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Papers of Sir Cecil Beaton Hose, Eileen (d 1987)
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Letter to Rudolf Bing

A typewritten letter, in which Hose asks whether Bing would confirm that he would like Beaton to complete his set and costume designs for 'Turandot' by April 1960. If so, then he must hear from Yoshio Aoyama straight away, with his suggestions and complete dress chart.

Hose, Eileen (d 1987)

Letter to Arnold Weissberger

A typewritten letter, in which Hose (who is possibly not the author) confirms that Weissberger will negotiate the terms of Beaton's contract as a designer for 'Turandot' with Rudolf Bing. Hose reminds Weissberger of the unanticipated amount of work Beaton was asked to do for 'Vanessa', and adds that he cannot be expected to supply as many technical drawings and variations of expensive models for 'Turandot'. The drawings which he produced for 'Vanessa' cost almost as much as he was paid for them. Hose mentions this so that just such another eventuality may be covered by the terms of the contract from the beginning. She concludes by writing that Beaton will probably need an assistant for his work on 'Turandot' and that he will most likely ask Bob Randolph.

Hose, Eileen (d 1987)

Letter to Allene Talmey

An invitation for Beaton to accompany Allene Talmey to Spain for the purpose of photographing the main characters in the film 'Nicholas and Alexandra'.

Hose, Eileen (d 1987)

Letter to Arnold Weissberger

A typewritten letter, regarding Beaton's arrangement to fly to the U.S. on 20th October 1954, and his desire to know the period Quintero would prefer for his set designs.

Hose, Eileen (d 1987)

Letter to the Editor of "The Times"

Letter from Eileen Hose, regarding the possible inclusion of a photograph of a set design for "The School for Scandal" alongside a review of the Comédie-Française's production.

Hose, Eileen (d 1987)

Typescript letter to Beaton

Went to see the solicitor who made the following comments about the three documents sent to him for consideration: About the equity statement: Although it contains libellous words such as "virtual blackmail" or "deliberately sabotaged" he thinks Beaton would be protected of charges of libels because he is reporting a misdemeanour in the theatrical profession to Equity. As both parties have a mutual interest in this, this would constitute a "privileged occasion" or exemption. The solicitor will investigate this. Beaton might have to rephrase some sentences. Has not been able to speak to Minster, who is not in London. Sykes does not know if Minster intends to report Wolfit, but in any case he would wait until after Wolverhampton. Beaton's statement can only go forward with Minster's support in writing, and he can't see how Minster can be forced. They must know what are his intentions. About the press statement. It is "libellous in every line" and the newspapers would probably not publish it. Should be destroyed. About the personal letter. It is full of libellous statements but Beaton can't be sued as long as he writes the letter in his own hand (i.e. no third party would be involved) and marks it PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL. Will send the Brighton and Wolverhampton reviews as soon as he gets them.

Hose, Eileen (d 1987)

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