Can Heironymus Merkin Ever Forget Mercy Humppe and Find True Happiness? soundtrack album art

Published March 16, 2026
Photo(s) by Bart Solenthaler on Flickr.


Source: www.flickr.com Uploaded to Flickr by Bart Solenthaler and tagged with “groovy”, “holiday” and “microgramma”. License: All Rights Reserved.





Bodidot Flair (Sample unavailable)

Gras Serrés Italique (Sample unavailable)


Can Heironymus Merkin Ever Forget Mercy Humppe and Find True Happiness? is a British musical film from 1969. Anthony Newley (1931–1999) co-wrote the script, served as director, played the lead role, and composed the score. From Adam White’s 2017 article for the Telegraph:

Famed at the time for its ludicrously unwieldy title, 1969’s Can Heironymus Merkin Ever Forget Mercy Humppe and Find True Happiness? is a surrealist sex-drenched disaster that could only ever have been made in the more free-wheeling Sixties. Released to significant controversy for Universal Pictures and given an X rating, it was dubbed “an act of professional suicide” by the New York Times.

The cover of the soundtrack album by Kapp Records is an adaptation of the movie poster, with illustration is by Robert Tanenbaum. It uses typefaces that all were available from Californian phototype company Lettergraphics. Most of the text is set in various widths and weights of Microgramma – at Lettergraphics, Microgramma and Eurostyle [sic!] were distinguished solely by whether the font was all caps or had a lowercase, without differences in the design. The title is a potpourri of Sans Shaded, Bodidot Flair (a copy of Pistilli Roman, with swashes), a generic sans in italic caps and small caps, Windsor Contour, Torena Italic Flair, Holiday, Groovy, and Gras Serrés Italique.



This post was originally published at Fonts In Use
WRITTEN BY

FontsInUse

An independent archive of typography.