Inventory of the Larry Neal Papers,
1961-1985
Sc MG 344
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. New York Public Library.
515 Malcolm X Boulevard
New York, NY 10037-1801
(212) 491-2224
scmarbref@nypl.orghttp://nypl.org/research/sc/scm/marb.html
©2000 The New York Public Library.
Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations. All rights reserved.
This inventory was prepared as part of an archival preservation project to arrange,
describe and catalog resources essential for the study of the post-Civil Rights
period of African-American history. The necessary staff and supplies for the Archival Resources for the Study of the Post-Civil Rights
Movement project were made available through a combination of funding
from the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the City and State of New
York.
Table of Contents
Descriptive Summary
Title
Larry Neal Papers, 1961-1985
Collection Number
Sc MG 344
Size
45 boxes (16.8 linear feet
Repository
The New York Public Library
Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books
Division
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
Administrative Information
Source
Purchased from Evelyn L. Neal, 1986
SCM 86-32
Donated by Evelyn L. Neal, 1988
SCM 88-49
Donated by Evelyn L. Neal, 1990
SCM 90-17
Biography
Larry (Lawrence Paul) Neal was well-known as a writer, literary and music critic, and
major catalyst for the Black Arts Movement of the 1960's and 1970's. Born September
5, 1937 in Atlanta, Georgia he grew up in Philadelphia and graduated from Roman
Catholic High School. In 1961 he received his Bachelor of Arts degree in history and
English from Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, and was a recipient of the
Eichelburger Award for Creative Writing from that school. After graduating from
college, Neal taught creative writing, a course entitled “Afro-American
Literature and Cultural History,” and other English courses at several
universities including City College of New York, Case Western Reserve and Yale
University between 1963 and 1976. In 1970 he was a recipient of a Guggenheim
Fellowship for Afro-American critical studies. Graduate courses in folklore
completed in 1964 at the University of Pennsylvania provided Neal with the
opportunity to develop his writing skills, but it was folk tales, slang and street
chants that shaped his distinctive style of poetry.
In 1964 Neal moved from Philadelphia where he had been teaching at Drexel Institute
of Technology to New York City. The following year he married Evelyn Rodgers, a
chemist at Mount Sinai Hospital; they adopted a boy, Avatar, in 1971. The Neal's
residence on Jumel Terrace in the Sugar Hill section of Harlem, purchased in 1971,
served as a magnet for the creative individuals of the period, particularly literary
figures whose works gained attention during the late 1960's and the early 1970's,
including Amiri Baraka (Leroi Jones), Ishamel Reed, Quincy Troupe, Askia Muhammad
Toure, Hoyt Fuller, Stanley Crouch, and Henry Dumas. During this period, Neal worked
as a copywriter for John Wiley and Sons (1964), and wrote for Liberator magazine, a progressive journal of that time and a
publication for which he eventually became arts editor. During his Liberator period (1964-1966) he wrote accounts of
cultural events and conducted interviews with writers, artists, and musicians.
Neal's commitment to radical politics was demonstrated through his position as
education director of the Black Panther Party and as a member of the Revolutionary
Action Movement, both in the 1960's. Baraka has written that he and Neal initially
met at a demonstration protesting Patrice Lumumba's 1961 assassination. Neal's
relationship with Baraka became more firmly established after Neal wrote an article
entitled The Development of Leroi Jones which
discussed Baraka's transformation from a Beat poet to a revolutionary artist.
Together with Askia Toure, Neal and Baraka became principal movers in a group that
created the Black Arts Repertory Theatre School in Harlem in 1964. They produced a
number of plays including Jones' Jello and
Dutchman, and also initiated a series of
poetry readings and concerts. The Black Arts Theatre attacked the values of the
Establishment theater in New York and presented art that reflected black life with
its history of resistance and struggle. The theater was forced to close because of
factionalism among the members and the cut of government funds (channeled through
HARYOU-ACT) due to this theater's opposition to traditional theater and values. By
now, however, the new direction forged in the theater became the impetus for the
Black Arts Movement.
This movement by young black artists in the 1960's sought to create art forms that
would advance black people's liberation. Neal described the Black Arts Movement as
being radically opposed to any concept that alienates the artists from their
community. Rather than fuse their ideas with the mainstream white culture, black
writers, plastic artists and musicians should speak directly to the needs and
aspirations of black America. Neal wrote that “Black Art is the aesthetic
and spiritual sister of the Black Power concept.” Both related to the
African-American's desire for self-determination and nationhood. According to Neal,
Black Arts was concerned with the relationship between art and politics; Black Power
with the art of politics. The Black Arts Movement proposed a separate symbolism,
mythology, critique and iconology. Individuals whose perceptions and art work were
associated with the movement knew that their perception of reality was different
from that of the white American majority.
Neal's belief in the centrality of African-American music to developing a black
aesthetic was expressed in essays he published in Negro
Digest in 1966 and 1967. He, Baraka and A.B. Spellman also collaborated
on a magazine, Cricket, a publication devoted to
African-American music, which espoused a black nationalistic philosophy. Although
Cricket ceased publication after three issues, it
served as a vehicle through which black writers attempted to define black art forms
and aesthetics.
In 1968 Neal and Baraka edited Black Fire: An Anthology of
Afro-American Writing, a significant publication for the Black Arts
Movement, and Neal wrote two ground breaking essays that sought to define the
movement. Still the seminal anthology of that period, Black
Fire contains works by well-known social critics, poets and playwrights
such as James Boggs, Ed Bullins, Sonia Sanchez, Stokely Carmichael, John Henrik
Clarke, Harold Cruse, Henry Dumas, and Hoyt Fuller.
In addition to writing essays concerning such topics as the arts and artists, Harlem,
and the death of Malcolm X, Neal served as a literary and music critic, writing
essays about the works of Ralph Ellison, Zora Neale Hurston, Charlie Parker, and
others. Among his many projects, Neal was responsible for the publication of a new
edition of Hurston's autobiography, Dust Tracks on a Road,
and for her novel, Jonah's Gourd Vine, for
which he wrote the introductions (1971).
