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<eadheader langencoding="iso639-2b" relatedencoding="Dublin Core" scriptencoding="iso15924" dateencoding="iso8601" countryencoding="iso3166-1" repositoryencoding="iso15511"> 
<eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="deu" identifier="mss0510.xml">mss0510.xml</eadid> <filedesc> <titlestmt>
<titleproper encodinganalog="Title">Finding aid for Richard Hoffman - August Wilson collection<date normal="1988/1999">1988-1999</date></titleproper> <author encodinganalog="Creator">University
of Delaware Library, Special Collections</author> </titlestmt> 
<publicationstmt> <publisher encodinganalog="Publisher">University of Delaware
Library</publisher> <address> <addressline>Newark, Delaware
19717-5267</addressline> <addressline>Phone: 302-831-2229</addressline> 
<addressline>Fax: 302-831-6003</addressline> <addressline>URL:
http://www.lib.udel.edu/ud/spec/</addressline></address> 
<date encodinganalog="Date" normal="2010-10-22">Date encoded (2010 October 22)</date> </publicationstmt> </filedesc> <profiledesc> <creation>Finding aid
encoded <date normal="2010-10-22">2010 October 22</date></creation> <langusage><language langcode="eng" encodinganalog="Language" scriptcode="latn">English</language></langusage> </profiledesc> </eadheader> 
<frontmatter> <titlepage> <titleproper>Richard Hoffman -  August Wilson collection<date normal="1988/1999">1988-1999</date></titleproper> <publisher>Special
Collections Department, University of Delaware Library</publisher> <address> 
<addressline>Newark, Delaware 19717-5267</addressline> <addressline>Phone:
302-831-2229</addressline> <addressline>Fax: 302-831-6003</addressline> 
<addressline>URL: http://www.lib.udel.edu/ud/spec/</addressline></address>
</titlepage> </frontmatter> 
<archdesc level="collection" relatedencoding="MARC21"> <did> <origination> 
<persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="100">Hoffman, Richard.</persname></origination>   <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Richard Hoffman -  August Wilson collection<unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" normal="1988/1999" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1988-1999</unitdate>
</unittitle> 
<unitid countrycode="us" repositorycode="deu">MSS 510</unitid> 
<physdesc encodinganalog="300"><extent>.3 linear feet and oversize removals</extent> <extent>(1
box)</extent> </physdesc> <abstract>The Richard Hoffman - August Wilson Collection consists of two playbills and one poster from stage productions of African-American playwright August Wilson's plays <title>Seven Guitars</title>, <title>King Hedley II</title>, and <title>Joe Turner's Come and Gone</title>spanning the dates between 1988 and 1999.</abstract> <langmaterial encodinganalog="546">Materials entirely in
<language langcode="eng">English</language>.</langmaterial> 
<repository encodinganalog="852">University of Delaware Library -
<subarea>Special Collections</subarea></repository> </did> 
<acqinfo encodinganalog="541"> <head>Source</head> <p>Purchase, 2005.</p> </acqinfo> 
<accessrestrict encodinganalog="506"> <head>Access Restrictions</head> 
<p>The collection is open for research.</p> </accessrestrict> 
<userestrict encodinganalog="540"> <head>Terms Governing Use and
Reproduction</head> <p>Use of materials from this collection beyond the
exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S.
Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is
required from the copyright holder. Please contact Special Collections
Department, University of Delaware Library, 
<extref href="http://www.lib.udel.edu/cgi-bin/askspec.cgi">http://www.lib.udel.edu/cgi-bin/askspec.cgi</extref></p>
</userestrict> <prefercite encodinganalog="524"> <head>Citation</head> <p>MSS
510, Richard Hoffman  - August Wilson collection, Special Collections, University of Delaware Library,
Newark, Delaware.</p> </prefercite> <odd encodinganalog="500" type="shelving">
   <head>Shelving Summary</head>
   <list>
    <item>Box 1: Shelved in SPEC MSS manuscript boxes (1 inch)</item>
   <item>Removals: Shelved in SPEC MSS oversize boxes (32 inches)</item></list>
  </odd> <processinfo>
      <head>Processing</head>
      
