The Florenz Ziegfeld Photograph
Collection documents the history of the Ziegfeld Follies and Midnight Frolics,
revues and musical comedies through production photographs and portrait and stage
photographs of showgirls and actors. The collection also includes a small amount
of
other materials, including photographs, clippings, and programs formerly located
in
the Florenz Ziegfeld Biographical File.
Call Number:
Performing Arts Collection PA-00121
Language:
English
Access:
Open for research
Administrative Information
Acquisition:
Assembled by Performing Arts staff, primarily from the Albert Davis Collection.
Processed by:
Suzy Nones, 2001; Ancelyn Krivak, 2009; Helen Baer, 2012
Repository:
The University of Texas at Austin, Harry Ransom
Center
Scope and Contents
Florenz Ziegfeld entered show business promoting the vaudeville strongman Eugene
Sandow. He met his future wife Anna Held in Europe in 1896 and presented her in
several musicals in New York. By 1905 he was producing musical comedies for the
theatrical booking monopoly the Syndicate. In 1907 he launched the Follies (later
renamed the Ziegfeld Follies), a revue with glamorous showgirls and some of the
best
performers of the day. The Follies featured or made famous Fannie Brice, Bert
Williams, Nora Bayes, Ed Wynn, W. C. Fields, Mary Eaton, Will Rogers, and others.
It
ran in annual installments until Ziegfeld's death in 1932. Ziegfeld also produced
the revues the Midnight Frolic and Nine O'Clock Revue, as well as numerous musical
comedies, notably Show Boat and Sally. He divorced Held and married Billie Burke,
with whom he had a daughter. After Ziegfeld's death, Burke presented the 1933
and
1936 editions of the Follies.
The Florenz Ziegfeld Photograph Collection documents the history of the Ziegfeld
Follies and Midnight Frolics, revues and musical comedies through production
photographs and portrait and stage photographs of showgirls and actors. The
collection also includes a small amount of other materials, including
advertisements, playbills, programs, souvenir programs, clippings from newspapers
and magazines, sheet music and some miscellaneous items such as tickets and an
original caricature.
The material is arranged in two series: I. Productions (arranged by type, then
chronologically) and II. Performers (arranged alphabetically). Series II. includes
materials removed from the Theater Biography Collection (known as the "Bio File").
Related Material
The Florenz Ziegfeld Collection in the Performing Arts Collection at the Harry Ransom
Center contains additional materials related to Florenz Ziegfeld and the Ziegfeld
musical revues, including additional personal and production photographs.