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  1. The elusive Broadway producer was, in the words of his second wife, Billie Burke, a man of “triple and quadruple personalities.”¹ If one were to read every bit of literature available on the man, one would find him to be a mass of contradictions. His press agent, Bernard Sobel, wrote, “In dealing with his girls, stars,...

  2. Broadway, a theatre of his own, The Ziegfeld, America’s most beautiful Playhouse, a dazzling suite of offices furnished with rare antiques, a fabulous collection of good luck elephants, trunks erect, and three gold. telephones. On 29 October, 1929, the stock market crashed—Flo’s losses totaled over a million—and with it the world of Flo ...

  3. 31 de dic. de 2014 · Pdf_module_version 0.0.22 Ppi 360 Rcs_key 24143 Republisher_date 20230625135053 Republisher_operator associate-jhoankhatelampadio-antonio@archive.org Republisher_time 160 Scandate 20230624062223 Scanner station65.cebu.archive.org Scanningcenter cebu Scribe3_search_catalog bwb Scribe3_search_id W8-BND-604 Tts_version 5.7-initial-24-gde4a12cb

  4. Florenz Ziegfeld was born in 1867 in Chicago. His father, Florenz, Sr., was head of the Chicago Musical College and a significant figure in the cultural life of the city. The junior Ziegfeld worked at his father's conservatory while in high school, earning a promotion to assistant manager in 1885. His lifelong interest in "low" culture was

  5. Florenz Ziegfeld and the Creation of a Cosmopolitan Chicago. Susan E. Hirsch. IN 1863 WHEN THE YOUNG PIANIST Florenz Ziegfeld arrived in Chicago from the Duchy of Oldenburg, the thirty- year- old city had a booming economy but it lacked permanent institutions to showcase Europe’s fine arts.

  6. 23 de jun. de 2015 · Ziegfeld and His Follies: A Biography of Broadway’s Greatest Producer. Cynthia Brideson, Sara Brideson. University Press of Kentucky, Jun 23, 2015 - Biography & Autobiography - 576 pages. The...

  7. revues. Many epithets have described Ziegfeld’s significance in American popular theater from “The Great Glorifier” (1934) to the “The Man Who Invented Show Business” (2008).1 Born in 1867, Florenz Ziegfeld was raised by a well-respected upper middle-class family in Chicago. His