Neal also published two books of poetry: Black Boogaloo
(1969) and Hoodoo Hollerin' Bebop Ghosts
(1974). Black Boogaloo focuses on discovering
the historical moment when Africans lost their connection with their gods and
ancestors, thereby losing themselves. Hoodoo Hollerin' Bebop
Ghosts, Neal's second volume of poetry, explores black folk culture and
figures, especially black liberation and Shine. His dramatic works include The Glorious Monster in the Bell of the Horn and
In an Upstate Motel, both of which were
performed during Neal's lifetime as well as after his death. Lesser known as an arts
administrator, Neal held the position of Executive Director for the District of
Columbia Commission on the Arts and Humanities (1976-1979), a city agency that made
grants to artists and organizations that encouraged the development of the arts in
black communities, including the Elma Louis School of Fine Arts in Roxbury,
Massachusetts.
At his death of a heart attack at age forty-three, Neal was assisting the
percussionist Max Roach to write his autobiography and had completed a jazz series
for a Boston television station and a film script on musical improvisation for Clark
College in Atlanta. Neal had nearly completed a book on the rise of black
consciousness in the 1960's he had entitled New Space:
Critical Essays on American Culture. This book, published posthumously
as Visions of a Liberated Future: Black Arts Movement
Writings: Larry Neal (New York, Thunder's Mouth Press, 1989) is a
compilation of selected works by Neal (encompassing poetry, essays, and drama); many
entries were published during his lifetime. Although not credited, Neal's widow
Evelyn Neal assisted in the production of the book by selecting material that was
included.
BibliographyHarris, Norman, Larry Neal. Davis, Thadious
M. and Trudier Harris, eds. Dictionary of Literary Biography.
Vol. 38, Afro-American Writers After 1955: Dramatists and Prose Writers.
Detroit, MI: Gale Research, 1985Neal, Larry, The Black Arts Movement. Davis
Thadious M. and Trudier Harris, eds. Dictionary of Literary
Biography, vol. 38, Afro-American Writers After 1955: Dramatists and Prose
Writers. Detroit, MI: Gale Research, 1985Neal, Larry. Visions of a Liberated Future: Black Arts
Movement Writings, Schwartz, Michael, ed. New York: Thunder's Mouth
Press, 1989
Scope and Content
The Larry Neal Papers date from 1961 to 1985 and document Neal's role as
writer/editor and seminal figure in the Black Arts Movement. The papers consist
principally of manuscripts and research materials for Neal's diverse forms of
writings, including essays, scripts, screenplays, poems, stories, and anthologies.
Published copies of some of his writings are included in the collection, as are
writings by colleagues. Neal's professional papers include correspondence with
colleagues and publishers. Materials post-dating his death in 1981 document the
various memorials and a conference honoring his achievements.
Organization
The collection is divided into six series and thirteen subseries. The titles, dates
and box numbers are as follows:
- Personal Papers, 1966-1985: Box 1
- Professional Papers, 1966-1981: Box 2-5
- Writings
- Essays, 1970-1975: Box 6-8
- Scripts, 1972-1980: Box 9-14
- Screenplays, 1967-1979: Box 15-17
- Screenplays, 1967-1979: Box 15-17
- Poems, 1974-1979: Box 18-19
- Anthologies and Other Publication Projects, 1961-1981: Box 20-23
- Short Stories, 1973 & n.d.: Box 24-25
- Interviews, 1973-1980: Box 26
- Notes, 1971-1979: Box 29-30
- D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities
- Reference Materials
- Subject File, 1965-1980: Box 31-36
- Card File, n.d.: Box 37
- Annotated Books, 1960-1978: Box 38-40
- Writings by Other Authors
- Essays, Short Stories, 1966-1979: Box 41-43
- Scripts, 1972-1977: Box 44-45
Series Descriptions/Container List
Personal Papers
The PERSONAL PAPERS series, 1966-1985 (.4 lin. ft.),
is composed of biographical information including Neal's resumes,
incoming letters, his marriage certificate, and photocopies of photographs
of his family and colleagues (Schomburg Center's Photographs and Prints
Division maintains a Larry Neal Photograph Collection). Most of this series
deals with Neal's death in 1981, and includes letters of condolence, funeral
(viewing) guest book, memorials, obituaries, literary criticism in the form
of a memorial and a literary conference named in his honor, which was
sponsored by the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities.
b. 1 f. 1
Biographical Information/Resumes,
n.d.
b. 1 f. 2
Personal Correspondence, 1969-1978
b. 1 f. 3
Astrology, September 21, 1970
b. 1 f. 4
Marriage Certificate, 1966
b. 1 f. 5
Applications for Birth Certificate and Passport,
1969
b. 1 f. 7
Financial Records, 1968-1978
b. 1 f. 8
Photographs - Photocopies,
[1972-1981]
b. 1 f. 10
Funeral, Hospital, Insurance,
1981
b. 1 f. 11
Letters of Condolence, January,
1981
b. 1 f. 12
Letters of Condolence, Flower Cards, January-March, 1981
b. 1 f. 13
Viewing-Guest Book, January,
1981
b. 1 f. 15
Obituaries, January, 1981
b. 1 f. 16
Literary Criticism - The Mojo and the
Sayso: Myth and Ritual in the Work of Larry Neal by Wesley
Brown, November 14, 1981
b. 1 f. 17
D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities - Second Annual Larry
Neal Writer's Conference, May 11-12,
1984
Professional Papers
The PROFESSIONAL PAPERS series, 1966-1981 (1.6 lin. ft.),
includes letters from significant correspondents such as Amiri
Baraka, Gwendolyn Brooks, Eddie Ellis, Hoyt Fuller, Langston Hughes, Woodie
King, Dudley Randall, Max Roach, Leopold Sedar Senghor, and Chiz Schultz.
Topics discussed in the correspondence include Neal's plans for projects
involving music, writing, filming, and the production of plays he wrote as
well as the Journal of Black Poetry. Avatar
Enterprises, Neal's production company is represented by the incorporation
book and related letters.
