PHM 200-135, Philips, 1964 [Carnegie Hall, New York, NY]
Tumblr media
69 notes · View notes
zurich-snows · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
Clara Rockmore plays the terpsitone, an electronic instrument invented by Léon Theremin, at Carnegie Hall in 1932
635 notes · View notes
sonimage1965 · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Nina Simone
Carnegie Hall New York
1965
2K notes · View notes
ktredshoes · 24 days
Text
I've got absolutely no evidence to suggest that he did but what if Rosie Rosenthal attended the Benny Goodman Carnegie Hall Concert on January 16, 1938? As a jazz fan, he certainly would have fit right in, and the timing would have worked. Rosie would have been a 20-year-old senior at Brooklyn College, so it would have been possible. That's not even mentioning that Gene Krupa, who Rosie mentions to the doctor at the flak house, was Goodman's drummer at that time.
47 notes · View notes
federer7 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Nina Simone, Carnegie Hall, New York, 1965
Photo: Alfred Wertheimer
659 notes · View notes
lisamarie-vee · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
554 notes · View notes
d-criss-news · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
carnegiehall: Broadway, television, and acclaimed recording artist @ leamichele made her Carnegie Hall debut earlier this week with special guests @ darrencriss and @ grofffsauce in an evening of music that celebrated the range and breadth of her career. 📷: @jennyandersonphoto & @richardtermine
60 notes · View notes
jgroffdaily · 6 months
Text
Part of Jonathan singing ‘She’ll be back’ at Lea Michele’s concert at Carnegie Hall. Another version:
64 notes · View notes
pacountry-madrid · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
youtube
Alan Jackson "Remember When"
Grand Ole Opry
Carnegie Hall (Stern Auditórium) 2006
La sala de conciertos Carnegie Hall abrió sus puertas por primera vez en 1891. Este hito histórico nacional, está ubicado entre 57th Street y Seventh Avenue, NY.
20 notes · View notes
newyorkthegoldenage · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media
In the 1920s, Carnegie Hall had a restaurant, as shown in this postcard. Today, it serves as Orchestra Room 1.
Photo: Carnegie Hall Archive
165 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Joni Mitchell, Carnegie Hall, NYC, February 23, 1972 © Anthony Pescatore.
57 notes · View notes
queenie435 · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
FIRST SUCCESSFUL FEMALE STANDUP COMEDIAN
Loretta Mary Aiken (March 19, 1897 – May 23, 1975), known by her stage name Jackie "Moms" Mabley, was the first successful female standup comedian and had a career that spanned over 50 years. Moms bridged the gap between vaudeville and modern stand up comedy. She was also the first woman comic to be feature at the Apollo theater and Carnegie Hall in 1962.
Moms Mabley was born Loretta Mary Aiken in Brevard, North Carolina, to a large family. She experienced a horrifying, traumatic childhood. Her firefighter father was killed in an explosion when she was 11 and her mother was later hit and killed by a truck on Christmas Day. By the time she was fifteen she had borne two children resulting from sexual assaults: the first by a neighbour when she was twelve, and the second, two years later by a local sheriff. Her stepfather, who had remained her guardian, gave both children up for adoption and then forced Moms to marry a much older man who she despised.
Aiken left home at the age of 14 and pursued a show business career, joining the African-American vaudeville circuit(aka Chitlin' Circuit)as a comedian under the Theatre Owners Booking Association, Fellow performer Jack Mabley became her boyfriend for a short time, and she took on his name, becoming Jackie Mabley, with "Moms" coming from her eventual reputation as a mentoring, mothering spirit.
Moms saw an opportunity to try out her own voice, and discovered that she was a natural at singing, dancing and telling a joke. Especially telling a joke. She realized she had something that many of her contemporaries didn’t - original material. Since her sheltered life had hampered any introduction to current comedy routines, Moms inevitably began to craft authentic pieces based on her own experiences, much of it based on Granny’s pearls of wisdom.
Moms talked to her audience as if they were her children. She delivered superbly solemn routines, original in their time yet amazingly, never bettered. As soon as Moms delivered her opening line “I 'gots' something to tell you...” she immediately captured the attention of everyone in the room - and those rooms were full for over fifty years.
By the early 1920s she had begun to work with the duo Butterbeans & Susie, and eventually became an attraction at the Cotton Club. Mabley entered the world of film and stage as well, working with writer Zora Neale Hurston on the 1931 Broadway show "Fast and Furious: A Colored Revue in 37 Scenes" and taking on a featured role in Paul Robeson's "Emperor Jones" (1933).
Starting in the late 1930s, Mabley became the first woman comedian to be featured at the Apollo, going on to appear on the theater's stage more times than any other performer. She returned to the big screen as well with "The Big Timers" (1945), "Boarding House Blues" (1948), and the musical revue "Killer Diller" (1948), which featured Nat King Cole and Butterfly McQueen.
By the late 1950s Moms Mabley was one of the highest-paid comics in the US, making $10,000 a week. Mabley's standup routines were riotous affairs augmented by the aesthetic she presented as being an older, housedress-clad figure who provided sly commentary on racial bigotry to African-American audiences. Her jokes also pointed towards a lusty zest for younger men.
Mabley began a recording career with her Chess Records debut album "The Funniest Woman Alive," which became gold-certified. Subsequent albums like "Moms Mabley at the Playboy Club," "Moms Mabley at the UN" and "Young Men, Si - Old Men, No" continued to broaden Mabley's reach (she ultimately recorded many albums). She landed spots on some of the top variety shows of the day, including "The Ed Sullivan Show," and graced the stage of Carnegie Hall.
Mabley continued performing in the 1970s. In 1971, she appeared on The Pearl Bailey Show. Later that year, she opened for Ike & Tina Turner at the Greek Theatre and sang a tribute to Louis Armstrong as part of her set.
Mobley had a starring role in the 1974 picture "Amazing Grace," which she was able to complete despite having a heart attack during filming.
Over the course of her life, Mabley had six children: Bonnie, Christine, Charles, and Yvonne Ailey, and two placed for adoption when she was a teenager. She died from heart failure on May 23, 1975, in White Plains, New York.
Actress Clarice Taylor, who portrayed Bill Cosby's mother on "The Cosby Show" and was a major fan of Mabley's work, staged the 1987 play "Moms at the Astor Place Theater, in which she portrayed the trailblazing icon.
Fellow comedian Whoopi Goldberg made her directorial debut with the documentary "Moms Mabley: I Got Somethin' to Tell You, which was presented at the Tribeca Film Festival and aired on HBO in 2013.
18 notes · View notes
datshitrandom · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Darren Criss x Lea Michele | ♡, ♡
26 notes · View notes
sondheims-hat · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
1992. Backstage at Sondheim: A Celebration at Carnegie Hall. Madeline Kahn, Liza Minnelli, Sondheim, Bernadette Peters, Glenn Close.
47 notes · View notes