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vaudeville
Vaudeville in America
The Oxford Companion to American Theatre
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2004
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© The Oxford Companion to American Theatre 2004, originally published by Oxford University Press 2004. (Hide copyright information)
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Vaudeville in America. In this country the term “vaudeville” has almost never had the same connotation as it had in the original French. Instead, it was borrowed rather late to indicate an entertainment consisting of short, variegated acts, some musical, some comic, all offered on the same bill. Small olios (another term for this sort of entertainment) appeared early in American stage history, usually as divertissements on the extended bills offered in the late 18th and the first half of the 19th century even in the best legitimate theatres. Nonetheless, most see the real seeds of modern vaudeville in the “free concert saloons,” “free‐and‐easies,” and Western “honky‐tonks” that sprang up in the years just before the Civil War. To lure customers (almost exclusively male, except for prostitutes), these establishments provided a series of acts whose tilt, both in its comedy and lyrics and in the presentation of its occasional dancing, was rough and often salacious. In the 1870s and 1880s attempts were made to clean up the nature of the bills so as to attract a more widespread, higher class audience. Although several impresarios apparently began to incorporate such changes at about the same time, the most famous was Tony
Pastor, who was hailed as the leader in the field and whose vaudeville house in New York was considered to offer the pinnacle in such entertainment. Like others, he banned the sale of intoxicating drinks, discouraged rowdiness, and removed any performer whose act was in any way offensive. About the same time, the term “vaudeville” began replacing the term “variety,” which had been accepted for several decades. (A similar transition was occurring concurrently in the British equivalent, the music hall.) The heyday of American vaudeville was the first quarter of the 20th century. The huge national circuit established by B. F.
Keith and E. F.
Albee was paramount in the field. Keith, like Pastor before him, carefully guarded the morals of his patrons, while his partner Albee established an often vicious near monopoly that frequently played havoc with competition and imposed salary and other dictates on performers. Other notable managers included Alexander Pantages, S. Z. Poli, F. F. Proctor, and Martin
Beck. Beck built the
Palace Theatre in New York, which quickly became two‐a‐day's most prestigious auditorium. Historian Don B. Wilmeth has noted that “at its height, ten people attended a vaudeville show to every one who patronized other forms of entertainment; as many as ten to twenty thousand vaudeville acts were competing for bookings.” For many people, vaudeville indicated modes of dress and established certain canons of behavior. Thus, while managers insisted on removing offensive acts, certain religious and racial stereotypes were allowed to persist since they were not perceived as truly offensive. Yet for all its tremendous popularity and despite the enormous salaries paid headliners, vaudeville was never to have quite the cachet that attached to the legitimate stage. As a result, many performers used variety merely as a stepping stone. Lillian
Russell and Harrigan and Hart were among the earliest to leave the field to find even greater glory in the theatre. The loose structure of many musical comedies of the period allowed artists who were essentially vaudevillians to find occasional homes there. May
Irwin, Marie
Cahill, Blanche
Ring, and, to a lesser extent, Eva
Tanguay were all vaudeville headliners who found a welcome in book musicals. George M.
Cohan moved from vaudeville to exceptional success on Broadway. The growth of the even more loosely structured revue proved a further lure. But traffic was not all one way. With the coming of his children, a leading musical comedy star, Eddie
Foy, left book shows to create one of the greatest acts in two‐a‐day, Eddie Foy and the Seven Little Foys. Other legitimate stars used vaudeville to fill in between shows, while the genre afforded a haven for many fading stars who found the road receptive and loyal after more fickle Broadway audiences had lost interest in them. A few notable vaudevillians, such as Harry Lauder, never ventured afield. The coming of radio and then sound films, both major family entertainments, precipitated the demise of two‐a‐day. Most historians generally mark the showing of feature films at the Palace in 1932 as the end of traditional vaudeville, although it persisted, especially as
Tab Shows were presented along with feature films throughout the 1930s in some large cities. Attempts to revive big‐time vaudeville at the Palace in the 1950s failed.
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VAUDEVILLE COMES HOME.(Weekend)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 9/26/1986; 700+ words
; ...Byline: Sari R. Botton "We opened with vaudeville," said Dennis Madden, executive director...says 'Proctor's' on one side and 'Vaudeville' on the other." Which makes it fitting...Saturday night, Proctor's brings back vaudeville, in an updated presentation by Hubbard...
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Lazer Vaudeville melds cutting-edge technology with old-fashioned talent
Newspaper article from: St. Joseph News-Press; 1/16/2004; ; 700+ words
; Vaudeville gave way to silent films, and silent...there's more than one way to bring vaudeville into the modern day, says Cindy Marvell...members in the touring production Lazer Vaudeville, which comes to the Missouri Theater...