As an instructor at various universities, the teaching materials, student
papers, and administrative documents in the collection reflect this aspect
of Neal's career. Correspondence with organizations in which he was involved
include the Federal Theatre Project in the 1970's and 1980's. Addresses and
datebooks complete the professional papers series.
b. 3 f. 2
Letter To the Editor, 1978 and
n.d.
b. 3 f. 6
Oye Willie Writers' Guide,
1980
b. 3 f. 11
Journal of Black Poetry, 1967-1969
b. 3 f. 14
Diary - Excerpts, May 1968
b. 3 f. 15
Brooklyn College, SEEK Program,
1968
b. 3 f. 16
Teaching Materials, 1968-1980
b. 3 f. 17
Yale University, 1971-1980
b. 4 f. 1
Williams College, Colgate University, 1974-ca. 1980
b. 4 f. 6
Lincoln University, 1979-1980
b. 4 f. 7
Creative Writing Class - Craft of Writing,
1980
b. 4 f. 8
Class Materials and Notes,
n.d.
b. 4 f. 9
Permission for Reprints, 1967-1973
b. 4 f. 10
Contracts, Agreements, 1968-1979
b. 4 f. 11
Copyright Registrations, 1968-1976
b. 4 f. 13
Screenplay Writer's Employment Agreement re 0 with Neal and Hoyt
Fuller
b. 4 f. 14
Federal Theatre Project, n.d.
b. 4 f. 15
Gordy Foundation Program Memorandum,
n.d.
b. 4 f. 16
Langston Hughes Memorial Tribute - Program,
1967
b. 4 f. 17
National Center of Afro-American Artists, Elma Lewis School of
Fine Arts, n.d.
b. 4 f. 18
WNET - Proposal Submitted to National Endowment for the
Humanities - “Celebrating Jazz,”
1978
b. 5 f. 1
Addresses, Business Cards, n.d.
Writings
The largest series in this collection is Neal's WRITINGS,
1970-1975, (8.2 lin. ft.) and is divided into the genres in which
he wrote.
Essays
The Essays subseries, 1970-1975 (1 lin. ft.)
encompasses literary criticism principally of black writers and themes
for which Neal was well-known. The essays Neal intended to be included
in New Space: Critical Essays on American
Culture, published posthumously as Visions of a Liberated Future: Black Arts Movement Writings: Larry
Neal, have been maintained under Neal's original title.
b. 6 f. 2-3
Any Day Now: Black Art and Black
Liberation
b. 6 f. 4
Autobiographical Sketch -
Incomplete
b. 6 f. 5
The Arts, Technology and
Media - Incomplete
b. 6 f. 6
The Beatles is Comin' Out of a Different
Bag
b. 6 f. 8
Black Aesthetic/Writer's Theory
b. 6 f. 9
A Letter on the Black
Aesthetic - Draft The Black
Aesthetic and Ideological Imperative - Draft
b. 6 f. 10
Black Aesthetic - Fragment
b. 6 f. 13
Black History/Cultural Development - Fragment
b. 6 f. 14
Black Literature - Incomplete
b. 6 f. 16
Black Power in the International
Scene
b. 6 f. 17
Black Power/Liberation - Incomplete
b. 6 f. 19
The Blues Regenerates a
Man - Incomplete
b. 6 f. 20
Clarence Cooper, - Essay
and Interview, October 7, 1967
b. 6 f. 21
Claude Brown in the Promised Land Role of Black Writers, 1965
b. 6 f. 22
Coming at You Weird -
[Death of Malcolm X]
b. 6 f. 24
A Conversation With Piri Thomas
b. 6 f. 25
Cultural Conference - Notes: Guideline
#One, 1978
b. 6 f. 26
Cultural Nationalism and Black
Theatre - Incomplete
b. 6 f. 27
Eatonville's Zora Neale Hurston:
A Profile - Fragment
b. 6 f. 28
Several Versions and Published Copy,
1970
b. 6 f. 31
Bird's Word, [About
Charlie Parker], 1975
b. 6 f. 32
The Idea of the Third World Black
Power in the International Context - Nationalism,
Pan-Africanism)
b. 6 f. 33
Introduction to the Black Arts
Movement
b. 6 f. 34
Jonah's Vine Gourd (Zora Neale
Hurston) - Notes for Introduction
b. 6 f. 35
Langston Hughes: Black America's Poet
Laureate
b. 6 f. 36
The Mighty Wall -
Fragment
b. 7 f. 1
Larry Neal on Malcolm X
(For Rolling Stone)
b. 7 f. 2
Leon Damas - Essay -
Incomplete
b. 7 f. 3
A Nation of Flowers: A Black
Aesthetic
b. 7 f. 6
Note on the Artist, From Otto Rank's Art
and Artist
b. 7 f. 7
Notes on Afro-American Literature and
the Class Struggle
b. 7 f. 8
Notes on Marxism and Black Nationalism
Impact on Black Arts Concepts
b. 7 f. 9
On the Significance of the Black Panther
Party to the Nationalists
b. 7 f. 10
Origin of Black Arts Movement
b. 7 f. 11
The Plot to Destroy Black
Militancy
b. 7 f. 12
Prologue: The Idea of Harlem
b. 7 f. 13
Queen Mother -
Incomplete
b. 7 f. 14
Role of Black Writers -
Questionnaire for Negro Digest
Article
b. 7 f. 15
Separate State -
Incomplete
b. 7 f. 16
[ Sinner Man Where You Gonna Run
To?]
b. 7 f. 18
Some Notes on a Magazine of
Afro-American Popular Culture
b. 7 f. 19
Some Notes on Black Theatre in the
Sixties
b. 7 f. 20
Spirits Rejoice: The Lowre
Eastside and Black Art - Incomplete
b. 7 f. 21
Towards a Relevant Black Theatre
b. 7 f. 22
Towards the Destruction of the
Western Poem - Incomplete
b. 7 f. 23
Tricks and Toys [for
Liberator]
b. 7 f. 24
Visions of Harlem -
Incomplete
b. 7 f. 28
A Black Review of 'Sambo'
A Pitiful Answer to Doris Day, 1970
b. 7 f. 29
The Black Musician and White
America: A Review of A.B. Spellman's Four Lives in the Bebop
Business
b. 7 f. 30
The Free Southern Theater
b. 7 f. 31
Don't Let Your Bag Hang You
Up
b. 7 f. 32
Douglas Turner Ward's 'The
Reckoning': Born in a Barrel of Razor Blades
b. 7 f. 33
Drylongso: A Self Portrait of Black
America
b. 7 f. 34
Long Live Blues People, The
Beautiful Sun People - A Review/Essay on The Sound of Soul
b. 7 f. 36
Mint Juleps and 'Black
Revolution' - Review Essay
b. 7 f. 37
To Harlem With Love -
[About Roy DeCarava, photographer]
Scripts
The Script subseries, 1972-1980 (2 lin. ft.),
is composed of playscripts Neal authored and includes annotated and
incomplete versions (dated and undated), final and early drafts, and
fragments, as well as reviews for several of his produced plays. Among
the plays included in the collection are The
Glorious Monster in the Bell of the Horn, In an Upstate Motel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, The Blue Monday Number, Daddy Salvation, Deep River, as well as some which
are unidentified.
