Raimondo Borea's Photograph of Johnny Carson and Steve Allen Featured in Marilyn Maye Show at 54 Below

Raimondo Borea's Photograph of Johnny Carson and Steve Allen Featured in Marilyn Maye Show at 54 Below

On Thursday, October 30th, GME President Jon Gartenberg, GME Fine Arts Curator David Deitch, and GME Associate Matt McKinzie attended a live musical performance by celebrated singer Marilyn Maye at 54 Below. Maye is a Grammy-nominated performer who was discovered by Steve Allen in 1963. She went on to appear on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson a record 76 times, the most of any other musical guest. She also recorded a number of successful albums for RCA in the 1960s, and at the age of 97, continues to perform live. Throughout her show at 54 Below, Maye shared clips from her appearances on The Tonight Show as well as stills from the show itself. One of the stills is an on-set photo taken by Raimondo Borea. Borea, a freelance photographer, was afforded exclusive behind-the-scenes access to The Tonight Show, where he captured candid portraits of the show’s hosts and celebrity guests. The Borea photo featured in Maye’s show is from the mid-1960s and captures host Johnny Carson and guest Steve Allen sharing a laugh. GME represents Borea’s photographic oeuvre and is committed to resurrecting the career of this important yet overlooked artist. GME recently partnered with Getty Images to make Borea’s photographs of The Today Show and The Tonight Show available for licensing. Please contact info@gartenbergmedia.com for all inquiries related to the Borea photography collection.

Read More

Shari Lewis and Lamb Chop Documentary Acquired for U.S. Theatrical Distribution by Kino Lorber

Shari Lewis and Lamb Chop Documentary Acquired for U.S. Theatrical Distribution by Kino Lorber

On June 4, 2025, it was announced that Kino Lorber had acquired the U.S. distribution rights to Lisa D’Apolito’s SHARI & LAMB CHOP, a documentary about trailblazing children’s entertainer Shari Lewis and her anthropomorphic sock puppet Lamb Chop. For this documentary, GME licensed Raimondo Borea’s photograph of Lewis and Lamb Chop appearing on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson in the mid-1960s. D’Apolito’s film will be theatrically released by Kino Lorber tomorrow, July 18th, 2025, followed by a digital, educational, and home video release. GME distributes a number of films from Kino Lorber’s library to North American academic institutions. To read a complete list of Kino Lorber titles we currently offer on DVD, Blu-Ray, and digital formats, click here.

Read More

May 2025 Roundup Related to GME Titles, Artists, and Colleagues

May 2025 Roundup Related to GME Titles, Artists, and Colleagues

Today we recap screenings, events, and celebrations from May related to GME titles, artists, and colleagues. Notably, four films by Warren Sonbert screened at Shotgun Cinema in Missouri, and stills from Sonbert’s debut film AMPHETAMINE were featured in Maurice Nagington’s book The Moral Lessons of Chemsex: A Critical Approach, now available in print. In terms of GME’s photography collections, we publicly announced our co-exclusive partnership with Getty Images to license Raimondo Borea’s photographs of The Today Show and The Tonight Show. GME also continued programming in the Adrienne Mancia Streaming Room last month with a double bill of films by King Vidor and Henry King.

Read More

2025 Photo Licensing Reel

2025 Photo Licensing Reel

GME's Photo Licensing Reel comprises a vast array of photographs taken by Raimondo Borea (1926—1982) and Hugh Bell (1927—2012), whose collections are represented by Gartenberg Media Enterprises for licensing, exhibition, and placement.

Read More

Raimondo Borea: A Recent Renaissance

Raimondo Borea: A Recent Renaissance

GME is proud to represent the work of photographer Raimondo Borea (b. 1926—d. 1982) who, over a four decade-long career, amassed an impressive portfolio that permeated all areas of fine art photography, television, music, publishing, and advertising. Recently, Borea’s work has been experiencing a small renaissance, as evidenced by the appearances of his photos in two books and a documentary within the past year.

Read More

GARTENBERG MEDIA ENTERPRISES ANNOUNCES EXCLUSIVE REPRESENTATION OF THE RAIMONDO BOREA PHOTOGRAPHY COLLECTION

000032

Photograph © Esmond Edwards.  Used by permission.

Gartenberg Media Enterprises (GME) is proud to announce exclusive representation of the work of photographer Raimondo Borea (b. 1926 - d. 1982).  Over a 40-year career of active photography, Borea amassed an impressive body of photographs that are virtually unknown today.  And yet, his creative output permeated all areas of fine art photography, television, music, book publishing, and advertising.  

