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Channing, Lansbury, Henderson and More to Donate Career Memorabilia to National Museum
By Andrew Gans
Ten legends from stage and screen will donate objects from their award-winning careers to the National Museum of American History, which is part of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. The 5 PM event will feature remarks by the museum's director Brent D. Glass, entertainment curator Dwight Bowers and the starry donors. Items being donated to the National Museum of American History follow: Carol Channing: Diamonds gown worn as Lorelei and her 1964 Tony Award for Hello, Dolly! Phyllis Diller: Her personal library and collection of jokes Tippi Hedren: The original scripts with notes for Hitchcock's "The Birds" and "Marnie" as well as for Chaplin's "The Countess From Hong Kong." Florence Henderson: The TV Land Pop Icon Award Angela Lansbury: Mame's dressing gown (donated by Stephanie Troulman) and bugle from Broadway and the typewriter from "Murder She Wrote" (co-donated by Universal Studios) June Lockhart: Her Tony Award for her role in For Love or Money Rose Marie: The Baby Rose Marie dress and shoes from "Baby Rose Marie the Child Wonder," a dress from The Dick Van Dyke Show and her signature black hair bow. Julie Newmar: The Catwoman outfit from "Batman." Esther Williams: Her two MGM career scrapbooks. The Entertainment Collections at the National Museum of American History, according to a press statement, "preserve a dazzling array of artifacts that presents the history of American life through the brightly-colored perspectives of theater, film, radio, television, puppetry, circuses, carnivals, and popular music." |
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