The Glorious Monster in the Bell of the
Horn
b. 9 f. 1
Final Version, July 10,
1980
b. 9 f. 3-5
Annotated, September 14,
1977
b. 9 f. 13
Early Script - Characters in
a Play - Revised, Incomplete, February 3,
1975
b. 9 f. 14-15
Annotated and Incomplete,
1974
b. 10 f. 1-3
Early Script Entitled Tag
Taking - Annotated
b. 11 f. 3
Manuscripts and Annotated Fragments
b. 11 f. 7
Reviews, Correspondence and Programs,
1979
b. 11 f. 8
Contract With Henry Street Settlement,
1979
Their Eyes Were Watching God
b. 12 f. 12-14
Draft - September 4,
1972
b. 12 f. 15-16
Their Eyes Were Watching
God - Film, 1972-1973
b. 13 f. 7
Outline Revised - November 28,
1975
b. 13 f. 8
Film Outline - November 10,
1975
b. 13 f. 12
Book of Numbers - Story
Synopsis of the Even Chapters
b. 13 f. 13
Buddy Byrd's Inner City
Blues - Play Idea
b. 13 f. 19
The Death of Boogie Woogie
b. 13 f. 20
Deep River - Drafts,
Incomplete
b. 14 f. 2
Lenox Avenue Sunday -
Script, Notes
b. 14 f. 3
Revolutionary Violence and the
Negro Leadership - Script
b. 14 f. 4
Ethnic Culture Television Series,
Treatment/Script
b. 14 f. 5-6
Script Fragments and Notes
Screenplays
The Screenplay subseries, 1967-1979 (.8 lin.
ft.) contains screenplays (typescripts and handwritten), story and film
outlines, treatments, film ideas (dated and undated), proposals and
budgets for the many screenplays Neal authored, only a few of which were
produced. The film titles include “Haig's Last
Case,” Holy Days
(produced) (co-authored with Evan Walker and published in 1970), Ramadan Lover, Saga of the Slave Ship Amistad, and
A Truant's End, (produced) and
some that are unidentified. Neal was also involved in a number of film
projects. Those contained in the collection are Harlem Studio Visuals,
Revolution in Black America, and
Newark Television Station/Urban Communications Institute.
b. 15 f. 1
All African Games - Film
Ideas - Incomplete
b. 15 f. 2
Beirut Fiasco - Film
Treatment
b. 15 f. 3
The Cafe Blue Majestic -
Film Treatment - Incomplete
b. 15 f. 5
Black Art!!! - Film
Outline, 1968(?)
b. 15 f. 6
Cosmos and the Old Musician,
Buddy - Story Outline
b. 15 f. 7
The Disciple - Film
Treatment
With Hoyt Fuller (Television Drama) - Film Treatment,
1975
b. 15 f. 10
Story Outline - Incomplete
b. 15 f. 11
With Evan Walker - Screenplay,
1970
b. 15 f. 13
Harlem Audio-Visuals - Filmscript, Story
b. 15 f. 15
Story, Early Revision - Fragment
b. 15 f. 16
Script, Production Schedule - Film Project -
1970
b. 15 f. 17
Film Script - Budget Estimate
b. 15 f. 18
Screenplay - Review,
1970
b. 15 f. 19
In Search of
Improvisation - Filmscript,
1980
b. 15 f. 20
In Search of Jazz - Film
Outline
b. 15 f. 21
Jihad (Holy War) - A
Piece for Dance
b. 15 f. 22
Jim Crow, Shine and
Stepinfechit - Filmscript
b. 15 f. 23
Kansas City Layover -
Script - Notes, 1979(?)
b. 16 f. 1
Labor Series - Court Room
Testimony - Script,
n.d.
b. 16 f. 2
The Man Who Lived
Underground - Film Project,
1980
b. 16 f. 3
Meeting Point: Afro-Americans
Look at Zaire - Film Proposal (Avatar Enterprises),
1974
b. 16 f. 4
More Than Machines -
Picture Budget Detail (Avatar Enterprises),
1974
b. 16 f. 5
Outline and Treatment - Incomplete First Draft,
May 20, 1973
b. 16 f. 7-8
Raymond, Iris, Eddie - Incomplete,
n.d.
b. 16 f. 9
Saga of the Slaveship
Amistad - Film Treatment/Outline,
1974
b. 16 f. 10
Slave Ship Amistad -
Manuscript, Reference Articles
b. 16 f. 11
The Sun Song of Cosmos T.
Bird - Film Treatment
b. 16 f. 12
The Transfiguration of Joe
Eclipse: An Outline for a Music-Drama - With Evan
Walker
b. 16 f. 16
Visions of Harlem - Film
Idea - Holy Days Film Company, Inc.
b. 16 f. 17
The Way September Came
Down - Film Treatment
b. 16 f. 19
Untitled Script - Fragment
b. 17 f. 1
Harlem Audio Visual-Coalition/Jobs,
1969
b. 17 f. 2
Harlem Audio Visuals,
1969
b. 17 f. 3-7
Newark Television Station/Urban Communication Institute,
Inc., 1968-1969
Revolution in Black America
b. 17 f. 10
News Releases, Correspondence, Clippings,
1967
Poems
The Poems subseries, 1974-1979 (.8 lin. ft.),
consists of both published and unpublished poems and includes
typescripts (some annotated), fragments, and holograph versions.
