Belasco gay comics
Meatmen No 25 - Anthology of Gay Male Comics (Paperback)
This anthology of gay mate comics features art and stories by "Zack," Farraday. John Blackburn, "Joe," "Belasco," "Stepan Zubinski,"Patrick Fillion, Gerard Donelan, Jeff Jacklin, and David Barnes.
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Vintage Posters
Original Vintage Poster: The Rocky Horror Show - The Belasco Theatre NYC (Window Card)
Poster ID: CL88696
Category: Theatrical/Stage and Plays
Year: 1970s
Actor / Director: Tim Curry, Richard "Ritz" O'Brien, Jamie Donnelly, Boni Enten, Abigale Haness, Graham Jarvis, Meat Loaf, Kim Milford, Bill Miller, dir. Jim Sharman;
Country: American
Approximate Size 14 x 22 inches
Condition: Very Good
Wonderful window card for the 1975 live Broadway musical production of The Rocky Horror Show, a musical with music, lyrics and book by Richard O'Brien. After productions in the West End and L.A., the show debuted in Broadway at the Belasco Theatre and lasted only three previews and forty-five showings, despite earning one Tony nomination and three Drama Desk nominations. Actor Tim Curry, who originated the role of Dr. Frank-N-Furter in the original London production, became particularly associated with the musical. The musical was adapted into the 1975 film The Rocky Horror Picture Show, starring O'Brien as Riff Raff, with Curry also reprising his role.
Four decades from now on the outskirts of Seoul, South Korea, the handsome and immaculately groomed Oliver (Darren Criss) spends his days contentedly confined to his stylish but tiny single-room apartment. He one-sidedly converses with his houseplant, HwaBoon (a far more amicable herbage than the man-eater Criss encountered Off-Broadway in Little Shop of Horrors), listens to classic jazz records, looks down at the world outside his widow, and reminisces about his former life with James (Marcus Choi, who skillfully takes on multiple roles including James’ son Junseo, and an amusingly jaded motel clerk). Oliver tunes into daily weather and air quality reports as he eagerly awaits the mail that is delivered via a chute in the ceiling. He continually hopes that there might be something from James, but instead he gets the latest copy of Jazz Monthly and the occasional replacement part. He also receives stay updates on his vitals, such as his battery charge and efficiency, from an advanced Siri-like AI voice that he interacts with.
As is immediately evident from Criss’
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