Poster with captioned cartoons for the play Abie's Irish Rose

http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/units/us-005578-irn537029-irn544976 an entity of type: Record

The Katz Ehrenthal Collection is a collection of more than 900 objects depicting Jews and antisemitic and anti-Jewish propaganda from the medieval to the modern era, in Europe, Russia, and the United States. The collection was amassed by Peter Ehrenthal, a Romanian Holocaust survivor, to document the pervasive history of anti-Jewish hatred in Western art, politics and popular culture. It includes crude folk art as well as pieces created by Europe's finest craftsmen, prints and periodical illustrations, posters, paintings, decorative art, and toys and everyday household items decorated with depictions of stereotypical Jewish figures. 
The poster was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2016 by the Katz Family. 
approximately 1922-1927 
irn544976 
Poster with captioned cartoons for the play Abie's Irish Rose 
overall: Height: 29.250 inches (74.295 cm) | Width: 18.500 inches (46.99 cm) 
Poster by Fred Spurgin for the hit Broadway play, Abie's Irish Rose, by Anne Nichols, which opened in 1922. It is about a young couple, an Irish American woman and a Jewish man, who marry despite the objections of their families. This poster is one of more than 900 items in the Katz Ehrenthal Collection of antisemitic visual materials. 
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No restrictions on use 
Offset lithograph poster in green and black ink on paper with the title in English text in decorated fonts at the top and center, with 7 captioned cartoons depicting scenes from a play in 3 rows of 2, and 1 in the bottom center. In the top row: left, a young fashionably dressed woman, Rose, holds the hand of a young man, Abie, as he embraces a man in a yarmulke, his father; right, a short man walks away from a matron in a fur stole, Rose's parents. In the center: left, Abie's father, with a Rabbi, holds a pocket watch and says time as Abie and Rose kiss; right, the short man, now in tuxedo and top hat, sits on a sofa and hides behind his wife, in a feathered headdress, as a man with thinning hair angrily confronts them. In the bottom row: left, the short, bearded man in top hat and tuxedo escorts Rose, in a wedding dress, followed by a young girl holding the bride's train, and the tall overdressed matron with feathered fan and headdress; right, a priest stands between Abie’s father and the man with thinning hair, who holds a baby. In the center, the bearded man, in a plaid coat, holds a cane and stands beside his wife, now in a feathered hat. The artis's name, Fred Spurgin, is printed in the lower left. The poster has a narrow green border and is adhered to slightly larger linen backing. 

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