Anthologies and Other Publication Projects
The Anthologies and Other Publication Projects
subseries, 1961-1978, (1.2 lin. ft.), includes selections for
the anthology Black Fire: An Anthology of
Afro-American Writing (New York, William Morrow &
Co., 1968) which Neal co-edited with Amiri Baraka, consisting of the
essays, poetry, short stories and drama the co-editors considered for
inclusion. Not all pieces submitted were actually published in Black Fire, and the book contains
submissions not represented in the collection. The published books of
poetry (represented by manuscripts) are Hoodoo
Hollerin' Bebop Ghosts (Howard University Press, 1974) and
Black Boogaloo: Notes of Black Liberation
(San Francisco, Journal of Black Poetry Press, 1969). Many of
the poems here such as Neal's Shine
series were anthologized in a number of works. Other poems were
published once or remain unpublished. The manuscripts for sections of
Neal's New Space: Critical Essays on
American Culture (published posthumously) can be found in
this series. There are also several manuscripts, outlines and proposals
for unpublished books including works on jazz and a biography of Max
Roach, as well as Black American
Music, black cultural criticism, and the social history of
popular Afro-American music. In addition, this subseries encompasses the
published version of Notes on Black Liberation,
articles Neal wrote, and copies of the journal's Confrontation and Extension which he edited. Included are photocopies of some
of his published poems, clippings of articles he wrote, and articles in
which his work is mentioned.
b. 19 f. 1
Correspondence, Biographies,
1966
b. 19 f. 2
William Morrow Publishers,
1968
Black Boogaloo (Notes on Black Literature)
Hoodoo Hollerin' Bebop Ghost
b. 20 f. 17
Hoodoo Hollerin' Bebop Ghosts/and Other
Visions
b. 20 f. 19
Dust Jacket and Flap-Copy
b. 20 f. 20
Review, Errata, and Program,
1974
New Space: Critical Essays on American
Culture
b. 21 f. 1
The Rise of Black Consciousness in
the Sixties
b. 21 f. 2
The Rise of the Black Consciousness
in the 70's, 1970's
b. 21 f. 3
The Galaxy Around
Harlem - Incomplete
b. 21 f. 5
Reactionary and Revolutionary
Positions - Literary Criticism
b. 21 f. 7
Black American Music -
Book
b. 21 f. 8
The Black Church -
Outline
b. 21 f. 9
Black Boxing and Ali/Johnson - Outline
b. 21 f. 10
Black Culture Criticism - Outline for a Book and
Essay
b. 21 f. 11
Black History - Forward
to Book - Incomplete
b. 21 f. 12
Exodus - Migration Novel
- Notes
Jazz is a Four Letter Word: The
Biography of Max Roach - By Max Roach and Larry
Neal
b. 21 f. 13
Typescript, Notes Draft, ca.
1979
b. 21 f. 15
Chapter Outline and Notes
b. 21 f. 18
Precis `Boxing As Drama'
by Larry Neal and Seymour Gray - Book Outline
b. 21 f. 19
Social History of Popular Afro-American Music - Book
Proposal
b. 21 f. 20
Six Black Horses - Story
Outline - Novel by Nolan Davis, outline by Larry Neal
b. 23 f. 2
Editor - Confrontation and
Extension, 1971,
1980
Short Stories
The Short Stories subseries, 1973, n.d. (.6
lin. ft.), consists of complete and incomplete typescripts, most
unpublished, in addition to fragments and notes. Titles of a few stories
are The Assassins, Blue Berry Hill, Deaths in the John, Our Bright Tomorrows, and Rahada/A Love Song for the Cosmic
People.
b. 24 f. 1
Abdul Avatar and the Sun Sister's
Song
b. 24 f. 4
The Assassins, 1967, 1968, 1980
b. 24 f. 6
Blues Stretch - Tentative
Scenes - Incomplete, 1973
b. 24 f. 9
Deaths in the John, -
Story Sketch, ca. 1973
b. 24 f. 10
First Entry: Scorpio, Aries
Raises
b. 24 f. 12
Iris, Mabel, André - (Goodnight, Congressman),
1968
b. 24 f. 13
New York War - Incomplete
b. 24 f. 17
Professor Chauncey E.
Worthington's Diary - Incomplete
b. 24 f. 18
Rahada/A Love Song for the Cosmic
People
b. 24 f. 19
Sea Song and Other
Fragments
b. 25 f. 9
Story Fragments and Notes
Interviews
The Interviews subseries, 1971-1980 (.8 lin.
ft.), is comprised of manuscripts, outlines, notes and questions for
interviews with the following individuals: Muhammad Ali on his 1974
fight with George Foreman in Zaire, Rap Brown, John Coltrane, Langston
Hughes, Melvin Van Peebles, Max Roach, Sun Ra, and James Van Der
Zee.
b. 26 f. 1
Muhammed Ali on Foreman Fight - Questions for
Interview
b. 26 f. 2
Black Theatre - Incomplete
b. 26 f. 3
John Coltrane Biography - Outline and Fragment,
1973
b. 26 f. 5
Larry Neal Interview on Langston Hughes 1978 (?)
b. 26 f. 6
An Interview with Melvin Van
Peebles
b. 26 f. 7
An Interview with Sun God
- [Sun Ra] - Incomplete
b. 26 f. 8
An Interview with Mr. and Mrs. James
Vanderzee, 1979
Notes
The Notes subseries, 1971-1980 (.8 lin. ft.),
contains Neal's notes about writers and poets, and writing projects with
which he was involved including Ishmael Reed's Mumbo Jumbo as well as notes Neal took based upon his
readings, conferences he attended, and ideas he had for his writings.
Many notes appear in notebooks, others are on individual sheets of
paper.
b. 27 f. 1
Notes for Classes - Writer and Poets, 1971 1975-1976
b. 27 f. 2
First Love - Direction
Notes (Dance?), Stories, 1975
b. 27 f. 3
Mexico, Writers (Addresses), 1975-1976
b. 27 f. 5
Ishmael Reed's `Mumbo Jumbo”, Plagiarism, Camas -
Notebook, 1978-1980
D.C. Commission On The Arts And Humanities
The series provides a limited view of Neal's role as Executive Director of
this agency. The scope of the material includes, an incomplete set of
minutes of Board of Directors' meetings, memoranda, transcript of an
interview with Neal, several proposals such as those for a District of
Columbia Solidarity Project, and a National Black Theatre, handouts from an
employment and career workshop, annual and other reports, and printed
material pertaining to programs sponsored by the commission.
b. 29 f. 1
Minutes - Board of Directors Meetings, 1977-1978
b. 29 f. 3
Personnel, Budgets, 1977-1978
b. 29 f. 4
Transition Meeting Notes, November 9,
1977
b. 29 f. 5
On the Road to Transition - I
b. 29 f. 8
Notebook - Meeting Notes, 1978-1979
b. 29 f. 10
Interview with Larry Neal, Letter of Resignation, 1977-1979
b. 29 f. 11
National Assembly of State Arts Agencies,
1977
b. 29 f. 12
Proposals for District of Columbia Cultural Solidarity Project,
n.d.
b. 29 f. 13
Proposal for the National Black Theatre (A Theatre for the Black
Nation), n.d.
b. 29 f. 14
Proposals and Budgets, 1977-1979
b. 30 f. 1
Arts D.C. - Employment and Career Workshop, July 14,
1978
b. 30 f. 6
Printed Material, 1977-1979
Reference Material
Subject File
The Subject File subseries, 1965-1980 (2 lin.
ft.) reflects Neal's broad range of interest in black related issues.
