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BROADWAY CONCERT PIANIST RADIO TV FILM COMEDIAN VICTOR BORGE 1960s POSTER SIGNED

$ 5.27

Availability: 19 in stock
  • Condition: VG+
  • Signed: Yes
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Signed by: VICTOR BORGE-COMEDIAN, CLASSICAL PIANIST & ENTERTA
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Denmark
  • Autograph Authentication: GUARANTEED AUTHENTIC
  • Object Type: Poster
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Industry: Theater
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back

    Description

    VICTOR BORGE
    (1909 – 2000)
    WORLD-RENOWNED 20
    th
    CENTURY DANISH-AMERICAN ENTERTAINER
    &
    ACCOMPLISHED BROADWAY CONCERT PIANIST, COMPOSER, CONDUCTOR, and COMEDIAN WHO ACHIEVED GREAT POPULARITY IN RADIO and TELEVISION WORLD-WIDE FROM THE 1940s TO THE 1990s.
    Borge’s blend of music and comedy earned him the nicknames "
    The Clown Prince of Denmark
    , "
    The Unmelancholy Dane,
    " and "
    The Great Dane
    ."
    Well-loved for his comedic renderings and recordings of classical mainstays,
    The Clown Prince of Denmark
    launched his remarkable career with a debut in Copenhagen at the spry age of eight. Quickly gaining momentum as a gifted musician, though one who possessed a remarkable sense of humor, it didn't take Borge long to adopt the persona that would define his career.
    Breaking the Broadway stage record for one-man shows with an exhausting 849 performances at Gotham's Golden Theater in the 1950s
    (
    a feat which placed him in the
    Guinness Book of World Records
    )
    ,
    Borge was a tireless performer who continued to entertain until his death at age 90!
    Borge also appeared in Hollywood films (as well as movies made in his Denmark), and made an appearance as himself in Martin Scorsese's “
    King of Comedy”
    in 1983.
    <
    <>
    >
    HERE A RARE
    1960-1970s
    VINTAGE DANISH PERFORMANCE POSTER BOLDLY SIGNED & INSCRIBED BY BORGE:

    To Mark-
    With best wishes –
    Victor Borge”
    THIS COLOR POSTER WAS “
    PRINTED IN DENMARK BY VANG RASMUSSEN LTD
    .”
    The document measures 14” x 22¾” and is in VERY GOOD FRAMEABLE CONDITION, with some light edge creases/wear.
    <>
    <>
    <>
    BIOGRAPHY OF VICTOR BORGE
    Borge performing before an audience in 1957.
    Børge Rosenbaum
    (3 January 1909 – 23 December 2000),
    known professionally as
    Victor Borge
    (
    /ˈbɔːrɡə/
    BOR-gə
    ), was a Danish-American comedian, conductor, and pianist who achieved great popularity in radio and television in the
    United States
    and
    Europe
    . His blend of music and comedy earned him the nicknames "The Clown Prince of Denmark," The Unmelancholy Dane", and "The Great Dane."
    Biography
    Early life and career
    Victor Borge was born Børge Rosenbaum on 3 January 1909 in
    Copenhagen, Denmark
    , into an
    Ashkenazi Jewish
    family. His parents, Bernhard and Frederikke (
    née
    Lichtinger) Rosenbaum, were both musicians: his father a
    violist
    in the
    Royal Danish Orchestra
    , and his mother a pianist. Borge began piano lessons at the age of two, and it was soon apparent that he was a prodigy. He gave his first piano recital when he was eight years old, and in 1918 was awarded a full scholarship at the
    Royal Danish Academy of Music
    , studying under
    Olivo Krause
    . Later on, he was taught by
    Victor Schiøler
    ,
    Liszt
    's student
    Frederic Lamond
    , and
    Busoni
    's pupil
    Egon Petri
    .
    Borge played his first major concert in 1926 at the Danish Odd Fellow Palæet (
    The Odd Fellow's Lodge building
    ) concert hall. After a few years as a classical concert pianist, he started his now famous "
    stand-up
    " act, with the signature blend of piano music and jokes. He married the American Elsie Chilton in 1933; the same year he debuted with his revue acts. Borge started touring extensively in Europe, where he began telling anti-
    Nazi
    jokes.
    When the German armed forces occupied Denmark on 9 April 1940, during
    World War II
    , Borge was playing a concert in
    Sweden
    and managed to escape to
    Finland
    .
    He traveled to America on the United States Army transport
    American Legion
    , the last neutral ship to make it out of
    Petsamo
    , Finland, and arrived 28 August 1940, with only (about 9 today), with going to the customs fee. Disguised as a sailor, Borge returned to Denmark once during the occupation to visit his dying mother.
