October
1906 saw several noteworthy theatrical happenings in Brooklyn. On the
performance front, the usual contingent of well-known stars who shone with
varying degrees of brightness arrived, some in the vehicles and character types
to which they owed their fame, some in new additions to their growing
repertory. They included Frank Daniels, Eva Tanguay, Fritzi Scheff, Joe Weber,
Marie Dressler, James J. Corbett. Virginia Harned, Cecil Spooner, and Annie
Russell, among others. The most interesting for our purposes are the latter two.
But first, this.
On October Brooklyn Life took issue with the way star actors were handled so brazenly as objects of merchandise when their services were being sold. Ticket prices for the same actors, it was noted, ran up and down just like items in the stores, the prices rarely having any relation to intrinsic value. E.H. Sothern and Julia Marlowe, leading Shakespeareans, charged three dollars at the Montauk but were “knocked down” later in the season to a dollar and a half at the Broadway. E.S. Willard’s price in Hartford was a dollar and a half, then a dollar at New York’s Grand Opera House (not Brooklyn’s), but then raised to two dollars a week later at the Montauk: three weeks, three different prices. Maxine Elliott charged two dollars at the Montauk before charging a dollar and a half at the Broadway. Arnold Daly may have said it was beneath him to play for less than two dollars in Philadelphia, but he charged a dollar and a half in Brooklyn. And so on, with more examples. “In short, it is not a question of quality but of what the public can be bulldozed into paying.”
The writer insisted that very few current stars
on American stages were worth two dollars, their salaries far exceeding their
merit; most deserved to charge no more than a dollar and could adjust their extravagant
expenditures accordingly. If theatergoers resisted the overcharging for a
season or two, says the article, they would need “a powerful telescope
to find in the theatrical firmament certain ‘stars’ who now fancy themselves
planets.”
Cecil Spooner’s
name will be familiar to readers who recall when she and her sister, Edna
May Spooner, had costarred in Brooklyn as leading ladies for their mother’s Spooner
Stock Company, mostly at the Bijou, for half a dozen years, performing
countless roles in weekly stock. Each gained large followings among the local population,
who were said to be afflicted with “Spooneritis.” Cecil had tried going out on
her own as a touring star a couple of years earlier, but had returned when her
career stumbled. She was now on her own again, while her sister monopolized leading roles at the Bijou.
Cecil brought
her play, The Girl Raffles, to the Majestic for a two-week run, which did
good business, her presence being deemed a “homecoming.” The play was a “musical
melodrama,” set in New York, with the actress playing a mysterious girl called
Raffles (the same name as that of a popular male stage character of the day),
who helps her crooked uncle in his Lower East Side curio shop. There she gets
involved with high life crooks and a handsome young detective who falls for
her. Raffles eventually discovers she’s the daughter of the wealthy Lord Randolph,
etcetera and so forth, as per the conventions of so much similar claptrap. But it
gave Cecil plenty of opportunities for dancing and singing, supported by a
large chorus of “comely maidens.”
The other
prominent actor-related news of the month concerned a revival of A Midsummer
Night’s Dream starring Annie Russell. However, rather than playing one of the
lovers, like Hermia, normally assigned to a leading actress, she undertook Puck. Although some actresses had played Puck in the past, the boyish role
was still typically played by males (unlike today when female Pucks are common). Also, women who had played Puck were usually petite, given the
tradition that he is a kind of elf. Russell, by comparison, was considered large,
yet, as the Citizen rejoiced (October 23), “she is so delightfully elfish
in manner, so thoroughly a sprite, that she quickly convinces the most critical
of the audience of the naturalness and the success of her impersonation.” And
the Standard Union added, “The conception of Puck, as a bat-winged,
mouse-eared, fawn-like tricksy spirit is as original as it is quaint and
delightful.” Russell's, in fact, was praised as the best performance in a production
whose actors too often made mush out of Shakespeare’s lines.
