Difference between revisions of ".Mzg0Mw.NjI1MQ"

From William and Mary Libraries Transcription Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "93 Cardboard cutouts stapled onto a small wooden cube. 48 Male Figures (Black), 48 Female Figures (Black, White and Red. Used for stage arrangement. Figures measure 4 in. (height...")
 
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
93 Cardboard cutouts stapled onto a small wooden cube. 48 Male Figures (Black), 48 Female Figures (Black, White and Red. Used for stage arrangement. Figures measure 4 in. (height) x 1 in. (width). Heights vary slightly. In good condition some figures have been bent and repaired with Scotch tape. Gift of Thomas Terry, Class of 1974. Located in the Carl Fehr Papers (UA6.017), Series 15, Box 6. UA2003.001.14.
+
Cardboard people cutouts on wood platform. Used for stage arrangement. In good condition with some soiled and bent figures. Gift of Thomas Terry, Class of 1974. Located in Carl Fehr Papers (UA6.017), Series 15, Box 6, 7, 8. UA2003.001.13.  Note:  Pappy used these figures and wooden risers to create elaborate formations mixing the men and women of The Choir.  For this photo, the figures are arranged to make the letter "A" which was sometimes done to open a concert with "America!"  Members always told Pappy's wife, Alice, that we made the "A" for her.  When it was time to change formations between numbers, it looked like a swarm of activity until a new image suddenly appeared.

Latest revision as of 08:59, 4 August 2013

Cardboard people cutouts on wood platform. Used for stage arrangement. In good condition with some soiled and bent figures. Gift of Thomas Terry, Class of 1974. Located in Carl Fehr Papers (UA6.017), Series 15, Box 6, 7, 8. UA2003.001.13. Note: Pappy used these figures and wooden risers to create elaborate formations mixing the men and women of The Choir. For this photo, the figures are arranged to make the letter "A" which was sometimes done to open a concert with "America!" Members always told Pappy's wife, Alice, that we made the "A" for her. When it was time to change formations between numbers, it looked like a swarm of activity until a new image suddenly appeared.