    Move to America
    Even though Borge did not speak a word of English upon arrival, he quickly managed to adapt his jokes to the American audience, learning English by watching movies. He took the name of Victor Borge, and in 1941, he started on
    Rudy Vallee
    's radio show. He was hired soon after by
    Bing Crosby
    for his
    Kraft Music Hall
    programme.
    Borge quickly rose to fame, winning Best New Radio Performer of the Year in 1942. Soon after the award, he was offered film roles with stars such as
    Frank Sinatra
    (in
    Higher and Higher
    ). While hosting
    The Victor Borge Show
    on
    NBC
    beginning in 1946, he developed many of his trademarks, including repeatedly announcing his intent to play a piece but getting "distracted" by something or other, making comments about the audience, or discussing the usefulness of
    Chopin
    's "
    Minute Waltz
    " as an egg timer.He would also start out with some well-known classical piece like
    Beethoven
    's "
    Moonlight Sonata
    " and suddenly move into a harmonically similar pop or jazz tune, such as
    Cole Porter
    's "
    Night and Day
    " or "
    Happy Birthday to You
    ."
    Borge's style
    One of Borge's other famous routines was "Phonetic Punctuation," in which he read a passage from a book and added exaggerated sound effects to stand for all of the
    punctuation
    marks, such as periods, commas, and exclamation marks.
    Another is his "Inflationary Language," in which he added one to every number or homophone of a number in the words he spoke. For example: "once upon a time" becomes "twice upon a time", "wonderful" becomes "twoderful", "forehead" becomes "fivehead", "anyone for tennis" becomes "anytwo five elevennis", "I ate a tenderloin with my fork and so on and so forth" becomes "I nined an elevenderloin with my fivek and so on and so fifth."
    Borge used physical and visual elements in his live and televised performances. He would play a strange-sounding piano tune from sheet music, looking increasingly confused; turning the sheet upside down or sideways, he would then play the actual tune, flashing a joyful smile of accomplishment to the audience (he had, at first, been literally playing the tune upside down or sideways). When his energetic playing of another song would cause him to fall off the piano bench, he would open the seat lid, take out the two ends of an automotive seat belt, and buckle himself onto the bench, "for safety." Conducting an orchestra, he might stop and order a violinist who had played a sour note to get off the stage, then resume the performance and have the other members of the section move up to fill the empty seat while they were still playing. From off stage would come the sound of a gunshot.
    His musical sidekick in the 1960s,
    Leonid Hambro
    , was also a well-known concert pianist. In 1968, classical pianist
    Şahan Arzruni
    joined him as his straight man, performing together on one piano a version of
    Liszt's Second Hungarian Rhapsody
    , considered a musical-comedic classic. Borge performed a version of the routine with
    Rowlf the Dog
    on Season 4 of
    The Muppet Show
    .
    He also enjoyed interacting with the audience. Seeing an interested person in the front row, he would ask them, "Do you like good music?" or "Do you care for piano music?" After an affirmative answer, Borge would take a piece of sheet music from his piano and say, "Here is some," and hand it over. After the audience's laughter died down, he would say, "That'll be .95" (or whatever the current price might be). He would then ask whether the audience member could read music; if the member said yes, he would ask a higher price. If he got no response from the audience after a joke, he would often add "...when this ovation has died down, of course." The delayed punchline to handing the person the sheet music would come when he would reach the end of a number and begin playing the penultimate notes over and over, with a puzzled look. He would then go back to the person in the audience, retrieve the sheet music, tear off a piece of it, stick it on the piano, and play the last couple of notes from it
    Making fun of modern theater, he would sometimes begin a performance by asking if there were any children in the audience. There always were, of course. He would sternly order them out, then say, "We do have some children in here; that means I can't do the second half in the nude. I'll wear the tie (pause). The long one (pause). The very long one, yes."
    In his stage shows in later years, he would include a segment with opera singer Marylyn Mulvey.
    She would try to sing an aria, and he would react and interrupt, with such antics as falling off the bench in "surprise" when she hit a high note. He would also remind her repeatedly not to rest her hand on the piano, telling her that if she got used to it, "and one day a piano was not there –
    Fffftttt!
    " After the routine, the spotlight would rest on Mulvey, and she would sing a serious number with Borge accompanying in the background.
    Later career
    Borge appeared on
    Toast of the Town
    hosted by
    Ed Sullivan
    several times during 1948. He became a
    naturalized citizen
    of the United States the same year. He started the
    Comedy in Music
    show at
    John Golden Theatre
    in
    New York City
    on 2 October 1953.
    Comedy in Music
    became the longest running one-man show in the history of theater with 849 performances when it closed on 21 January 1956, a feat which placed it in the
    Guinness Book of World Records
    .
    Continuing his success with tours and shows, Borge played with and conducted orchestras including the
    Chicago Symphony Orchestra
    ,
    the
    New York Philharmonic
    and
    London Philharmonic
    . Always modest, he felt honored when he was invited to conduct the
    Royal Danish Orchestra
    at the
    Royal Danish Theatre
    in Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1992.
