The Shifting Point: 1946-1987
New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1987. First Edition. First Printing. 254, illus., index. More
New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1987. First Edition. First Printing. 254, illus., index. More
Washington DC: Counterpoint, 1998. Second printing [stated]. Hardcover. [8], 212, [4] pages. Illustrations. Signed by the author on the title page. Includes 27 black and white photographs. Also includes an Index. Folger ticket for an event with Peter Brook laid in (presumed where the book was signed). Peter Stephen Paul Brook, CH, CBE (born 21 March 1925) is an English theatre and film director who has been based in France since the early 1970s. He has won multiple Tony and Emmy Awards, a Laurence Olivier Award, the Praemium Imperiale, and the Prix Italia. He has been called "our greatest living theatre director". With the Royal Shakespeare Company, Brook directed the first English language production of Marat/Sade in 1964. It transferred to Broadway and won the Tony Award for Best Play; Brook was named Best Director. Brook directed Dr. Faustus, his first production, in 1943 at the Torch Theatre in London. In 1947, he went to Stratford-upon-Avon as assistant director on Romeo and Juliet and Love's Labour's Lost. From 1947 to 1950, he was Director of Productions at the Royal Opera House in London. His work there included a controversial staging of Strauss's Salome with sets by Salvador Dalí, and a re-staging of Puccini's La bohème using sets dating from 1899. Much stage and screen work as producer and director followed. Dark of the Moon by Howard Richardson (1948–49), at the Ambassadors Theatre, London, was an admired production. Brook founded, with Micheline Rozan, the International Centre for Theatre Research, a multinational company of actors, dancers, musicians and others which traveled in the Middle East and Africa in the 1970s. More
Gravesend, Kent, England: World Ship Society, 1999. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Trade paperback. 243, [1] pages. Illustrations. List of tables. Notes to Data Tables. Abbreviations. Bibliography. Index. Slight wear. Sir W G Armstrong Whitworth & Co. Ltd was a major British manufacturing company of the early years of the 20th century. With headquarters in Elswick, Newcastle upon Tyne, Armstrong Whitworth built armaments, ships, locomotives, automobiles and aircraft. The company was founded by William Armstrong in 1847, becoming Armstrong Mitchell and then Armstrong Whitworth through mergers. In 1927, it merged with Vickers Limited to form Vickers-Armstrongs, with its automobile and aircraft interests purchased by J D Siddeley. In 1847, the engineer William George Armstrong founded the Elswick works at Newcastle, to produce hydraulic machinery, cranes and bridges, soon to be followed by artillery, notably the Armstrong breech-loading gun, with which the British Army was re-equipped after the Crimean War. In 1927, it merged with Vickers Limited to form Vickers-Armstrongs. More