In the course of the its long history Vaudeville had
created its own protocol. Vaudeville took most of its
form from Minstrel shows, popular traveling troupes from
the early 19th Century. In 1843, the Christy Minstrels
were performing at the Bowery Theater in New York.
Minstrel shows were divided into three "acts" or "sets".
The first was the "line", an introductory piece with the
minstrels seated in a string across the stage, a straight
man in the center and acting as foil for comedians at each
end. The second set was the "Olio", a collection of
variety acts that often included animal acts, singers and
dancers. And finally the "after-piece", which might be
short dramatic renderings or comic parodies of dramatic
presentations.
Invariably, Minstrels were white troupes acting in
Blackface and a lot of the comedy was dependent on black
stereotypes. Crude perhaps, but it provided an avenue for
black performers into an otherwise closed arena. While
black performers also appeared in blackface and assumed
the white parody of black culture, they brought their own
particular talents to the stage. William "Juba" Lane was
appearing with the white Georgia Champion Minstrels as
early as the 1840's and presenting a unique and soon
imitated dance style. By the 1890's, William Walker and
Bert Williams are appearing at the Casino Theater Roof in
an all Black production. This was followed shortly by,
Clorindy, or the Origin of the Cakewalk, written by
Will Marion Cook and Paul Lawrence Dunbar. Finally,
Williams, (without Walker who had died in 1911) became one
of the leading headliners of Vaudeville.
The Cakewalk, introduced by Williams and Walker was soon
being done in clubs all over the country and when assumed
by Vernon and Irene Castle, a vaudeville dance team, and
introduced to Europe, it became a worldwide rage. The
Castles created numerous variations of the cakewalk, but
always there was that music, syncopated, Ragtime, Blues,
the beginnings of jazz. By 1914, Irving Berlin was
creating an entire show in these rhythms. There's new
things on the horizon also, for in 1915, Eubie Blake meets
Noble Sissel and Broadway is about to get a surprise; a
Black play, with Black producers, for a white audience.
What can the stage be coming to? Blake and Sissel worked
together for two years before being separated by the
exigencies of the war. During that time they were aided
by Sophie Tucker who was singing Blake and Sissel songs in
her Vaudeville act in 1917.
By 1900, the introductory sets of the Minstrel shows were
gone, and the presentations had assumed the name
Vaudeville. Though blackface was still popular and would
be carried into the 1950's by performers like Al Jolson
and Eddie Cantor, it was no longer a requisite for the
Variety stage. The "Olio" was the established format,
with the "dumb acts" opening the shows, animal acts,
acrobats or magicians who didn't rely on dialog. Houdini
was such a "dumb act", who soon rose to top billing, a
feat uncommon for a "dumb" act. "Top billing" was
generally the third position on the card, and it was here
that the "star" of the show would get a half hour or
forty-five minutes to wow their audience.
Willie Hammerstein, who was managing the Victoria for his
father, added the "Freak Act" to the venue, and presented
to audiences individuals who had become household names
through fame or infamy. It was the freak act that gave
Evelyn Nesbit her second career on the stage. When it
became clear that America was tired of Miss Nesbit's
story, he shipped her off to Europe and posted "rave
reviews" of her European popularity in American papers.
Americans were still keen on seeing Europe's top stars, so
Evelyn's return was very lucrative for Hammerstein and
Miss Nesbit.
Like legitimate theater, Vaudeville had its circuits too.
Martin Beck, Marcus Loew, Alexander Pantages, Sylvester
Poli, Keith-Albee (Benjamin and Edward), F. F. Proctor and
for a short time William Morris, were the names associated
with the strings of theaters that criss-crossed the
country from Broadway to the West Coast. Performers had
seven to twelve minutes to capture their audience and
entertain. In the larger theaters where the top
performers were billed, the shows might run two a day, in
smaller theaters where they worked to build their acts and
perfect their performances the shows could be scheduled up
to six times daily. Stamina was the name of that game.
The history of Vaudeville is its own story. We're
primarily interested in it for its contribution to the
Broadway theater, particularly this decade from 1910 to
1920. It provided an avenue for black performers to
participate and soon innovate on Broadway. It created an
alternative for stars like Mrs. Fiske, Sarah Bernhardt,
Alla Nazimova, the Barrymores, Elsie Janis, etc. to
display their talents to a broader audience between their
legitimate shows (to say nothing of their extra earning
capacity). It provided a testing and tempering ground for
some of Broadway's biggest stars like George M. Cohan, Al
Jolson, Fannie Brice and Eddie Cantor. And it was
responsible for the one innovation that led to its own
demise and the cutback in legitimate theatrical
productions on Broadway.
To pick up some extra income and reduce the down time of
Vaudeville houses, managers began running the novelty,
"flickers", "flickering flicks", "moving pictures",
between shows. Again some of Broadway's biggest talents
began taking advantage of the short production times and
high salaries which accompanied the new industry.
Nazimova, for instance, moved to Hollywood to establish
residence in "The Garden of Allah", and star in some of
the first full production movies that were made.
The Barrymores also found the new venue profitable. Both
John and Lionel Barrymore were more comfortable with the
new medium. Lionel because of his stage fright, and John
because his one criticism of theater was the repetition.
Once having perfected a character, he hated to repeat it
nightly.
Tales of the difficulties he had with theater are not
exaggerated. Once while starring with Florence Reed in a
play called, The Yellow Ticket, he made his
entrance dead drunk. Miss Reed had the curtain brought
down and Barrymore removed, restarting the show with a
stand-in.
By the next decade, many of Broadway's biggest names will
be trekking from New York to Hollywood (or the local New
York studios) to spread their talents between the stage
and the screen. Joining the Barrymores will be Sarah
Bernhardt, the Gish sisters, Douglas Fairbanks and Mary
Pickford, Alla Nazimova and Marion Davies, to name but a
few.
Next: 1920-1930: The American Theater
|