Examples of the subject files are the Black Panther, Party, Black Power,
Congress of African Peoples, Eddie Ellis, Second World Black and African
Festival of Arts and Culture (FESTAC), Harlem Urban Renewal, LeRoi Jones
(Neal used both LeRoi Jones and Amiri Baraka; during processing the
decision was made to keep Neal's usage for folder headings), Black Power
conferences, the Revolutionary Action Movement, and the 1965 and 1967
riots/rebellions that took place in Detroit, Los Angeles, Newark, New
York, and New Haven. The subject files contains news clippings,
articles, other printed and typed reports, leaflets, and other printed
material. In this subseries can be found several papers prepared for the
Primer Congreso de la Cultura Negra de las America held in Columbia,
South America (1977), including papers by Abdias do Nascimento and
Antonio Viera de Silva.
b. 31 f. 1
African Nationalist, 1965-1967
b. 31 f. 2
African People's Conference, December 26-27, 1970
b. 31 f. 4
Black Aesthetic, 1971-1979
b. 31 f. 5
Black Art, 1970-1974,
n.d.
b. 31 f. 6
Black Dramatists Project - Conference,
1969
b. 31 f. 9
Black Filmmaker Foundation,
1980
b. 31 f. 10
Black History Museum Umum Newsletter, 1976-1978
b. 31 f. 11
Black Music Association - Conference,
1980
b. 31 f. 12
Black Panther Party, 1966-1967,
ca.1971, n.d.
b. 31 f. 14
Articles, Statements, etc., 1966-1967, 1969, n.d.
b. 31 f. 16
Articles About, 1966-1967
b. 32 f. 1
Miscellaneous Articles, 1967-1970
b. 32 f. 6-7
Congress of African Peoples - Kuumba House,
1970
Congress of African Peoples
b. 33 f. 3
Creativity Workshop,
1970
b. 33 f. 4
Ideological Statement,
n.d.
Congress on Black Culture in the Americas (Columbia, South
America), August 1977
b. 33 f. 6
Diouf, Mam Biram - Pour un Nouvel
Order Culturel Mondial
b. 33 f. 7
Nascimento, Abdias do Afro-Brazilian Ethnicity and International
Policy
b. 33 f. 8
Rodrigues Al Ves, Sebastiao Somos
Todos Iguais Perante a Lei
b. 33 f. 9
Viera de Silva, Antonio The
Cultural Contribution of Black People to the Construction of
Modern Brazil
b. 33 f. 10
Watts, A. Faulkner - The Black
Slave Woman: Protagonist for Freedom
b. 33 f. 11
Congress of Racial Equality, 1966-1968
Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines
b. 33 f. 12
General Information,
1971
b. 33 f. 14
Cricket - Black Music
Journal
b. 33 f. 15
Detroit Shooting- New Republic of Africa,
1969
b. 33 f. 19
Feet - Dance Magazine,
1971
FESTAC (Second World Black and African Festival of Arts and
Culture)
b. 33 f. 21
Speeches by Bernard W. Bell, John Henrik
Clarke, and Ronald W. Walters,
1977
b. 33 f. 22
Films - Cast and Credits of The
Lost Man and Slaves, 1969
b. 34 f. 1
Harlem Cultural Council - Harlem Writers' Committee,
1968-1969
Harlem Urban Renewal Proposal
1970
b. 34 f. 4
Hatch-Billops Oral History Collection of Black Artists,
1972-1973
b. 34 f. 5
Billie Holiday Estate, 1954-1962
b. 34 f. 8
Jordan, Norman/Black Cultural Network,
1967
b. 34 f. 9
Roy Lewis - Autobiography, ca.
1972
b. 34 f. 11
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People,
1967
b. 34 f. 12
National Association of Black Media Producers, ca.
1975
b. 34 f. 13
National Black Theatre, Inc., Touring Program,
1978
b. 34 f. 14
Creativity Workshops, Elma Lewis School,
1969
b. 34 f. 16
National Independent Political Party for Afro-Americans -
Minutes, September 3-4,
1966
b. 34 f. 17
National Urban League, 1960,
1966
b. 34 f. 18
New Lafayette Theatre, ca.
1971
b. 34 f. 19
Organization for the Development and Advancement of the
Cultural Black Arts, 1970
b. 34 f. 20
Pan African Artists' Alliance,
n.d.
b. 35 f. 1
Obituaries- John Coltrane, Langston Hughes, Billy Strayhorn,
1967
b. 35 f. 2
Charlie Parker Estate, 1961-1976
b. 35 f. 3
Progressive Labor Party,
n.d.
b. 35 f. 4
Revolutionary Action Movement,
1967
b. 35 f. 11
Riots - General, 1966-1967
b. 35 f. 12
Rod Rodgers Dance Company, 1974-1977
b. 35 f. 13
Schools- I.S. 201 School Strike,
1967
Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee
b. 36 f. 5
Statement by James Forman,
1967
b. 36 f. 6-7
International Seminar on Racial Discrimination and
Colonialism in Southern Africa (Zambia), Agenda, Speeches,
August, 1967
b. 36 f. 9
Surinam I Shall Molder Before I
Shall be Taken, I Sought My Brother, 1976
b. 36 f. 10
Van Der Zee, James, 1970-1976
b. 36 f. 11
Van Peebles, Melvin, 1971-1972
b. 36 f. 14-17
Miscellaneous Articles, n.d.
b. 37
Card File - Musicians, Richard Wright
The Card File subseries, n.d. (.4 lin. ft.),
consists of notes Neal prepared on jazz and blues musicians and on
Richard Wright.
Annotated Books
The Annotated Books subseries, ca. 1960-1978
(1 lin. ft.), consists of photocopies of annotated pages from books in
Neal's library. The original books have been transferred to the General
Research and Reference Division of the Schomburg Center. Authors include
Kenneth Burke, Ralph Ellison, Addison Gayle, Jr., Ishmael Reed, and
Askia Muhammad Toure. Topics of the books encompass literature (such as
novels), language, music, politics, and history.