The play that made news this month was The Kreutzer Sonata. Actually, I should say “the title,” as two plays by that name were presented in Brooklyn. This was when there was a big hubbub about the English version of Jacob Gordin, Yiddish playwright (and Brooklyn resident) as to which of two famous actresses, Bertha Kalich—who had given it at New York’s Lyric Theatre—or Blanche Walsh had the rights to do it. A loose adaptation of Leo Tolstoy’s novel of the same name, adapted for Jewish characters, it was widely regarded as one of the more powerful tragic dramas of the day, although some found its depiction of lust morally rank. Both actresses gave strong performances, but Walsh, who had premiered it at the Manhattan Theatre, won the legal battle to its rights. Bertha Kalich had been scheduled to bring her version to the Shubert this month; it never happened. Meanwhile, Walsh brought hers to the New Montauk on October 13.
On the other hand, a week earlier another Kreutzer
Sonata opened at the Bijou, starring Edna May Cooper. This, however, was a
new play by a local actress, Ullie Ackerstrom, who had made a more direct,
non-Jewish, adaptation of Tolstoy’s novel. It insisted it was not another version of the Gordin
play, with which it had “only a purely coincidental connection,” as Brooklyn
Life reported.
Regardless
of provenance, both Kreutzer Sonatas managed to fill seats despite the Standard
Union declaring that “Brooklyn is not celebrated among cities for being a
devotee to drama, although melodrama, and rural plays ever find a welcome.”
News
pertaining to the theatres was mainly concerned with Phillips’ Lyceum, in
Williamsburg, catching fire and sustaining $25,000 in damages. On October 14, manager
Phillips posted a note to his patrons in the Standard Union: “Fire from
the adjoining [factory] building on Johnson Avenue has completely destroyed the
roof of the stage only. The scenery has been damaged by water. The rest of the
theatre is in perfect condition. Repairs and alterations now in progress. Will
reopen in a few days. Money will be returned to patrons holding tickets.” It
was actually about two weeks before the place reopened, but that was faster than one might have expected.
The fire
broke out during a stock company rehearsal involving the entire company, none
of whom was harmed. When the upper portion of the stage burst into flames, Phillips
sliced the rope of the asbestos curtain with his pocket knife, which brought it
down swiftly, saving the playhouse.
Theatre
managements in the news were not uncommon, especially when someone got in
trouble for violating some statute or other. It might have been a fire regulation,
for example, or perhaps the presentation of one of those so-called “sacred
concerts” on Sunday nights that were endemic during these blue laws period. As we’ve
seen, these concerts were really vaudeville shows using the concert loophole to earn money. This was the case in October with Blaney’s Amphion when Morris
S. Schlesinger was arraigned for violating Section 277 of the Penal Code for
allowing performers to appear in costume, something that was proscribed. When the manager admitted to having
Sunday concerts, Magistrate O’Reilly of the Lee Avenue Court responded: “I do
not think it a very nice spectacle to see little children waiting in front of
the theater to get in. I think that six days in the week is sufficient in which
to provide shows fer the public.” A hearing was set for November, and
Schlesinger would be joined at it by another naughty manager, Charles Williams
of the Novelty.
