by Joe_DS »
Wed Jan 02, 2008 7:08 am
Hi Larry:
If you haven't already done this, also try posting your request on the local (Boston) craigslist board. I believe there's a "wanted" section in the "for sale" items area. You may also try The Old Time Victrola Music Message Board --
http://sonoraman.proboards107.com/ -- which also has a wanted section.
By the way, the type of "gramophone" used would depend on the year in which the play is set. In the United States, for instance, outside horn type talking machines were displaced in well furnished parlors starting around 1908-1910 by enclosed horn models. The first enclosed horn talking machine, the Victrola, hit the market in 1906. Households that would never consider an "ugly looking contraption" with a large horn sitting in the corners of their living rooms (or music rooms) were far more willing to embrace the expensive wood veneers and cabinetry of the larger, enclosed horn models.
You can find out quite a bit of information about this at
http://victor-victrola.com . (Also see
http://victor-victrola.com/new_page_2.htm which provides a list of the various models, along with illustrations and
production dates.)
A well to do family, circa 1908 or before, would likely have had an outside horn model similar to a Vic. V or Vic VI (see list above), especially one equipped with a matching wooden horn, even if this meant the maid had to dust it off once a day.
While I am not recommending you use this, there are also so-called "reproduction gramophones" that appear in the hundreds on eBay at any given time, and sell for well under $100. They are equipped with cheap brass looking horns and cabinets slapped together with parts culled mostly from junked 1940s/1950s portable wind-up phonographs. (Google "crap-o-phone" to find out more about these.) These turn up from time to time in movies and television shows, theatrical productions, etc. To the knowledgeable collector, they are a laughable prop; but the average person seated in the audience probably wouldn't know the difference.