Writings By Other Authors
The series is divided into two subseries: Essays, Short
Stories, Poems, 1966-1979 (1 lin. ft.) focus on African-American
and African topics by such authors as Amiri Baraka, John Blassingame, Hoyt
Fuller, and Robert F. Thompson. The second subseries, Scripts, 1972-1977 (.8 lin. ft.), consists of playscripts and
screenplays authored by a variety of writers including Hoyt Fuller, Earnest
L. Hudson, Henry Edward Krehbiel, Ishmael Reed, Howard Sackler, and Douglas
Turner Ward.
Essays, Short Stories, Poems
b. 41 f. 1
A. Philip Randolph Institute - A
`Freedom Budget' For All Americans - Article,
July 1966
b. 41 f. 2
Alakoye, Adesanya - Poems,
1978
b. 41 f. 3
Allen, Mayor Ivan - If You
Were - Poem
b. 41 f. 4
Allen, Samuel W. - Poetry and the
National Conscience - Essay,
1969
b. 41 f. 5
Anderson, S.E. - Let Nobody Turn
Us 'Round - Short Story
b. 41 f. 6
Baraka, Amiri - Not Just
Survival: Revolution - Essay, Poems, 1964-1977
b. 41 f. 7
Bassett, John - The Western Dream
Turns Nightmare - Poem
b. 41 f. 8
Bibbs, Hart LeRoi - Diet Book for
Junkies - Short Story
b. 41 f. 9
Black, W. Joseph - Harlem's Other
Image - Essay, 1974
b. 41 f. 10-11
Blassingame, J. (Editor) - The
Poet's Vision of Black America - Compilation
b. 41 f. 12
Brierre, Jean F. - Louis
Armstrong and Prayer to
Olokun - Poems, 1970-1971
Brown, Patricia L. (Shariat, Fahamisha) -
b. 41 f. 13
Black Ritual Theatre
- Essay, Spring, 1975
A Woman's Voice: Black Woman
Poets from Phyllis Wheatley to Angela Jackson -
Essay, n.d.
b. 41 f. 14
Bullins, Ed - Black Theatre: The
70's - Evolutionary Changes - Essay,
1971
b. 41 f. 15
Bush, Joseph - Phil Edwards:
Perennial Olympian - Essay
b. 41 f. 16
Cirino, Linda/Edmiston, Susan - Chapter - Harlem,
1973
b. 41 f. 17
Cloud, Hamilton - Jazz and
Capitalism: Never the Twain Shall Meet - Essay,
1973
b. 41 f. 18
Cobb, Charles - “Proposal for an Afro-American
Cultural and Educational Center”, Proposal,
1967
b. 41 f. 19
Coleman, John - The Development
of the Black Short Story - Dissertation Abstract,
1976
b. 41 f. 20
Collings, Webb - One More
Time - Short Story
b. 41 f. 21
Committee of Concerned Blacks - Should American Blacks Tour South Africa to Entertain
Africans - Essay
b. 41 f. 22
Crouch, Stanley - Look Out Moan
We Standing Round - Essay,
1970
b. 41 f. 24
Cutter, Charles H. - Towards a
Contextual Analysis of the African Mask: The Filmic Evidence of
Dan Masks - Essay, 1973
b. 41 f. 25
Dent, Tom C. - The Ghetto of
Desire (Inside Desire Version) - Essay
b. 41 f. 26
Djenaba, Nneke, (nee Pat Ford) - Poems,
1978
b. 41 f. 27
Douglas, Max - Poems, pre
1970
b. 41 f. 28
Dumas, Henry - `Ark of Bones'
and Other Stories Strike and Fade” - Story,
1969
b. 41 f. 30
Essien-Udom, E.U. - Tribalism and
Racism - Essay, 1971
b. 41 f. 31
Farabi, Khadijah Nubian House Theatre - Poems, ca.
1976
b. 41 f. 32
Farley, Jr., William H. - Summun
Bukmun Umyun - Short Story, Poems,
1972
b. 41 f. 33
Franklin, Clarence - Poems
Question: What is Black
Power, Daddy? Answer: `?' - Essay,
n.d.
Richard Kluger's Simple
Justice - Teleplay,
1979
b. 41 f. 35
Gibson, Kenneth Morality and City
Government - Speech,
n.d.
b. 42 f. 1
Goss, Clay - The Way
Before - Essay, 1970
b. 42 f. 3
Harris, Michael DeHart - The
Development of a Non-Materialistic Approach to Painting,
- Essay, 1979
b. 42 f. 4
Hawkins, Richard C. - Dicky's
Dictionary of Dark Definitions!
b. 42 f. 5
Hurston, Zora Neale - Poems,
1919
b. 42 f. 6
Hemphill, A. Marcus - A Touch of
Sweden - Novel
b. 42 f. 7
Henderson, David - Keep On
Pushing (Harlem Riots/Summer/1964), Summer 1964
b. 42 f. 8
Hughes, Langston - The Backlash
Blues - Poem
b. 42 f. 9
Jennings, Regina Belvey - Poems, 1979,
n.d.
Open Windows to My Song....
b. 42 f. 10
Jennings, Regina Belvey - Stories
A Love for the People, 1979
b. 42 f. 11
Jones, Barbara (Odaro) - Alafia - Poem
b. 42 f. 12
Key, Ted - Emma's First National
Bank - Television Treatment
b. 42 f. 13
Kilgore, James - Toward the Dark
Tower - Incomplete - Essay,
1970
b. 42 f. 14
King, Eric S. - Portrait of the
Manchild in Wynnefield - Essay
b. 42 f. 15
King, Josie M./Blake, J. Herman - Teaching Negro History: A Dual Emphasis -
Essay
b. 42 f. 16
Lane, Pinkie Gordon - Songs to
the Dialysis Machine - Poem
b. 42 f. 17
Llorens, David - Damn the
American Dream - Story
b. 42 f. 18
Mayfield, Julian - Black Power
and White Response - Speech, November 28,
1967
b. 42 f. 19
Merriam, Alan P. - The African
Idiom in Music - Conference Papers,
1959
b. 42 f. 20
Milner, Ron - Ray: A
Pantomine - Short Story,
1966
b. 42 f. 21
Mweusi, A. - Steps to
Liberation - Essay, n.d.
