A Collection of Television History Preserved for
The Ages...
A Complete Database Spanning Almost
Five Star-Studded Decades of American Television
This is a vast
collection of classic television memorabilia
glittering with Hollywood Stars. The star-studded archive - more than 200,000
separate items covering almost 50 years of television
programming - comprised the working files of Al and Polly Vonetes. Widely respected
Hollywood insider columnists, the Vonetes' began accumulating
the materials in the early 1960s in conjunction with their work
in producing what was one of the first weekly TV guide newspaper
inserts. In 1970, son Dean joined the family business and the
push for expansion was on. By the late 1970's the company
had eclipsed TV Guide's circulation in the state of North
Carolina. The wildly successful programming guide begun by the Vonetes' eventually gained a circulation of over 2.5 million
households operating from Pennsylvania to Alabama and was sold in 1982 to United Media, a
Scripps-Howard Company.
Single Largest Private Collection of TV Pictures
and Content Includes More Than 200,000 Original Items
The contents
of the archives were provided directly to Al and Polly Vonetes
by the TV networks, studios, production companies, publicists or through their own interviews
and research on TV stars and programming. Their collection
covers more than 26,000 performers and virtually every show that
aired on American television from 1960 onward (as well as some
fragmentary materials from the 1950s). This is an extraordinary
archive comprising 66,150 unique photographs (episodic shots and
stills), 24,000+ slides, and at least 134,000 pieces of written
material encompassing biographical sketches, press releases,
newspaper clippings, and original studio promotional kits. Many
of the items contained in the files are thought to be among the
few remaining originals in existence. The archives include
primetime series, daytime series, movies aired on TV, specials,
mini-series, documentaries, and children's programming.
Also included are biographical files on television stars, movie
stars, musical groups, singers, musicians, politicians,
commentators and many others appearing on television.
- 28 file drawers.
More.
- 36 file drawers.
More.
- 26 file drawers.
More.
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A Treasure Trove of
American TV History
Television
began to invade the American home during the 1950's. During the
early 50s, there were only a few major networks -- NBC, CBS and
ABC - joined later by PBS. And television neither had the
resources nor content to become the 24-hour medium that it is
today. The networks used their limited resources and early
sponsors to develop and produce programs like I Love Lucy and
Leave It To Beaver. The networks would assemble press releases
with photo stills, background materials and an episode synopsis,
to media channels for publication, and to distribute them to media
channels for publication.
At that time, TV guides as we now know them were nonexistent. In
the early 1960s, Al and Polly Vonetes started a small business
to assemble and produce a Television Guide Insert for newspapers
in Virginia and North Carolina. The TV channels, networks,
studios and producers provided the Vonetes family companies,
Press Features and Television Programming data and later Television Newsfeatures Syndicate, with
information that is now included in their files along with the
interviews, features and articles they produced. Also included
are materials produced by the Vonetes themselves who conducted
their own interviews with many stars, and wrote original reviews
of shows and features.
In much the same way as today’s “traditional media” viewed the
early onslaught of the Internet, newspapers first looked upon
television as a threat with a negative impact on their
advertising revenues. With ever increasing success, by 1980 the
company founded by the Vonetes' was operating in nine states
servicing more than 70 daily newspapers with a combined
household circulation in excess of 2.5 million. The rapid
expansion caught the attention of newspaper giant
Scripps-Howard. United Media, a Scripps-Howard Company, acquired
the family enterprise in 1982.
The Vonetes' have continued to maintain this archive since
1960, even as the existing networks grew and new networks
emerged. Al and Polly Vonetes later launched Television
Newsfeatures Syndicate which provided interviews and content to
national publications, syndicates, and international television
networks showing syndicated American programming. This
collection represents
five decades of Americanna.
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