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AMERICAN MUSEUM OF VAUDEVILLE, INC has closed after forty years of preserving vaudeville!

We collected vast amounts of memorabilia and in 2008, secured a permanent home for most of our collections at the University of Arizona. The University however, now thinks they have better expertise in the field and decided they will pick and choose what gets added to the American Vaudeville Museum Archives. This is not acceptable to the AVM and deviates from the original agreement with the Board of Regents. We have found other locations willing to take AVM’s extensive library of theatre books, DVDs and VHS tapes. We are sending all memorabilia to the Shubert Archive and encourage you to contact them if you have collections you wish preserved.
Shubert Archive

In the future, coming to this site you will be redirected to the personal site of co-founders, Frank Cullen and Donald McNeilly. There you will find Vaudeville Times (original & bound volumes) and all the Porridge Sisters Adventures. There will also be limited resources and profiles as space allows.

This domain, vaudeville.org is available for purchase. Please write to dmcneilly@vaudeville.org if interested.

Do not send any other inquiries–we can no longer respond to questions about your books, articles or relatives. I’m afraid CLOSED means CLOSED. You will not receive any response.

We will dissolve AVM, Inc. when all appropriate filings have been made.
Thank you all for your years of support.

"Variety" 1908

“Vaudeville was more than an assembly of ragtime pantaloons, topical monologists, eccentric dancers, barrel-house songbirds, magicians, tumblers and jugglers, more than a coast-to-coast network of once-gilded theatres now shambling into plaster dust. Vaudeville was a people’s culture. What has remained of vaudeville is the act—a distillation of a performer’s best material into a near-perfect performance piece: the product of personality, talent and skill—the vaudevillian’s reason for living.”             ~Frank Cullen

The American Museum of Vaudeville (aka AMV, American Vaudeville Museum and AVM) was cofounded by Frank Cullen and Donald McNeilly in 1982 as a nonprofit corporation. It was dedicated to the preservation, collection, presentation and publication of all vaudeville materials, records and effects as may advance and preserve the knowledge of vaudeville, its performers and its place in the cultural and social history of the United States. AVM received its tax exempt 501 (c) (3) designation in 1984. It was closed in 2022.

Arnaut Brothers
Ferry Corwey, "The Musical Clown"

From 1998 until 2008, American Vaudeville Museum published Vaudeville Times, a quarterly magazine. Each issue ran twenty to twenty-eight pages and included four to ten profiles with photos of vaudevillians, old and new, plus reviews and other showbiz histories. Limited quantities of back issues are available and AVM has reissued all forty as a ten volume set.

AVM principals Frank Cullen and Donald McNeilly, coauthored Vaudeville, Old & New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performers in America published by Routledge Press in 2007.

In 2008, AVM made arrangements with the University of Arizona for the permanent housing and preservation of its extensive collections of vaudeville memorabilia. The thousands of items in the collection represent one of the largest archives of vaudeville materials in the country and prepares the way for the University of Arizona to become the largest repository of historical vaudeville materials available for research. AVM’s materials are the core of the collection at U of A and is attracting other collections.
As stated earlier, U of A now thinks they are more knowledgeable in the field of vaudeville and have decided they know what is important to be preserved and what is not important. While they may have the bulk of AVM’s collections, they will receive nothing further. Ever. Any future collections that come our way will go to the Shubert Archive. We encourage you to contact them directly with your collections.

The American Vaudeville Museum

Shubert Archive

Rice & Prevost
"The Greatest of All Acrobatic Acts"
Gaudsmith Brothers

In 2011, AVM principals, Cullen and McNeilly were recipients of The Theatre Museum of NYC’s Award for Excellence in the Preservation of Theatre History.

 

From 2010 to 2018, AVM has published a series of seven “Porridge Sisters Adventures”. The historical novels are set in Boston between 1908 and 1933—vaudeville’s peak years and its decline. The series offers an intimate look into the daily lives of vaudevillians as they trudged from train station to boardinghouse to band call at the current week’s theatre.

From 2006 until 2018, AVM sponsored and presented film series at the Guild Cinema in Albuquerque. Frank Cullen introduced “Exceptional films of every era and from many lands” and hosted after-screening discussions. In 2018, the series was rechristened “Movies in the Mountains” and moved to the Public Library in Tijeras, NM and continues until this day.

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