Get cool with the T-Birds - or the Pink Ladies - with this slick comic-book style artwork to help promote your production of Grease.
The Grease artwork is available for licensing to theatre companies and their designers to incorporate into publicity material (posters, leaflets, playbills, programmes, tickets etc.). I can also supply poster templates or design the entire poster for you.
Please contact me if you would like to license this artwork or require any help or further information.
These hi-res poster templates are available for you to add your own details to, or I can layout the poster or customise the design for you. The title graphics are not part of the license agreement but they can be supplied along with the artwork if you wish, or you can create your own title. See the prices page for more information.
They can be supplied in a variety of formats and sizes, including high-resolution JPG, TIFF, PSD, PNG or PDF.
Learn more about formats here.
The artwork is drawn in a comic-book style, with colour a screentone look.
The original 1971 production of Grease, by Jim Jacobs and Warren Casey, directed by Guy Barile, was tough, hard-hitting, raunchy, and often profane, reflecting the Chicago high school experiences that influenced it. Richard Gere, an understudy in the original cast, took the lead role of Danny in the 1973 London staging. The huge popularity of the 1978 film version, directed by Randal Kleiser and starring John Travolta (a member of the original Broadway cast) and Olivia Newton-John, saw the plot sanitised and toned down somewhat, with many of the changes being incorporated into subsequent stage versions. The songs became very popular and well-known, including classics such as Summer Nights, Greased Lightnin', Sandy, and You're The One That I Want. A less-successful sequel to the film, Grease 2, starring Maxwell Caulfield and Michelle Pfeiffer, was released in 1982.