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This poster is black with a black and white photograph at the top center of the Friderichstadtpalast's orchestra. The poster is framed by a decorative border in layers of orange, chartreuse, and green. The text is in white at the top and bottom. This poster advertises for "Music Lays in the Sky", an evening with the Orchester des Friedrichstadtpalast (Orchestra of the Friedrichstadtpalast) under the direction of Hans Schulze-Bargin.
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This poster is white with a green outer border and a black inner border. There is a black script title at the top. It depicts cartoon boy in a shirt with blue and white horizontal stripes, green hair resembling grass, and a yellow and red tulip (respectively) growing out of his head. The theater and date information is at the bottom in black on green. This poster advertises for a "Children's Varieté".
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This poster is white with red and black script. It depicts a clown pulling apart music staffs to look through them. The clown is wearing orange and yellow horizontally striped shirt with a blue gingham jacket. The theater information is at the bottom in black on green. This poster advertises for "Ferdinand in the Kingdom of the Tones".
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This poster is black with a white script text written as if on a chalkboard. It depicts a clown child looking up with rainbow hair parted in center. The theater's information is at the bottom in black on green. This poster advertises for children's revue titled "Ferdinand Seeks the Rainbow".
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This poster is white with tiny black dots that make it appear gray. A large letter "M" is in white at the top with "Montagabend" (Monday Evening) below in white. "Heiner Müller" is below in black on red with a black border. The remaining text is in black. This poster advertises for performances of part 4 and 5 of Heiner Müller's cylce of plays "Volokolomsk Highway", also known as "Road of Tanks": "Centaur" and "The Foundling".
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This poster is black with a white script text written as if on a chalkboard. It depicts a child with a green pacifier, red clown nose, and clown-like orange hair. This poster advertises for "Ferdinand is my Father?" a children's revue. The theater's name features at bottom in yellow on red.
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This poster is white with a yellow border. It depicts an anthropomorphized sun with clown features behind a blue gingham cloud, drawn in a childlike manner. The text is in blue underneath with theater name on bottom border in red. This poster advertises for the children's performance "Ferdinand Rides the Sun" from May 16th through June 15th 1979.
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This poster is black with a cartoon depiction of a burlesque dancer with green hair wearing blue boots, pink bikini top and fishnet body stocking with wind-up key in her back. A speech bubble includes the performance title, "How would you like it?", with the remaining text at the bottom in black on green.
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This poster is black with an abstract depiction of a woman wearing a Musketeer-style hat and jester-style belled sleeves and pants. The outfit is composed of stripes in red, white, blue, yellow, orange and green, with a female's face in the pants. The text is in white at the top and bottom of the poster. This poster advertises for an opera revue around the song "Untern Linden, Untern Linden" by Marlene Dietrich.
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This poster is white with a profile silhouette of Jakob Lenz facing right. The profile is composed of black horizontal lines and blue, red, and green vertical swathes of color. The same swathes are behind the black text at the top. This poster advertises for the opera "Jakob Lenz" from Wolfgang Rihm.
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This poster is black with a square frame in center with top and bottom orange and left and right pink. A green egg rests on the bottom of the frame. The title is in white at the top and bottom, while the text at the left and right alternating in white and black on red. This poster advertises for several performances, including "Station" from Holger Teschke, "The Hen" from Stefan Schütz, Shakespeare's "Hamlet", and and Heiner Müller's "Leipziger Song Spectacle", which included singing, dance, music, and scenes.
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Poster is black with blacka and white line drawing of Mozart as a younger man holding sheet music in his left hand with more at his feet. Text in white at top and black at bottom. Advertises for a performance of Peter Schaffer's "Amadeus".
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Poster is black with white text and "Die Schlacht" in red dripping blood. Depicts a white crevice as if black door is opening in center. Advertises for "The Slaughter" from Heiner Müller and "Outside the Door" from Wolfgang Borchert. Red border at bottom.
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Poster is white with black text. Large letter "M" in white with black dots at top in black square, with "Montagabend" (Monday Evening) below in white. Advertises for stories of mental black-outs, including "Trip with Persigehl" from Uwe Kant, "Three Letters from the Heart" from Uwe Saeger, "Mental Black-out" from Horst Matthies, and "Free from the Way of Love" from Stephan Dettmeyer.
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Poster is pink with purple line drawing of a woman with an umbrella. Text in purple script verticle left and bottom left. Advertises for the opera "Martha" from Friedrich von Flotow.
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Poster is black with with uneven white text. Large white letter "M" at top, with "Montagabend" (Monday Evening) below in white. Advertises for a performance of Udo Zimmerman's "White Rose", based on the text by Wolfgang Willaschek.
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Performance title and playwright text are white on navy, with remaining text in difficult to read navy on navy. Borders at top and bottom in gold, and also above and bewlo navy-scale portrati of a woman whose face is obscured by what appear to be animal ears with eyes and body obscured by tiles. Advertises for "Ingeborg", a comedy from Curt Goetz.
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Poster is off-white and speckled with red. Text in gray top and bottom with "Moliere" in larger red caps. Center features circa 18th century depiction of a wigged man and woman standing on either side of a seated individual who is pointing to the woman at right. Advertises for Moliere's "The Imaginary Invalid".
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Poster is blue-purple with abstract red depiction of an individual wearing a starred shirt holding a mask over their face by means of a string held above their head. Mask is white at bottom. Alternatively, face is white and mask only reaches to middle of face. Text in red handwritten script, vertical bottom left and at top. Advertises for "Match" by Jürgen Groß.
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Poster is white with green text. Large gold letter "M" at top in green square, with "Montagabend" (Monday Evening) below in white. Advertises for a performance of Volker Braun's "That Can't Be Everything", premiere on May 10th 1984.
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Poster is yellow fading to light aqua at edges. Text in painted blue, with red print beneath. Depicts pencil-sketched drawing of a boy wearing a crown, holding a color puppet wearing the same crown with arms extended toward the moon. Advertises for the puppet play "How the King Wanted the Moon".
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Poster is white with red handwritten tet. In center is a green hand-drawn depiction of a man with a beard and mustache wearing a hat. The man holds up a portrait in red in his right hand of a woman in a dress waving. With his left hand he points to the portriat. Advertises for "The Incredible Mrs. Schuster", a folk comedy from F.G. Lorca.
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Poster is white with black text in various fonts (Script, print, and decorative). In center is an oval with black and white line depiction of a stage with an Eastern architectural structure and lightning above. Three individuals, heavily made-up, stand in front of the stage, the left in a top hat, the center in a trench coat, the right a woman holding a fan. Advertises for Mozart's opera "Zaide".
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Poster is off-white (probably due to age) with black text. Large letter "M" at top in black square, with "Montagabend" (Monday Evening) below in white. Advertises for a performance of Alexander Gelman's "Protocol of a Meeting".
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Poster is green with blue text. Depicts white shape of a leg and foot turned inward, bottom left, with blue shape of a boot at right turned opposite direction and appearing to ste on the foot. Advertises for Schiller's "Intrigue and Love".