      
    <p>Processed by Karalee Kopreski, October 2005.  Encoded by Jillian Kuzma, January 2009. Updated by Maureen Cech, November 2010.</p></processinfo> <bioghist encodinganalog="545"> <head>Biographical Notes</head> <bioghist><head>Richard Hoffman</head><p><note><p>Brooklyn-based theater collector and book dealer Richard Hoffman  built a number of literary collections around American playwrights over a period of many years.</p></note> Hoffman has said that he entered the United States Army in the 1950s as an actor and left as a writer.  His military experience led to an assignment to create a television program titled "Your Army in View," which consisted of interviews and live drama.  After his discharge from the service in 1955, Hoffman taught in the drama department of The City University of New York.  During this period he was awarded a Eugene O'Neill fellowship for playwriting.  He also began to seriously collect rare books and first editions of contemporary American dramatists, notably the playwrights Eugene O'Neill, Arthur Miller, and Neil Simon. Hoffman's interest in collecting first editions led to his career as an antiquarian book dealer.</p></bioghist><bioghist><head>August Wilson</head><p><note><p>American playwright August Wilson (1945-2005) was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  Wilson's dramatic work explores the black experience in twentieth-century America and is perhaps best known for the series of ten plays that portray the African-American life set specifically in Wilson's own Hill District of Pittsburgh in each decade of the twentieth century. Called The Pittsburgh Cycle (alternatively, the Century Cycle), this series of plays include some of his most critically acclaimed works, including <title>Ma Rainey's Black Bottom</title> (the only one of the cycle not set in Pittsburgh), which was performed on Broadway in 1984; <title>Fences</title> (1985), <title>The Piano Lesson</title> (1989), and <title>Joe Turner's Come and Gone</title> (1986).  </p></note></p><p>Wilson dropped out of school at the age of sixteen and began educating himself at the public library.  He became active in theater after founding a theater company in Pittsburgh in 1968 called Black Horizons on the Hill with fellow playwright Rob Penny.  Wilson's many honors and awards include two Pulitzer Prizes (for <title>Fences</title> and <title>The Piano Lesson</title>), a Tony award (for <title>Fences</title>), a National Humanities Medal (1999), Rockefeller and Guggenheim fellowships in playwriting, and several New York Drama Critics' Circle awards.</p><p><bibref><title>Contemporary Authors Online</title>, Gale, 2004, reproduced in Biography Resource Center.  Farmington Hills, Mich.: The Gale Group. 2004.</bibref> 
<bibref>"Biographical Sketch of August Wilson." <title>August Wilson Center for African American Culture</title>. http://www.augustwilsoncenter.org/awc/augustwilson.php, accessed October 20, 2010.</bibref></p></bioghist> </bioghist> <scopecontent encodinganalog="520"> 
<head>Scope and Content Note</head> <p><note><p>The Richard Hoffman - August Wilson Collection consists of two playbills and one poster from stage productions of African-American playwright August Wilson's plays <title>Seven Guitars</title>, <title>King Hedley II</title>, and <title>Joe Turner's Come and Gone</title>spanning the dates between 1988 and 1999. Included are programs from the Walter Kerr Theatre production of <title>Seven Guitars</title>,  one playbill from Boston University's Huntington Theatre Company production of <title>King Hedley II</title>, and a theater poster of <title>Joe Turner's Come and Gone</title> from the Ethel Barrymore Theatre in New York, signed by Wilson.</p></note> </p> </scopecontent> 
 <controlaccess> <head>Selected Search Terms</head> 
 
<controlaccess> <head>Personal Names</head> 
<persname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf">Wilson, August.</persname>
</controlaccess>  <controlaccess> <head>Topical Terms</head> 
<subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">
        American drama--20th century.</subject> <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">
        American drama--African American authors--20th century.</subject></controlaccess> 
 <controlaccess> <head>Form/Genre Terms</head> 
<genreform source="aat" encodinganalog="655">Playbills.</genreform>
<genreform source="aat" encodinganalog="655">Posters.</genreform></controlaccess> <controlaccess> <head>Occupation</head> 
<occupation source="aat" encodinganalog="656">Playwrights.</occupation>
</controlaccess>  <controlaccess> 
<head>Personal Contributors</head> 
<persname encodinganalog="700" source="lcnaf">Wilson, August.</persname></controlaccess></controlaccess> 
  
<relatedmaterial encodinganalog="544 0"> <head>Related Materials in this
Repository</head> <p>MSS 484  Richard Hoffman - Neil Simon collection</p> <p>MSS 485  Richard Hoffman - Arthur Miller collection</p><p>MSS 490  Richard Hoffman - David Rabe collection</p><p>MSS 496  Richard Hoffman - David Mamet collection</p><p>MSS 505  Richard Hoffman - John Guare collection</p><p>MSS 508  Richard Hoffman - Lorraine Hansberry collection</p></relatedmaterial>  
 <dsc type="in-depth"> <head>Detailed Contents List</head> 
<c01 level="file"> <did> <container type="box">1</container> 
<container type="folder">F1</container> <unittitle><title>Seven Guitars</title> playbill 
<unitdate normal="1996" type="inclusive">1996</unitdate></unittitle> <physdesc>[text]</physdesc></did> 
<scopecontent><p>Issue of <title>Playbill</title>, volume 96, issue 3, featuring <title>Seven Guitars</title> performed at the Walter Kerr Theatre.  The production was directed by Lloyd Richards and features Keith David.  Opening night, March 28, 1996. 2 copies.
</p></scopecontent></c01> <c01 level="file"> <did> <container type="box">1</container> 
<container type="folder">F1</container> <unittitle><title>King Hedley II</title> playbill
<unitdate normal="1999" type="inclusive">possibly 1999</unitdate></unittitle></did> 
<scopecontent><p>Playbill for performance by Boston University’s Huntington Theatre Company.  Directed by Marion Isaac McClinton.</p></scopecontent></c01><c01 level="file"> <did> <container type="box">1</container> 
<container type="folder">F2</container> <unittitle><title>Joe Turner's Come and Gone</title> theater poster
<unitdate normal="1988" type="inclusive">[1988]</unitdate></unittitle> <physloc>Removed to SPEC MSS oversize boxes (32 inches)
</physloc></did> 
<scopecontent><p>Ethel Barrymore Theatre, New York City, [March 1988]; signed by August Wilson.</p></scopecontent></c01></dsc> </archdesc> </ead> 