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Vaudeville returns Presto! It's the '20s all over again as two groups pack their shows with jugglers, magicians and dancers.(Time Out!)(Main event)
Newspaper article from: Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL); 7/25/2003; 700+ words
; ...the bill, the answer is not baseball - it's vaudeville. The popular 1920s-era theater genre was big...on the same stage. Both Chicago Burlesque and Vaudeville and Vaudeville Underground put on shows once a month in the city...
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VIRTUALLY VAUDEVILLE VAUDEVILLE GAVE AMERICA NOT ONLY HOPE AND HOUDINI, GROUCHO AND FIELDS, IT GAVE US OUR POPULAR CULTURE AND A SENSE OF OURSELVES. NOW, A GROUP OF THEATER HISTORIANS IS BRINGING VAUDEVILLE BACK TO LIFE - IN CYBERSPACE.
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 6/20/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...Salome." Variety was the essence of vaudeville, the wildly popular entertainment that...and dime museum on Washington Street, vaudeville proved as diverse in its audience as...father of playwright Edward Albee. Vaudeville, he suggested, exemplified American...
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Blue Vaudeville: Sex, Morals and the Mass Marketing of Amusement, 1895-1915/From Traveling Show to Vaudeville: Theatrical Spectacle in America, 1830-1910
Magazine article from: Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film; 6/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; Andrew L. Erdman, Blue Vaudeville: Sex, Morals and the Mass Marketing...Lewis, From Traveling Show to Vaudeville: Theatrical Spectacle in America...various forms of popular theatre - Vaudeville, Music Hall, Minstrelsy, the...
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Vaudeville, Voice Of Variety
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 11/15/1989; ; 700+ words
; THE VOICE OF THE CITY Vaudeville and Popular Culture in New York...this modest but appealing book that vaudeville, the medium of popular entertainment...puts it in his introduction: "Vaudeville was slapstick clowns and devilish...
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A vaudeville comeback Regent marks its 90th year
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 10/19/2006; ; 700+ words
; Behind the scenes / Voltaic Vaudeville The Regent Theatre, 7 Medford St., Arlington Today...most popular form of entertainment at that time - vaudeville. "In its heyday, vaudeville was where it was at," said Leland Stein, the Regent...
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Vaudeville: forerunner to the movies.
Magazine article from: Cobblestone; 1/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...the 1880s through the 1920s, vaudeville was America's most popular...entertainment. A kind of variety show, vaudeville featured comedy, magic, song...many other acts. The word "vaudeville" comes from the French, perhaps...
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Vaudeville philosophers: "The Killers.".(short story by Ernest Hemingway)
Magazine article from: Twentieth Century Literature; 3/22/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...is Hemingway's acquaintance by 1926 with vaudeville and with the idea of vaudeville. The connection has long been noted: in 1959...Brooks and Robert Penn Warren mentioned the "vaudeville team" of Max and Al, and the "gag" and...
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Schtick to the facts, Ma'am: three wildly different studies on vaudeville cover the major circuits in the history of that old hardy har har har.(Vaudeville Humor: The Collected Jokes, Routines, and Skits of Ed Lowry)(Vaudeville Old and New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performers in America)(Vaudeville Wars: How the Keith-Albee and Orpheum Circuits Controlled the Big-Time and Its Performers)(Book review)
Magazine article from: American Theatre; 3/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; VAUDEVILLE HUMOR: THE COLLECTED JOKES, ROUTINES...Carbondale, Ill. 476 pp, $17.95 paper. VAUDEVILLE OLD AND NEW: AN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF VARIETY...2 vol., 1375 pp, $295 cloth. VAUDEVILLE WARS: HOW THE KEITH-ALBEE AND ORPHEUM...
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Vaudeville
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
VAUDEVILLE VAUDEVILLE. Vaudeville flourished as a form of variety theater from the 1880s to the late 1930s, when it succumbed to competing forms of popular entertainment, particularly "talking" pictures. Recent historians have portrayed vaudeville...
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Vaudeville in America
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Theatre
Vaudeville in America. In this country the term “vaudeville” has almost never had the same connotation...Nonetheless, most see the real seeds of modern vaudeville in the “free concert saloons,”...
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Theater: Vaudeville
Book article from: American Decades
THEATER: VAUDEVILLE The Heyday of Vaudeville The first two decades of the twentieth century were the heyday of vaudeville, a theatrical form that included performances such as music, dance, light drama, comedy, juggling, magic acts, animal...
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vaudeville
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
vaudeville , originally a light song, derived...to the English music hall , American vaudeville was a live entertainment consisting...origins in barrooms and "museums," vaudeville became the dominant attraction in American...
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Vaudeville, American
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre
Vaudeville, American, name adopted in the USA...programme of what was later to be known as vaudeville. It consisted of eight contrasting...system, which led to the appearance in vaudeville of star names from the theatre—...
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