    His later television appearances included his "Phonetic Punctuation" routine on
    The Electric Company
    in a filmed sketch. He would also use this sketch on
    The Electric Company
    '
    s LP record to follow, during its "Punctuation" song. In addition, he appeared several times on
    Sesame Street
    , and he was a guest star during the
    fourth season
    of
    The Muppet Show
    .
    Victor Borge continued to tour until his last days, performing up to 60 times per year when he was 90 years old.
    Other endeavors
    Borge made several appearances on the TV show
    What's My Line?
    , both as a celebrity panelist, and as a contestant with the occupation "poultry farmer" (the latter was not a comedy routine; as a business venture, Borge raised and popularized
    Rock Cornish game hens
    starting in the 1950s).
    Borge helped start several trust funds, including the Thanks to Scandinavia Fund, which was started in dedication to those who helped the Jews escape the German persecution during the war.
    Aside from his musical work, Borge wrote three books,
    My Favorite Intermissions
    and
    My Favorite Comedies in Music
    (both with
    Robert Sherman
    ), and the autobiography
    Smilet er den korteste afstand
    ("The Smile is the Shortest Distance") with Niels-Jørgen Kaiser.
    In 1979, Borge founded the
    American Pianists Association
    (then called the Beethoven Foundation) with Julius Bloom and Anthony P. Habig. The American Pianists Association now produces two major piano competitions: the Classical Fellowship Awards and the Jazz Fellowship Awards.
    Family
    He married his first wife, Elsie Chilton, in 1933. After divorcing Elsie, he married Sarabel Sanna Scraper in 1953, and they stayed married until her death at the age of 83 in September 2000. Borge had five children (who occasionally performed with him): Ronald Borge and Janet Crowle (adopted) with Elsie Chilton, and Sanna Feinstein, Victor Bernhard (Vebe) Jr., and Frederikke (Rikke) Borge with Sarabel.
    Death
    On 23 December 2000, Borge died in
    Greenwich, Connecticut
    , at the age of 91, after 75 years of entertaining. He died peacefully in his sleep a day after returning from a concert in Denmark. "It was just his time to go," Frederikke Borge said. "He's been missing my mother terribly." (His wife had died only three months earlier.)
    Per Borge's wishes, his connection to both the United States and Denmark was marked by having part of his ashes interred at
    Putnam Cemetery
    in Greenwich, with a replica of the iconic Danish statue
    The Little Mermaid
    sitting on a large rock at the grave site, and the other part in
    Western Jewish Cemetery
    (
    Mosaisk Vestre Begravelsesplads
    ), Copenhagen.
    Legacy
    Borge received an honorary degree from
    Trinity College Connecticut
    in 1997.
    When the
    Royal Danish Orchestra
    celebrated its 550th anniversary in 1998, Borge was appointed an honorary member — at that time one of only ten in the orchestra's history.
    Victor Borge received numerous awards and honors during the course of his career. Borge received
    Kennedy Center Honors
    in 1999. He was decorated with badges of
    chivalric orders
    by the five Nordic countries, receiving the
    Order of the Dannebrog
    ,
    Order of Vasa
    ,
    St. Olav's Medal
    ,
    Order of the White Rose of Finland
    and
    Order of the Falcon
    .
    Victor Borge Hall, located in
    Scandinavia House
    in New York City, was named in Borge's honor in 2000, as was
    Victor Borges Plads
    ("Victor Borge Square") in Copenhagen in 2002.
    In 2009, a statue celebrating Borge's centennial was erected on the square.
    Asteroid
    (5634) Victorborge is named in his honor.
    From 23 January to 9 May 2009, the life of Borge was celebrated by
    The American-Scandinavian Foundation
    with
    Victor Borge: A Centennial Celebration.
    Film and television
    On 14 March 2009, a television special about his life,
    100 Years of Music and Laughter
    , aired on
    PBS
    .
    On 7 February 2017, it was reported that, according to a press release by the Danish production company M&M Productions, both a television series and cinematic film about the life of Borge were foreseen to be filmed in 2018.
