Descriptive Summary
Access
Publication Rights
Preferred Citation
Acquisition Information
Biography/Administrative History
Scope and Content of Collection
Indexing Terms
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Descriptive Summary
Title: Yale Puppeteers Turnabout Theater collection
Dates: circa 1910s-1990s
Collection Number: TT
Creator/Collector:
Burnett, Harry.
Brown, Forman, 1901-1996
Brandon, Roddy.
Extent: 105 boxes (46.6 linear feet)
Online items available
Repository:
Los Angeles Public Library
Los Angeles, California 90071
Abstract: The Yale Puppeteers Turnabout Theater collection, circa 1910s-1990s, consists of several thousand photographs and negatives,
hundreds of items of ephemera, many journals and items of correspondence, and several puppets and stage props owned by the
Yale Puppeteers: Harry Burnett, Forman Brown, and Richard “Roddy” Brandon. This collection provides a unique look at Los Angeles
theatre, puppetry, and the lives of gay men through the 20th century. The collection’s photographs are primarily black and
white snapshots, but also include hundreds of 8x10 black and white portraits of Turnabout Theater players.
Language of Material: English
Access
This collection is stored on-site at the Central Branch of the Los Angeles Public Library. It is open for research by appointment
only.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item]. Yale Puppeteers Turnabout Theater collection. Collection Number: TT. Los Angeles Public Library
Acquisition Information
Gift of Forman Brown and Michael Bridges, May 1996.
Biography/Administrative History
The Yale Puppeteers were formed in 1928 by Harry Burnett, Forman Brown, and Richard “Roddy” Brandon, college friends who had
met through a mutual love of puppet theater during their educations at University of Michigan and Yale University.
The group toured New England in 1928 before establishing themselves in Los Angeles, on Olvera Street, at the Teatro Torito
in 1929. The Puppeteers stayed on at the Teatro Torito for two years before returning to the East Coast for a brief run on
Broadway from 1931 to 1933. In 1933, the men returned to Hollywood to work as puppeteers on the films “I Am Suzanne,” and
later “Whom the Gods Destroy.”
In 1941, Burnett, Brown, and Brandon opened the Turnabout Theater at 716 North La Cienega Boulevard with co-owner Dorothy
Neumann, a stage and film actress who would become a mainstay in the Turnabout. The Turnabout Theater held two stages on opposite
ends of the house, and hosted both marionette plays and live-actor performances on respective stages. Audience members were
seated on decommissioned Pacific Electric Railway seats, which could “turn about” at intermission so that both stages could
be seen over the course of the night.
The Turnabout Theater was the home of the Yale Puppeteers from 1941 until its closure in 1956, save for several limited national
tours. During its run, the Turnabout became a fixture of the Los Angeles theater scene, and a local attraction of some popularity.
The Yale Puppeteers’ performances and celebrity parodies attracted many celebrity patrons, who left their autographs on the
inner walls of the theater, as well as on personalized headshots gifted to the company.
The Turnabout revue was created primarily for an adult audience, and included productions like “Gullible’s Travels,” “Caesar
Julius,” and “Uncle Tom’s Hebbin,” as well as limited-engagement musical acts, and smaller-scale parodies using puppets and
live actors. Notable performers in the Turnabout include Elsa Lanchester, Dorothy Neumann, Lotte Goslar, Leota Lane, and Frances
Osborne.
Odetta, the folk-singer and civil rights activist, was another notable figure from the Turnabout. Odetta’s involvement with
the theater began as a child, assisting her mother Flora Feliz in her position as a maintenance worker. The family developed
a friendship with the Yale Puppeteers, Harry Burnett arranging Odetta’s early operatic vocal training several years later
in the mid-1940s. Odetta performed ensemble roles in the theater, and went on to have a major role in the 1952 production
“Tommy Turnabout Jr’s Circus” shortly before embarking on her career as a folk-artist.
In 1956, Burnett, Brown, and Brandon relocated their operation to San Francisco, but returned to Hollywood in early 1957.
The Yale Puppeteers spent the rest of their retirement in Hollywood, and staged occasional, scaled-down performances out of
their home and workshop “The Turnabout House”.
Harry Burnett constructed and operated the marionettes for the Yale Puppeteers, and performed live in many Turnabout Theater
productions. Burnett was also a prolific photographer, and documented the personal lives and travels of the Yale Puppeteers
in several thousand photographs, spanning from 1928 to the early 1990s.
Forman Brown wrote the Yale Puppeteers’ plays, including all music and lyrics, from the troupe’s formation in 1928 until their
retirement. Brown produced two books on the Yale Puppeteers’ careers, “Punch’s Progress” and “Turnabout.” Forman Brown was
also the author of the 1933 novel “Better Angel,” which explored gay sexuality without condemnation or a tragic ending—making
the novel unique for this period of gay literature.
Roddy Brandon served as a producer, business manager, and puppeteer for the Turnabout Theater. Brandon was Forman Brown’s
romantic partner from 1928 until Brandon’s death in 1985, and their correspondence is included in the collection.
The Yale Puppeteers Turnabout Theater collection documents the history of a prominent midcentury puppet theater. In doing
so, it also provides a unique look into the early years of Los Angeles theatre, and the lives of traveling performers and
gay men in 20th century America.
Scope and Content of Collection
The Yale Puppeteers Turnabout Theater collection, circa 1910s-1990s, consists of several thousand photographs and negatives,
hundreds of items of ephemera, many journals and items of correspondence, and several puppets and stage props owned by Harry
Burnett, Forman Brown, and Richard “Roddy” Brandon.
Several thousand black and white snapshots comprise the majority of the collection, spanning 1928-1960s. These photos, taken
by Harry Burnett, document the Yale Puppeteers’ personal lives, professional tours, and general travels. The collection also
includes hundreds of 8x10 black and white prints documenting Yale Puppeteers productions, puppets, and live performers spanning
1931-1956. Portraits of live performers feature primarily Elsa Lanchester, and include Harry Burnett, Forman Brown, Dorothy
Neumann, Lotte Goslar, Frances Osborne, Odetta, and others. Also featured are several albums of color snapshots documenting
the post-Turnabout careers, and retirement, of the Yale Puppeteers spanning 1960-1992. The entire collection includes several
thousand negatives (including a small number of Kodachrome slides) corresponding to these 8x10, 4x5, and snapshot photos.
The collection includes 17 puppets created by Burnett and used in Turnabout Theater productions from 1933-1956, or in his
post-Turnabout work in the 1960s-1970s. Other boxes contain small stage props used in the Turnabout, and two costumes worn
by Burnett.
Several albums and folders in the collection contain the Puppeteers’ correspondence, notably the correspondence between Forman
Brown and Roddy Brandon, spanning 1933-1978. Also included are Harry Burnett’s personal journals, spanning 1947-1986.
The collection also has over 100 signed headshots of celebrity guest performers and/or patrons to the Turnabout, including
by Marlene Dietrich, Anna May Wong, the Duncan Sisters, Beulah Bondi, Colleen Moore, Francis Lederer, Leota Lane, and Marie
Dressler. The Turnabout Theater’s “autograph wall” for celebrity patrons has been recorded in oversize photographs.
Indexing Terms
Theater--History--20th century.
Yale Puppeteers.
Los Angeles (Calif.)
Photographs.
Puppets.
Stage props.
Correspondence.
Diaries.
Ephemera.
Puppeteers.
Actors.
Additional collection guides