Gentlemen Prefer Blondes: A Critical EditionMain MenuPrefaceEditor's IntroductionRead about the conceptualization of the edition and its significance for scholars, students, and casual readers.The Text and Illustrations of Gentlemen Prefer BlondesRead the novel or examine the variants in text and visual presentation between the two original published editions.Critical and Biographical ContextRead about the production and reception of Blondes, explore maps of locations in the text, read about historical references, and read biographies of writer Anita Loos and illustrator Ralph Barton.Production of the EditionInformation about technical production and about contributors to the edition.About This BookAnita Loosdf7e8181b9011d96a772f9bc7265339b41c1e804Edited by Daniel G. Tracy1084a62f79367058cb758225ddf0a8810cfba170
Newspaper Joke about Maybelle Gilman Corey
12021-01-27T16:55:01+00:00Daniel G. Tracye4d2055c1ec04bf92575642aae6698bc52f8f12a1221plain2021-01-27T16:55:01+00:00Chronicling America https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024326/1923-11-27/ed-1/seq-6/1923-11-27UnknownPublic DomainOmaha Morning Bee (Omaha, Neb.), Nov. 27, 1923. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024326/1923-11-27/ed-1/seq-6/Daniel G. Tracye4d2055c1ec04bf92575642aae6698bc52f8f12a
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12021-01-27T16:56:07+00:00Maybelle Gilman Corey1plain2021-01-27T16:56:07+00:00Maybelle Gilman Corey was a musical stage actress Broadway before becoming the wife of W.E. Corey, a president of Carnegie Steel, and moving to France. They later divorced, and as the accompanying newspaper joke highlights, she lived abroad afterward on what was rumored to be a large alimony settlement.