See Also

Vaudeville

Vaudeville is a style of multi-act theatre Theatre

Theatre or theater is the branch of the performing arts [i] concerned with acting [i] out stories ... 

 which flourished in North America North America

North America is a continent [i] in the Earth [i]'s northern hemisphere [i] and almost fully in the western hemisphere [i] ... 

 from the 1880s through the 1920s 1920s

The 1920s was a decade [i] sometimes referred to as the "Jazz Age [i]" or the "Roaring Twenties [i]," us ... 

. An evening's schedule of performances could run the gamut from acrobats to mathematicians, from song-and-dance duos to trick high divers. Indeed, the scope of the presentations was unique in the history of American live performance: music, comedy, feats of athleticism, magic, animal acts, opera Opera

Opera is a dramatic [i] art [i] form, originating in Italy [i], in which the emotional content or... 

, Shakespeare William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare was an English [i] poet [i] and playwright [i] widely regarded as the great ... 

, banjo Banjo

The banjo is a stringed instrument [i] of African American [i] origin, early or original examples someti ... 

, acrobatics Acrobatics

Acrobatics is one of the performing arts [i], and is also practiced as a sport [i]. ... 

 and gymnastics Gymnastics

Gymnastics is a sport [i] involving the performance of sequences of movements requiring physical strengt ... 

, and lectures by celebrities and intellectuals of every scale. A bill usually began with a dumb act , allowing late arriving audience members to find their seats without interrupting important dialogue; peaked in the penultimate spot with the "headliner" ; and might conclude with a "chaser", an act considered admirable enough to feature

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Timeline

1880   Vaudeville actress Lillian Russell Lillian Russell

Lillian Russell was an American [i] actress [i] and singer [i]. ... 

 makes her debut at Tony Pastor's Theatre in New York City New York City

[i] in the [[United States]... 

.

1883   The first vaudeville theater is opened, in Boston, Massachusetts Boston, Massachusetts

Boston is the capital [i] of the Commonwealth [i] of Massachusetts [i] in the United States [i] ... 

.



Encyclopedia



Vaudeville is a style of multi-act theatre Theatre

Theatre or theater is the branch of the performing arts [i] concerned with acting [i] out stories ... 

 which flourished in North America North America

North America is a continent [i] in the Earth [i]'s northern hemisphere [i] and almost fully in the western hemisphere [i]... 

 from the 1880s through the 1920s 1920s

The 1920s was a decade [i] sometimes referred to as the "Jazz Age [i]" or the "Roaring Twenties [i]," us ... 

. An evening's schedule of performances could run the gamut from acrobats to mathematicians, from song-and-dance duos to trick high divers. Indeed, the scope of the presentations was unique in the history of American live performance: music, comedy, feats of athleticism, magic, animal acts, opera Opera

Opera is a dramatic [i] art [i] form, originating in Italy [i], in which the emotional content or... 

, Shakespeare William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare was an English [i] poet [i] and playwright [i] widely regarded as the great ... 

, banjo Banjo

The banjo is a stringed instrument [i] of African American [i] origin, early or original examples someti ... 

, acrobatics Acrobatics

Acrobatics is one of the performing arts [i], and is also practiced as a sport [i]. ... 

 and gymnastics Gymnastics

Gymnastics is a sport [i] involving the performance of sequences of movements requiring physical strengt ... 

, and lectures by celebrities and intellectuals of every scale.

A bill usually began with a dumb act , allowing late arriving audience members to find their seats without interrupting important dialogue; peaked in the penultimate spot with the "headliner" ; and might conclude with a "chaser", an act considered admirable enough to feature but dull enough to chase the audience from the theatre, an important role in houses that offered continuously revolving performances.

History


Etymology

The origin of the term is obscure, but is often considered a corruption of the expression "voix de ville", or "voice of the city". Another plausible etymology is that it is a corruption of the French French language

French is the third-largest of the Romance languages [i] in terms of number of native speakers, after Spanish [i] ... 

 Vau de Vire, a valley in Normandy Normandy

Normandy is a geographical region in northern France [i]. ... 

 noted for style of songs with topical themes. Though "vaudeville" had been used in the United States as early as the 1830s, most variety theatres adopted the term in the late 1880s and early 1890s for two reasons. First, seeking middle class patrons, they wished to dissasociate themselves with images of the earlier rowdy, working class variety halls. Second, the term, redolent of European sophistication, helped lend the American genre a patina of "class" that protected it from public censure while inserting it within the cultural vale of the Progressive Era's interests in education and self-betterment. Some, however, resisted the nomenclatural shift from "variety" to "vaudeville" because of what they saw as the attendant pretense, preferring the earlier term to what manager Tony Pastor called its "sissy and Frenchified" successor. Thus, confusingly enough, one often finds records of vaudeville being marketed as "variety" well into the twentieth-century.

