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Inventory of the Joan Ehemann Stone Memorabilia, 1943-1992
Machine-readable finding aid encoded by Lisa Janssen, 2006. ©2006. |
Descriptive Summary of the Collection |
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Creator |
Eaman, Joan |
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Title |
Joan Ehemann Stone Memorabilia |
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Dates |
1943-1992 |
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Extent |
0.5 cubic ft. (1 box) |
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Abstract |
Material relating to the life and career of ballet dancer Joan Eaman (later known as Joan Ehemann Stone) which includes a youthful diary, photographs, clippings and other memorabilia. All items, with the exception of three photographs, are photocopies. |
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Language |
Materials are in English. |
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Repository |
Newberry Library, Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections |
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Collection Call Number |
Dance MS Stone J |
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Collection Stack Location |
3A 48 13 |
Joan Ehemann Stone Memorabilia, Midwest Manuscript Collection, The Newberry Library, Chicago.
Gift of Alan and Joshua Stone, 1997.
Virginia Hay Smith, 2006.
The Joan Ehemann Stone Memorabilia is open for research in the Special Collections Reading Room (Priority III).
The Joan Ehemann Stone Memorabilia is the physical property of the Newberry Library. Copyright may belong to the authors or their legal heirs or assigns. For permission to publish or reproduce any materials from this collection, contact the Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections.
American dancer.
Joan Eaman (or Ehemann) was born in Chicago in 1934, where she received her early training in the Stone-Camryn Studio with Bentley Stone and Walter Camryn. At the age of fifteen she was accepted into the Ruth Page Ballet Company and after high school graduation, she joined the Broadway musical, “New Faces of 1952.” Her classical career was mainly with the American Ballet Theatre, performing as a soloist 1953-1958. She also danced with the New York City Ballet, the Stone-Camryn Ballet (she was unrelated to Bentley Stone), the Chicago Opera Ballet, and she appeared in a number of television and film productions. She later married Alan Stone and lived in Chicago, where she was instrumental in establishing the Stone-Camryn Memorial Lecture Series at the Newberry Library.
Stone died in Chicago in 1991. The American Ballet Theatre’s 1992 production of “The Other” was dedicated to her as a perpetual memorial.
A small collection consisting almost entirely of undated photocopies of material relating to the career of dancer Joan Ehemann (or Eaman) Stone, including clippings, photographs, articles, and a few letters concerning her and the American Ballet Theatre’s memorial performances in 1992. Also, a copy of a five-year diary kept intermittently beginning when Stone was ten, and three original photographs.
Arranged alphabetically by type of material.
The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the Newberry Library's public catalog. Researchers desiring additional materials on a particular topic should search the catalog using these headings.
Container List |
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| Box | Folder | Contents | |||||||||
| 1 | 1 | Clippings (photocopies), 1992; n.d. | |||||||||
| 1 | 2 | Correspondence (photocopies), 1991-1992 | |||||||||
| 1 | 3 | Stone, Joan Ehemann – Diary (photocopy), 1943-1947 | |||||||||
| 1 | 4-6 | Photographs (photocopies), 1950-1992, n.d. | |||||||||
| 1 | 7 | Photographs, original, n.d. | |||||||||
| 1 | 8 | Publicity material (photocopies), n.d. | |||||||||