Doug Reside
@dougreside
Curator of the Billy Rose Theater Division @nypl
[My opinions do not necessarily reflect those of anyone or any institution with whom/which I associate]
ID: 14185715
20-03-2008 17:56:53
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You may have seen Jesse Green's piece in the NYT Theater last year about the animations our Theatre Curator made of negatives of Cabaret from the Friedman-Abeles collection. Thanks to recent donations, we now have color photos as well and new animations!
Audiences might want Paris Hilton in the Apple Tree (HT: #HunterBell Jeff Bowen Bowen), but Barbara Harris's eyebrow game was on point in the 1966 original.
Curator Doug Reside writes about his last correspondence with Stephen Sondheim in which they discussed the composer's interest in creating a video game adaptation of INTO THE WOODS: nypl.org/blog/2022/07/2…
Learn how to best preserve your work and how to keep it safe in the digital realm. Join DG Copyright Managment and The Library for Performing Arts's Doug Reside on 10/20. thedgcm.org/national-estat… #EstatePlanningAwarenessWeek #EstatePlanning #LetYourWorkLiveOn #Archives #Legacy
Is 1776 revolutionary? A recent revival has raised some questions about the effect of showing the 1969 musical today. Doug Reside looks at some of the materials at the Library for the Performing Arts to uncover the original intentions of the producers. nypl.org/blog/2022/11/0…
I recently published a short piece of the making of the original production of The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window. You can read it here: nypl.org/blog/2023/04/1… Also, The Library for Performing Arts has digitized over 1000 photos of the original production. Here's Rita Moreno:
From the mid-70s, the appearance of musical theatre on television helped to establish the musical as an important American art form worthy of critical attention. Discover more about this development in a chapter from Doug Reside’s “Fixing the Musical”: oxford.ly/3XdrJBx