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・ Frank Waller
・ Frank Van der Stucken
・ Frank Van der Veer
・ Frank Van Dun
・ Frank van Eijs
・ Frank van Essen
・ Frank van Harmelen
・ Frank van Hattum
・ Frank van Kappen
・ Frank van Kouwen
・ Frank van Mosselveld
・ Frank van Neck
・ Frank Van Passel
・ Frank van Soldt
・ Frank van Straten
Frank Vance Strauss
・ Frank Vandenbroucke
・ Frank Vandenbroucke (cyclist)
・ Frank Vandenbroucke (politician)
・ Frank Vandiver
・ Frank Vanhecke
・ Frank Varey
・ Frank Vargas Pazzos
・ Frank Varley
・ Frank Varner
・ Frank Varrichione
・ Frank Vatrano
・ Frank Vaughan
・ Frank Vaughan (rugby league)
・ Frank Vaughn


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Frank Vance Strauss : ウィキペディア英語版
Frank Vance Strauss
Frank Vance Strauss was an Ohio business man who was the first to specialize in printing the theatre programme in New York City. He began by collecting ads for the Madison Square Theatre〔''Theater Playbills and Programs''. memory.loc.gov/ammem/vshtml/vsprge.html〕 and transformed the programme from a four page leaflet into a magazine playbill that included advertisements along with the credits.〔Bordman, Gerald and Thomas Hischak. ''The Oxford Companion to American Theatre''. New York: Oxford Uni. Press, 2004.(p 502)〕 Strauss began his work in 1884, and a year later recruited companies like Caswell Massey, Runkel Brothers Cocoa, and Schirmer Pianos to be advertised in his programs.〔Bloom, Ken. ''Broadway: Its History, People, and Places: An Encyclopedia''. New York: Routland, 2004.〕
In 1891, Strauss merged with his main competitor and, by 1905, standardized the "design and layout of the programs so that the makeup would be easier and the sizes of advertising space uniform."〔
Because the programs were made of such a higher quality, audiences were collecting them as souvenirs. Strauss, along with other publishers, started to create albums and leather-bound volumes specifically for collecting programs.〔Higgins, Sydney. ''A History of Playbills and Theatre Programs''. www.the-camerino-players.com/playbills/index.html〕 In 1918, Strauss sold the company to his nephew, Richard M. Huber. Under Huber the company's name changed to ''The Magazine Theater Program'' and, by 1924, was printing 16,000,000 playbills for over 60 theatres. This was the beginning of Huber's monopoly over program printing for Broadway theatres.〔
Although Strauss founded the idea for the magazine playbill, Huber is given credit for starting the ''New York Theater Program Corporation'', which in 1934-35 titled its magazines ''The Playbill''. ''The Playbill'' layout varied during this time. The more successful a show the more pages ''The Playbill'' contained. ''Anything Goes'' was 48 pages while the ''Post Road'' was only 12 pages. Advertisements could also subscribe to a specific show and not a whole season. This was evident when advertisements contained the show's title within their ads. During the production of ''Rain or Shine'' Rogers Peet Company clothing store placed an ad that read “Rain or shine Scotch Mists are fine. Handsome, stylish overcoats that are wetproof too!”〔 Advertisements were not the only additions to the playbill, but also short articles that discussed fashion, car care, book reviews, interviews, and even jokes.〔Viagas, Robert. ''Playbill Magazine Celebrates 124 Years in the Biz Sept. 21''. www.playbill.com/news/article/133027-Playbill-Magazine-Celebrates-125-Years-in-the-Biz-Sept-21. 21 September 2009〕
In 1956, after 70 years as a family company, Huber sold ''The Playbill'' to producer and real estate magnate Roger L. Stevens.〔 Stevens changed the name simply to ''Playbill'' and no longer allowed a production's image to dominate the cover. Instead, the cover was a generic design with the play's information located inside the ''Playbill''. Public outcry forced Stevens to allow a colorful band to strip across the top of the ''Playbill'' with the show's information printed underneath. Over time the colorful band generalized into the yellow strip that is still common in today's ''Playbill''.〔
Theatre playbills have become very valuable articles of information to a city or nation’s cultural history. The current ''Playbill'' collects samples of all their publications, which helps researchers understand what genre of theatre was being produced during a particular decade. Unfortunately, a fire destroyed all of Playbill’s theatre listings prior to 1924.〔Botto, Louis. At This Theatre: 100 Years of Broadway Shows, Stories, and Stars. New York: Applause Theatre & Cinema Books, 2002. (p xiii)〕
==References==


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