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  1. The Broadway League is the national trade association for the Broadway industry. Our 700-plus members include theatre owners and operators, producers, presenters, and general managers in North American cities, as well as suppliers of goods and services to the commercial theatre industry.

  2. Tilly Losch. Ottilie Ethel Leopoldine Herbert, Countess of Carnarvon ( née Losch; November 15, 1903 – December 24, 1975), known professionally as Tilly Losch. She was an Austrian dancer, choreographer, actress, and painter who lived and worked for most of her life in the United States and United Kingdom . She was born in Vienna to a Jewish ...

  3. 1. Nov. 2019 · Abstract. Tilly Losch is commemorated as an absent presence through two 1930s interiors commissioned by her then husband the art collector Edward James: Paul Nash’s design for a bathroom in James’s London town house and a patterned stair carpet ostensibly based on Losch’s wet footprints on leaving her bath. The Nash bathroom, no longer ...

  4. Ottilie Ethel ('Tilly') Losch. Sitter in 22 portraits. Austrian-born ballerina and actress Tilly (Ottilie) Losch danced with the Vienna State Opera Ballet (1921-8), including in Max Reinhardt's 1927 Salzburg Festival production of Shakespeare 's A Midsummer Night's Dream. She toured with Reinhardt's theatre and ballet ensemble to New York (1927 ...

  5. 25. Dez. 1975 · Tilly Losch, a leading international dancer in the 1920's and 30's, died yesterday of cancer at New York Hospital. She was believed to be in her early 70's and had homes at 20 East 68th Street and ...

  6. Mathilde Jaksch, 'Phantom' (Tilly Losch), c. 1930'Phantom' (Tilly Losch), c. 1930H. 20.2 cm. Made. Live auf Los 559 in der Auktion Jugendstil - Art Déco - Teil II bei Quittenbaum Kunstauktionen bieten. Jugendstil.

  7. "Tilly Losch" published on by null. (orig. Ottilia Ethel Leopoldine; b Vienna, 15 Nov. c.1904; d New York, 24 Dec. 1975)Austrian dancer, choreographer, actress, and painter. She studied at the Vienna Opera Ballet School and danced with the company (1921–8), creating her first major role in Kröller's Schlagobers (1924).