Sneha Girap (Editor)

Forman Brown

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Forman Brown

Revenue
  
3.614 billion USD (2012)


Founded
  
1870

CEO
  
Paul C. Varga

Forman Brown httpswwwbrownformancomwpcontentuploads20

Role
  
Company · brown-forman.com

Stock price
  
BF.B (NYSE) US$ 97.84 +3.03 (+3.20%)29 Jan, 4:05 PM GMT-5 - Disclaimer

Headquarters
  
Louisville, Kentucky, United States

Subsidiaries
  
Fetzer Vineyards, Bonterra Vineyards, Five Rivers Winery, Jekel Vineyards

Profiles


Net income
  
513 million USD (2012)

Operating income
  
788 million USD (2012)

Forman Brown (1901–1996) was one of the world's leaders in puppet theatre in his day, as well as an important early gay novelist. He was a member of the Yale Puppeteers and the driving force behind Turnabout Theatre. He was born in Otsego, Michigan, in 1901 and died in 1996, two days after his 95th birthday. Brown briefly taught at North Carolina State College, followed by an extensive tour of Europe.

Contents

Forman's Yale Puppeteers, which he established upon graduating from University of Michigan (class of 1922), opened a puppet theatre in Los Angeles in 1941 (the Turnabout Theater) that attracted celebrity attention and support from some of Hollywood's biggest names, e.g., Greta Garbo, Marie Dressler, and Douglas Fairbanks, as well as other notable figures including Albert Einstein. Brown wrote all the songs and sketches for the troupe's productions. Regular performers included Elsa Lanchester and Odetta. Bette Midler sang one of Forman's songs, Mrs. Pettibone, at a Los Angeles AIDS benefit.

Along with Yale Puppeteers Harry Burnett and Richard Brandon (1905 – May 4, 1985) (Brown's lifelong lover), Brown launched Turnabout Theatre in 1941 as "a vehicle for performing both puppet plays and revues for adults." Turnabout Theatre was a highly popular puppetry venue until its dissolution in 1956. Reversible seats were installed in the theatre so that after the puppet shows were performed at one end of the auditorium, the puppeteers asked the audience to "turnabout" their seats for the Turnabout revue staged at the opposite end of the auditorium.

In 1933, he wrote Better Angel, under the pseudonym Richard Meeker, about a young man coming to terms with his homosexuality. The novel is regarded as "the first American novel to present the 'gay' experience in a healthy light."

Broadway songs

  • Home Sweet Homer (4 January 1976) | lyrics by Forman Brown
  • Music in My Heart (2 October 1947 - 24 January 1948) | lyrics by Forman Brown
  • The Red Mill (16 October 1945 - 18 January 1947) | additional lyrics by Forman Brown
  • He also wrote the book and lyrics for the Richard Rodgers/Lincoln Center revival of "The Merry Widow."

    Filmography

  • I Am Suzanne! (1933) | uncredited songwriter (with Friedrich Hollaender): "Gay St. Moritz Is the Place", "Eski-olay-lio-mo"
  • Bandits and Ballads (1934) | writer
  • An Old Spanish Onion (1935) | writer
  • Published works

  • The Generous Jefferson Bartleby Jones (1991), ISBN 1-55583-198-2
  • Small Wonder: The Story of the Yale Puppeteers and the Turnabout Theatre (Scarecrow Press, 1980), ISBN 0-8108-1334-3
  • The Pie-Eyed Piper and Other Impertinent Plays for Puppets (Greenberg Publisher, 1933)
  • Better Angel (Greenberg Publisher, 1933), written under pseudonym Richard Meeker
  • References

    Forman Brown Wikipedia