Cue (magazine) explained

Cue
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Category:listings
Frequency:weekly
Publisher:Mort Glankoff
Circulation Year:1980
Total Circulation:300,000
Founder:Mort Glankoff
Based:New York, New York

Cue was a weekly magazine that covered theatre and arts events in New York from 1932 to 1980, when it was taken over by New York magazine.

Cue was the first of the city magazines, serving as a model for those that followed.[1]

History

Cue was founded in 1932 by Mort Glankoff.[2]

Claudette Colbert was on the cover of the first issue. The magazine's focus was evident from its various taglines over the years:

Cue was an early listings magazine. BBC's Radio Times listed radio schedules in 1923. Cue, with its city-specific focus, was the model for a genre that came to include Time Out, which now has 108 city editions.[3]

Glankoff sold Cue to Rupert Murdoch's New York magazine in 1980. Cue was prized for its listings section.[4] Glankoff died in August 1986.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Mort Glankoff Dead; Began Cue Magazine. 1 December 2017. New York Times. August 27, 1986.
  2. News: a salute to mort glankoff. 30 November 2017. New York Magazine.
  3. Web site: Gorkana meets...Time Out London . https://archive.today/20150414081350/http://gorkana.com/news/consumer/little-black-book/gorkana-meetstime-out-london/. dead. 14 April 2015. 26 January 2015 . Gorkana. 15 June 2015.
  4. News: Musto. Michael. 11 LONG-GONE PUBLICATIONS THAT SHAPED '70S NYC. 1 December 2017. Paper. May 27, 2015.
  5. News: Glankoff, founder of 'Cue,' dies at 85. Adweek. September 1, 1986.