    Discography
    Phonetic Punctuation Parts 1 and 2
    (1945, Columbia Records 36911, 78 rpm)
    The Blue Serenade / A Lesson in Composition
    (1945, Columbia Records 36912, 78 rpm)
    Brahms' Lullaby / Grieg Rhapsody
    (1945, Columbia Records 36913, 78 rpm
    A Mozart Opera by Borge / All The Things You Are
    (1945, Columbia Records 36914, 78 rpm)
    A Victor Borge Program
    (1946, Columbia Album C-111, 4 discs 78 rpm – a set containing the four previous releases
    Unstarted Symphony / Bizet's Carmen
    (1947, Columbia Records 38181, 78 rpm
    Intermezzo / Stardust
    (1947, Columbia Records 38182, 78 rpm)
    Rachmaninoff's Concerto No. 2 / Inflation Language
    (1947, Columbia Records 38183, 78 rpm)
    Clair de Lune / Vuggevise
    (1947, Columbia Records 38184, 78 rpm)
    An Evening with Victor Borge
    (1948 Columbia Album C-161, 4 discs 78 rpm – a set containing the four previous releases)
    A Victor Borge Program
    (1951, Columbia Records CL-6013, 10'' LP)
    Comedy in Music, Vol. 1
    (1954, Columbia Records CL-6292, 10'' LP)
    Comedy in Music, Vol. 2
    (1954, Columbia Records CL-6293, 10'' LP)
    Comedy in Music
    (1954, Columbia Records CL-554, LP)
    Caught in the Act
    (1955, Columbia Records CL-646, LP)
    Brahms, Bizet and Borge
    (1955, Columbia Records CL-2538, 10'' LP)
    ½ Time På Dansk
    (1958, Fona 251 HI-FI, 10'' LP)
    The Adventures of Piccolo, Saxie and Company
    (1959, Columbia Records CL-1223, LP)
    The Adventures of Piccolo, Saxie and Company
    (1959, Coronet KLP 762, LP (AUS))
    Victor Borge Plays and Conducts Concert Favorites
    (1959, Columbia Records CL-1305/CS-8113, LP)
    Borge's Back
    (1962, MGM E/SE-3995P, LP)
    Borge's Back
    (1962, MGM CS-6055, LP (UK))
    Borgering on Genius
    (1962, MGM 2354029, LP – same material as
    Borge's Back
    )
    Great Moments of Comedy
    (1964, Verve V/V6 15044, LP – same material as
    Borge's Back
    )
    Victor Borge presents his own enchanting version of Hans Christian Andersen
    (1966, Decca DL7-34406 Stereo, LP)
    Comedy in Music
    (1972, CBS S 53140, LP)
    Victor Borge at His Best
    (1972, PRT Records COMP 5, 2 LPs)
    Victor Borge Live At The London Palladium
    (1972, Pye NSPL 18394, LP)
    My Favorite Intervals
    (1975, PYE NSPD 502, LP)
    13 Pianos Live in Concert
    (1975, Telefunken-Decca LC-0366)
    Victor Borge 50 Års Jubilæum
    (1976, Philips 6318035, LP)
    Victor Borge Show
    (1977, CBS 70082, LP, in Danish)
    Victor Borge Live in der Hamburger Musikhalle
    (1978, Philips 6305 369, LP)
    Victor Borge Live
    (1978, Starbox LX 96 004 Stereo, LP)
    Victor Borge – Live(!)
    (1992, Sony Broadway 48482, CD)
    The Piano & Humor of the Great Victor Borge
    (1997, Sony Music Special Products 15312, 3 CDs)
    The Two Sides of Victor Borge
    (1998, GMG Entertainment, CD)
    Caught in the Act
    (1999, Collectables Records 6031, CD)
    Comedy in Music
    (1999, Collectables Records 6032, CD)
    Phonetically Speaking – And Don't Forget The Piano
    (2001, Jasmine 120, CD)
    En aften med Victor Borge
    (2003, UNI 9865861, CD)
    I Love You Truly
    (2004, Pegasus (Pinnacle) 45403, CD)
    Victor Borge King of Comedy
    (2006, Phantom 26540, CD)
    Verdens morsomste mand: alle tiders Victor Borge
    (2006, UNI 9877560, CD)
    Unstarted Symphony
    (2008, NAX-8120859, CD)
    Comedy in Music
    (2009, SHO-227, CD)
    Filmography
    Year
    Title
    Role
    Notes
    1937
    Frk. Møllers Jubilæum
    Klaverstemmer Asmussen
    1937
    Der var engang en Vicevært
    Komponist Bøegh
    1938
    Alarm
    Tjener Cæsar
    1939
    De tre måske fire
    Kontorist – Bøjesen
    1943
    Higher and Higher
    Sir Victor Fitzroy Victor
    1944
    The Story of Dr. Wassell
    Man
    Uncredited, Unbilled
    1964
    Victor Borge at Carnegie Hall
    TV special, ABC
    1966
    The Daydreamer
    Zenith (The Second Tailor)
    Voice
    1982
    The King of Comedy
    Victor Borge
    I am a proud member of the Universal Autograph Collectors Club (UACC), The Ephemera Society of America, the Manuscript Society and the American Political Items Collectors (APIC) (member name: John Lissandrello). I subscribe to each organizations' code of ethics and authenticity is guaranteed. ~Providing quality service and historical memorabilia online for over 20 years.~
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