Description: Original , Vintage Black & White 5" x 7" Publicity / Promotion Photograph of a Men's Musical Singing Quartet Group " The Mariners " photographer was James J. Kriegsmann (1909-1994), who was a celebrity photographer, working from 1929 to the early 1960s. He photographed notables as Frank Sinatra, Sid Caesar, Ray Charles, Stevie Wonder and many more. He was the in-house photographer for the Cotton Club in Harlem. Original signatures of all Four Members. The Mariners, who consisted of Martin Karl, Jim Lewis, Tom Lockard, and Nat Dickerson. I believe this was one of the first racially mixed recording music groups to be on television. guaranteed , vintage original , glossy photo , not a current reproduction. this photo is from a local estate / photograph scrapbook of TV/radio/recording stars from the 1950s , that I am listing on ebay. This photo is not dated , but probably from the mid 1950's. The bottom right corner tip is missing. The top right corner is creased. There is glue residue on the back and a name written in ink. otherwise about good/vg condition. -------------------------------------------------------- The Mariners regularly appeared on the TV show "Arthur Godfrey And His Friends" between 1949 and 1955. They also backed Godfrey on several Columbia releases. Early hit was "Oh Mo'nah" by Arthur Godfrey And The Mariners The Mariners were a pop and gospel vocal group of the mid 20th century, particularly noted for their work with Arthur Godfrey. The Mariners were a four-piece all-male racially integrated group (two white and two African American members). They formed during World War II, in 1942, at Manhattan Beach, Brooklyn; the four members (Tom Lockard, Jim Lewis, Nat Dickerson and Martin Karl) were serving in the United States Coast Guard there. They toured Pacific military bases in 1945. Arthur Godfrey hired them, and they were regulars on his radio show and later his television shows for several years. The presence of the integrated Mariners brought complaints from Southern politicians and Southern CBS affiliates, which Godfrey publicly and scathingly rebuffed. Godfrey summarily fired The Mariners in 1955. (a fairly common modus for Godfrey during these years). The Mariners then guested on other shows such as the Ed Sullivan Show and continued to record (on the Cadence Records label founded by Godfrey's musical director Archie Bleyer) and appear on New York radio, but with diminishing popularity As a group, The Mariners date from 1942, at Manhattan Beach, New York, where they were individually stationed with the Coast Guard. Although each of them had made many appearances as soloists, one of their officers requested them to sing as a quartet. The ensemble they formed produced such pleasing harmonies, both to audience ears and to those of the singers as well, that they decided to remain a unit. As the Coast Guard Quartet, they were attached to the Third Naval District in New York, and entertained throughout that area. View my other Vintage 1950s - 1960s promo photos, business cards, polaroid snapshots, postcards, photographs, programs, brochures and other items in my Ebay Store.
Price: 89.95 USD
Location: Salisbury, North Carolina
End Time: 2024-02-22T16:14:52.000Z
Shipping Cost: 10.15 USD
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