Raimondo Borea was born in Rome in 1926.   By the early 1950’s, he was already photographing candid portraits of orphaned and homeless war children housed in the  Boys’ Towns of Italy.  Borea emigrated to the United States in 1953.  He settled in New York City, where he joined the Village Camera Club and The Circle of Confusion.   Frequent meetings held by both these informal groups, attended by fellow photographers with a passion for the Leica camera, led Borea to develop his own highly personal form of creative expression.

About his photographic method, Borea wrote:

000109

Photography enables me to discover, observe [and] understand things about people and their relationships, and it allows me to captureand hold them forever… It is by photographs, rather than by talkingabout experiences, that I communicate.

Photography is an expression of your individuality.  You start withcolor or black and white.  Then having chosen your film, the camera,the lens, the developer, the paper for the final print, you can create analmost infinite number of ways to make a photograph.

I enjoy being in my darkroom.  There is something in the still darknessthat brings out your best creative thinking.  You relive your past photography and plan your future… You experience a very specialsensation holding the end product…the picture you have printed yourself.

Building on his career as a young photographer in Italy, Borea began working full time in 1957 as a freelance photographer, travelling around New York City on his three-speed Dunelt bicycle.  He shot photographic essays of now-demolished New York City landmarks, including the Washington Market and the Third Avenue El.  He also photographed many other cityscapes, including Central Park, Riverside Park, and the New York City subway system.  In his picture-making, he often transformed these locales into studies of abstraction.  Borea also produced photographic essays from his travels around the US and abroad.

000020
000016

Borea was afforded exclusive behind-the-scenes access to Firing Line, The Today Show, and The Tonight Show, where he captured candid portraits of the show’s hosts, including William F. Buckley, Jr., Johnny Carson, Hugh Downs, Dave Garroway, David Letterman, and Jack Paar.  Among the guests that Borea photographed were Fred Astaire, James Baldwin, Salvador Dali, Bette Davis, Farrah Fawcett, Betty Friedan, Benny Goodman, Steve Martin, Ethel Merman, Robert Mitchum, Ayn Rand, Eleanor Roosevelt, Twiggy, Gore Vidal, and Tom Wolfe.   Several telecasts of Borea’s photographs were also presented on The Today Show, narrated by Hugh Downs.

Over the course of his career, Borea was an active member in numerous photographic associations.  In addition to the Village Camera Club and The Circle of Confusion, he was also a member of the American Society of Magazine Photographers (ASMP) and the American Society of Picture Professionals (ASPP), where he served as President  from 1974 to 1975.  He developed both close personal and professional relationships with well-known photographers, including André Kertész, Ruth Orkin, Esmond Edwards, Barbara Morgan, and John Albok.  A number of vintage, signed photographs by and/or of these artists are also part of the Raimondo Borea Photography Collection.

000001
000063

Borea’s photographs were published in numerous magazines (Boys’ Life, Ladies’ Home Journal,National Review, Pageant, and Popular Photography), in books (Bunnies in School [Scholastic]), First thing in the Morning [Cowles], Seymour, A Gibbon [Atheneum], and Who needs parks? [Rapoport Printing Corp.]), and on album covers (Hang on Ramsey ! The Ramsey Lewis Trio (Cadet) and Johnny Carson’s Introduction to New York and The World’s Fair [Columbia.]).  Borea also used his expertise in the darkroom to print photographs from the original glass negatives by Alice Austen, one of the first female photographers in America to work outside of the confines of a studio setting.  This eventually led to the publication of a book of her photographs, entitled Alice’s World.

000057
000417

Borea’s photographs have been exhibited in New York City at the Gallery of Modern Art, the New York Public Library, and the Art Directors Club.  Selected photographs are held in the collections of the Library of Congress, the Smithsonian Libraries’ Collection, the ASPP archives, Associated Press, the University of Maryland, and SUNY/Albany.

GME is committed to resurrecting the career of this overlooked photographer, through licensing of his photographs, republishing his out-of-print books, mounting curated exhibitions, and in identifying a long-term repository for this significant collection of photographic works.

For further inquires or information, please contact

David Deitch, Fine Arts Curator at: 

david@gartenbergmedia.com

000184

All photographs © The Estate of Raimondo Borea, except where noted.