October 1-6, 1906
Bijou: (Spooner Stock Company) The Belle of Richmond
Blaney’s Amphion: A Bad Man from Mexico, with
Walter Wilson
Broadway: As Ye Sow
Columbia: A Race for Life
Folly: The Ninety and Nine
Grand Family: The Sign of the Four
Grand Opera House: The Burglar’s Daughter
Majestic: The Girl Raffles, with Cecil Spooner
New Montauk: M’lle Modiste, with Fritzi Scheff
Payton’s Lee Avenue: (Lee Avenue Stock Company) The Prodigal
Son, with Etta Reed Payton
Phillips’ Lyceum: (Lyceum Stock Company) The Queen
of the Highway
Shubert: The Social Whirl, with Adele Ritchie
Vaudeville and burlesque: Hyde & Behman’s, Gotham,
Gayety, Keeney’s, Star, Imperial, Novelty, Family
October 8-13, 1906
Bijou: (Spooner Stock Company) The Stubbornness of Geraldine
Blaney’s Amphion: Bertha, the Sewing Machine Girl
Broadway: The College Widow, with Evelyn Vaughan
Columbia: The Gypsy Girl, with Dolly Kemper
Folly: Breaking into Society, with the Four
Mortons
Grand Family: The Black Hand
Grand Opera House: The Gambler of the West
Majestic: The Girl Raffles, with Cecil Spooner
New Montauk: The Kreutzer Sonata, with Blanche Walsh
Payton’s Lee Avenue: (Lee Avenue Stock Company) Darkest
Russia
Phillips’ Lyceum: (Lyceum Stock Company) The
Gambler’s Daughter
Shubert: Veronique, the Flower Girl, with
Louise Gunning
Vaudeville and burlesque: Hyde & Behman’s, Gotham,
Gayety, Keeney’s, Star, Imperial, Novelty, Family
October
15-20, 1906
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Bijou: (Spooner Stock Company) The Kreutzer Sonata
Blaney’s
Amphion: Why Girls Leave Home
Broadway: Sergeant
Brue, with Frank Daniels
Columbia: The
Way of the Transgressor
Folly: The
Folly of the West
Grand
Family: The Road to 'Frisco
Grand
Opera House: Home Folks
Majestic: A
Good Fellow, with Eva Tanguay
New
Montauk: Mr. Hopkinson
Payton’s
Lee Avenue: (Lee Avenue Stock Company) For Her Children’s Sake,
with Etta Reed Payton
Phillips’
Lyceum: (Lyceum Stock Company) (Closed because of fire damage)
Shubert: The
Stolen Story
Vaudeville
and burlesque:
Hyde & Behman’s, Gotham, Gayety, Keeney’s, Star, Imperial, Novelty
October
22-27, 1906
Bijou: (Spooner Stock Company) On Shannon’s Shore
Blaney’s
Amphion: When the World Sleeps
Broadway: Twiddle
Twaddle, with Joe Weber and company, including Marie Dressler
Columbia: The
Great Jewel Mystery, with the Russell Brothers
Folly: The
Burglar and the Lady, with James J. Corbett
Grand
Family: Woman Against Woman, with Stewart Stock Company
Grand
Opera House: The Queen of the Highbinders
Majestic: As
Ye Sow
New
Montauk: A Midsummer Night’s Dream, with Annie Russell (as Puck)
Payton’s
Lee Avenue: (Lee Avenue Stock Company) Monte Cristo, with Etta Reed
Payton
Shubert: John
Hudson’s Wife, with Hilda Spong
Vaudeville
and burlesque:
Hyde & Behman’s, Gotham, Gayety, Keeney’s, Star, Imperial, Novelty
October
29-November 3, 1906
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Bijou: (Spooner Stock Company) Leah Kleschna
Blaney’s
Amphion: My Tom-Boy Girl, with Lottie Williams
Broadway: His
Honor the Mayor
Columbia: When
the World Sleeps
Folly: A
Lucky Dog, with Nat M. Wills
Grand
Family: Beware of Men, with Stewart Stock Company
Grand
Opera House: The Rocky Road to Dublin
Majestic: Me,
Him and I
New
Montauk: Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch, with Madge Carr Cook
Payton’s
Lee Avenue: (Lee Avenue Stock Company) Out of the Fold, with Corse
Payton, Etta Reed Payton
Phillips’
Lyceum: (Lyceum Stock Company) Rachel Goldstein
Shubert: The
Love Letter, with Virginia Harned
Vaudeville
and burlesque:
Hyde & Behman’s, Gotham, Gayety, Keeney’s, Star, Imperial, Novelty


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