Box 2
Container
Contains 111 Results:
Published Works About Shaw , 1956-1957
Sub-Series — Box: 2
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The George Bernard Shaw Collection reflects the many sides of Shaw’s versatile personality. In his letters he emerges as a merciless critic, a careful businessman, a fond uncle, an artist struggling to work among various distractions, a political organizer, a kind benefactor, and finally as an aged man wearied by the demanding public role he played well into his final years. The collection documents the structure of his work and the daily routines he followed. Shaw’s correspondence to others...
Dates:
1956-1957
“Bernard Shaw and the Quakers,” by Warren S. Smith, 1956
Item — Box: 2, Folder: 144
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The George Bernard Shaw Collection reflects the many sides of Shaw’s versatile personality. In his letters he emerges as a merciless critic, a careful businessman, a fond uncle, an artist struggling to work among various distractions, a political organizer, a kind benefactor, and finally as an aged man wearied by the demanding public role he played well into his final years. The collection documents the structure of his work and the daily routines he followed. Shaw’s correspondence to others...
Dates:
1956
Typed manuscript, “The Dramatist’s Dilemma,” Ozy, 1957
Item — Box: 2, Folder: 145
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The George Bernard Shaw Collection reflects the many sides of Shaw’s versatile personality. In his letters he emerges as a merciless critic, a careful businessman, a fond uncle, an artist struggling to work among various distractions, a political organizer, a kind benefactor, and finally as an aged man wearied by the demanding public role he played well into his final years. The collection documents the structure of his work and the daily routines he followed. Shaw’s correspondence to others...
Dates:
1957
“GBS One-Hundredth Anniversary” edition of The Saturday Review, 21 Jul. 1956
Item — Box: 2, Folder: 146
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The George Bernard Shaw Collection reflects the many sides of Shaw’s versatile personality. In his letters he emerges as a merciless critic, a careful businessman, a fond uncle, an artist struggling to work among various distractions, a political organizer, a kind benefactor, and finally as an aged man wearied by the demanding public role he played well into his final years. The collection documents the structure of his work and the daily routines he followed. Shaw’s correspondence to others...
Dates:
21 Jul. 1956
John Bull’s Other Island Revisited, by Warren S. Smith, Oct. 1951
Item — Box: 2, Folder: 147
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The George Bernard Shaw Collection reflects the many sides of Shaw’s versatile personality. In his letters he emerges as a merciless critic, a careful businessman, a fond uncle, an artist struggling to work among various distractions, a political organizer, a kind benefactor, and finally as an aged man wearied by the demanding public role he played well into his final years. The collection documents the structure of his work and the daily routines he followed. Shaw’s correspondence to others...
Dates:
Oct. 1951
A Letter to George Bernard Shaw and That Gentleman’s Reply, printed by Weygand , 1946
Item — Box: 2, Folder: 148
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The George Bernard Shaw Collection reflects the many sides of Shaw’s versatile personality. In his letters he emerges as a merciless critic, a careful businessman, a fond uncle, an artist struggling to work among various distractions, a political organizer, a kind benefactor, and finally as an aged man wearied by the demanding public role he played well into his final years. The collection documents the structure of his work and the daily routines he followed. Shaw’s correspondence to others...
Dates:
1946
“Reappraisal of G.B.S.,” TIME Magazine, 13 Aug. 1956
Item — Box: 2, Folder: 149
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The George Bernard Shaw Collection reflects the many sides of Shaw’s versatile personality. In his letters he emerges as a merciless critic, a careful businessman, a fond uncle, an artist struggling to work among various distractions, a political organizer, a kind benefactor, and finally as an aged man wearied by the demanding public role he played well into his final years. The collection documents the structure of his work and the daily routines he followed. Shaw’s correspondence to others...
Dates:
13 Aug. 1956
“Shaw’s Bout with Christianity,” by Warren S. Smith, 28 Jul. 1956
Item — Box: 2, Folder: 150
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The George Bernard Shaw Collection reflects the many sides of Shaw’s versatile personality. In his letters he emerges as a merciless critic, a careful businessman, a fond uncle, an artist struggling to work among various distractions, a political organizer, a kind benefactor, and finally as an aged man wearied by the demanding public role he played well into his final years. The collection documents the structure of his work and the daily routines he followed. Shaw’s correspondence to others...
Dates:
28 Jul. 1956
Typed manuscript, “Un Petit Drame”: Bernard Shaw’s First Play, by Stanley Weintraub, undated
Item — Box: 2, Folder: 151
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The George Bernard Shaw Collection reflects the many sides of Shaw’s versatile personality. In his letters he emerges as a merciless critic, a careful businessman, a fond uncle, an artist struggling to work among various distractions, a political organizer, a kind benefactor, and finally as an aged man wearied by the demanding public role he played well into his final years. The collection documents the structure of his work and the daily routines he followed. Shaw’s correspondence to others...
Dates:
undated
The War Against Bernard Shaw, by Ozy , 1957
Item — Box: 2, Folder: 152
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
The George Bernard Shaw Collection reflects the many sides of Shaw’s versatile personality. In his letters he emerges as a merciless critic, a careful businessman, a fond uncle, an artist struggling to work among various distractions, a political organizer, a kind benefactor, and finally as an aged man wearied by the demanding public role he played well into his final years. The collection documents the structure of his work and the daily routines he followed. Shaw’s correspondence to others...
Dates:
1957