b. 42 f. 22
Neal, Evelyn - The Train Has Been
Gone a Long Time, and You Missed It - Review
Essay
b. 42 f. 23
Ogilvie, D.T. - Sketches in
Black - Poems
b. 42 f. 24
Otis, Jr., Clarence - Kwame
Nkrumah and Some Tenets of Leadership - Essay,
1975
b. 42 f. 25
Partisan Review - A Statement on
the New Cultural Conservatism - Essay,
1972
b. 42 f. 26
Phillips, Anne Rutledge - Poems,
1968
b. 42 f. 27
Reed, Clarence - Not Forever
Tears - Poems, 1967
b. 42 f. 28
Roebuck, Daniel - Polemics and
Purity: The New Masses and the
Development of Literary Communism in America - Essay,
1975
b. 42 f. 30
Simon, James A. - Autobiography
b. 43 f. 1
Smith, Warren P. - Never the Fool
of Time - Story, 1973
b. 43 f. 2
Spellman, A.B. - Poems Preliminary Proposal for Black
Journal, 1969
b. 43 f. 3
Stanford, Max - What Road for
Black Power (The New Direction) - Essay
b. 43 f. 4
Stewart, James - We -
Poems
b. 43 f. 5
Stewart, Jimmie - Black Musical
Nationalism and Jazz - Incomplete - Essay
b. 43 f. 6
Sultan, Gene - Larry Neal at the
Gotham, Poem, 1973
b. 43 f. 7
Thelwell, Mike - As a Sounding
Brass and a Talking Cymbal: Modernist Fallacies and the
Responsibility of the Black Writer - Essay
b. 43 f. 8
Thompson, Robert F. - The Sign of
the Divine King: Yoruba Bead-Embroidered Crowns with Veil and
Bird Decorations - Article
b. 43 f. 9
Wagner, Jane - J.T. -
T.V. Outline
b. 43 f. 10
Williams, Marshall - A
Translation of a Fictitious Letter Found Backstage at a
Theatre, 1978
b. 43 f. 11
Unidentified Author - Comparative
Race and the Ethnic Relations - Essay,
1972
b. 43 f. 12
Unidentified Author - The
Necessity for Non-White Models in the Development of the Major
Revolutionary Artist - Essay
b. 43 f. 13
Unidentified Author - Book of
Illustrated Poetry - Poems
b. 43 f. 14
Unidentified Author - Exorcism of
the Straight/Man/Demon - Poem
b. 43 f. 15
Unidentified Author - Unidentified Title - Story
b. 43 f. 16
Unidentified Author - Adam
Clayton Powell, Esther James -
Chapters
b. 43 f. 17
Unidentified Author - Ghetto
Book - Typescript of Book,
1972
b. 43 f. 18
Unidentified Authors, n.d.
Scripts
b. 44 f. 1
Baraka, Amiri - A Recent
Killing - Script
b. 44 f. 2
Bezaleel, Khalil, N.B. - The
Black Disciple - Screenplay
b. 44 f. 3
The Candidate -
Script, 1972
b. 44 f. 4
Garvey - Screenplay,
1973
b. 44 f. 5
In My Many Names and
Days - Annotated, Script,
1971
b. 44 f. 6
Goss, Clay - Ornette -
Script, 1970
b. 44 f. 7
Harrison, Paul Carter - Top-hat
b. 44 f. 8
Himes, Terry - Baby
Sister
b. 44 f. 9
Howard, Terry - Nepal, 1969
b. 44 f. 10
Hudson, Earnest L. - My Kingdom
Come
b. 44 f. 11
Hughes, Aisha - Voodoo America, 1967
b. 44 f. 12
Jordan, Norman - When a Woman
Gets Blue
b. 44 f. 13
Kain, Gylan - Epitaph to the
Coagulated Trinity, 1965
b. 45 f. 1
King, Jr., Woodie - Harlem
Transfer - Screenplay Treatment
b. 45 f. 2
Lovelace, Earl - The
Schoolmaster - Screenplay
b. 45 f. 3
Roemer, Michael and Young, Robert - Nothing But a Man - Screenplay,
1963
b. 45 f. 4
Sackler, Howard - The Great White
Hope - Screenplay - Revised First Draft,
1969
b. 45 f. 5
Sloan, Anthony A Mystic
Wind (no date/all time/this space): The Works of Henry Dumas
Adapted to the Stage”
b. 45 f. 6
Smyrl, David Langston - On the
Lock-In, 1976-1977
b. 45 f. 7
Vose, Kenneth and DuKore, Lawrence - Good Ol' Boy - Screenplay,
1973
b. 45 f. 8
Ward, Douglas Turner - Happy
Ending and Day of Absence, 1963
b. 45 f. 9
Wexler, Norman - Mandingo
- Second Revision - Screenplay,
1974
b. 45 f. 11
Untitled - Incomplete - Screenplay
Separation Record
The following items were removed from:
Name of Collection/Papers Larry Neal Papers MG 344
Accession Number SCM 86-32, SCM 88-49, SCM 90-17
Donor: Evelyn Neal
Date received: 1986, 1988, 1990
Date transferred: 1987, 1987, 1990
The item(s) listed below have been sent to the division indicated, either to be
retained or disposed of there. Any items that should receive special disposition are
clearly marked.
Schomburg Library:
2 R.C.'s of magazines - college press, local, national and international circulation
periodicals, etc.
2 R.C.'s of books: small press, short publishing life, etc.
1 R.C of books: non-annotated; some autographed.
3 R.C. of annotated books - One box contains out-of-scope books.
Schomburg Art and Artifacts Division:
Thirteen art cards and small posters.
Schomburg Moving Image and Recorded Sound Division:
1 R.C. and one “shoebox” size plastic box of audiotapes, and
one 16mm film, 23 cassettes, and 54 reels.
Schomburg Photographs and Print Division:
1/2 AB of photographs, contact sheets, and slides depicting Neal, family, and actors
and of the Neal funeral.
Other:
Vertical File: One file folder of materials.
Archives: 1/2 R.C. of programs, playbills, and exhibit catalogs. Music books of Duke
Ellington (2), Billie Holiday (1), Stevie Wonder (1), and sheet music for
“In the Rain,” sheet music and additional music books for
others.
Accessioned by: Janice Quinter
Date: 9/22/95