Evolution

Though often confused with variety, its generically distinct predecessor , mature vaudeville distinguished itself from the earlier form by its mixed-gender audience, usually alcohol-free halls, and often slavish devotion to inculcating favor among members of the emerging middle class Middle class

The middle class, in colloquial usage, consists of those people who have a degree of economic independen... 

.

Most scholars view vaudeville as the result of a slow evolutionary process that required several para-theatrical developments prior to its own maturation. The form therefore gradually evolved from the concert saloon and variety hall into its mature form throughout the 1870s and 1880s. The usual date given for the "birth" of vaudeville, however, rests at October 24, 1881, the night upon which variety performer and theatre owner Tony Pastor, hard in the midst of his seemingly interminable effort to lure women into the male-dominated variety hall, famously staged the first bill of self-proclaimed "clean" vaudeville in New York City.

Popularity




Vaudeville's popularity grew in step with the rise of industry Industry

An industry is generally any grouping of business [i]es that share a common method of generating profit [i] ... 

 and the growth of North American cities City

A city is an urban area [i] that is differentiated from a town [i], village [i], or hamlet [i] ... 

 during this period, and declined as its audience more heavily patronized cinema and radio. After the incorporation of women into the audience, vaudeville's greatest economic innovation and the principal source of its industrial strength was its development of the circuit, a chain of allied vaudeville houses that foiled the chaos of the single theatre booking system by contracting acts for regional and national engagement that could span from a few weeks to two years. Benjamin Franklin Keith Benjamin Franklin Keith

Benjamin Franklin Keith was an American impresario who founded a chain of vaudeville theatres.
... 

 founded the most important circuit of theatres in vaudeville history. Later, E.F. Albee, grandfather of the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Edward Albee Edward Albee

Edward Franklin Albee III is an American [i] playwright known for works including Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? [i] ... 

, managed the chain to its greatest success.

Albee also gave national prominence to vaudeville's trumpeting of "polite" entertainment, a commitment to entertainment that could be consumed by men, women and children, giving offense to no party. Those acts who violated various dicta supporting this ethos were admonished and threatened with expulsion from the week's remaining bills.

The most striking examples of Gilded Age Gilded Age

The "Gilded Age" in American history refers to the post-Civil War and post-Reconstruction Era from 1865 ... 

 theatre architecture invariably rose from the largess of big time vaudeville magnates, insistent that these houses of juggling dogs and yodelers embody the very pinnacle of high class. As well, though classic vaudeville reached a zenith of capitalization and sophistication in urban areas dominated by national chains and commodious theatres, small-time vaudeville included countless scores of more intimate and locally-controlled houses. Small-time houses were often converted saloons, rough hewn theatres or multi-purpose halls, together catering to a wide range of clientele. African American audiences had their own smaller circuits, as did speakers of Italian and Yiddish. By the late 1890s, vaudeville thus found itself in the enviable position of having large circuits, small and/or large houses in almost every decent sized location, standardized booking, broad pools of skilled acts, and a loyal national following. At its height, vaudeville was rivaled by only churches and public schools as the nation's premiere public gathering place.

Decline

There was no abrupt end to vaudeville. The continued growth of the lower-priced cinema in the early 1910s 1910s

... 

 dealt the most striking blow to vaudeville, just as the advent of free broadcast television Television

Television is a telecommunication [i] system for
... 

 would later shrink the cultural and economic strength of the cinema. By the late 1920s, even the hardiest within vaudeville understood the form to be in financial and popular decline; the prescient understood the condition to be terminal. With the introduction of talking pictures in 1926, studios such as Warner Bros. Warner Bros.

Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc. or simply Warner Bros., is one of the world's largest producers o... 

 and Fox Film Fox Film

The Fox Film Corporation was an American [i] company which produced motion pictures [i]... 

 featured many vaudeville acts, both headliners and lesser-known acts, in series of short films. These films gradually replaced the live entertainment in theatres that had been commonplace with the showing of a film. A theatre owner could pay a small fee for the rent of the film and play it over and over again, whereas he had previously been forced to pay much more for live entertainers. The 1930s 1930s

... 

, graced with standardized film distribution and talking pictures, and cursed by the economic ravages of the Great Depression Great Depression

The Great Depression was a worldwide economic downturn [i] which started in 1929 and lasting ... 

, only confirmed the end of the genre. By 1930, the vast majority of theatres had been wired for sound and none of the major studios were producing silent pictures. For a time, the most luxurious theatres continued to offer live entertainment but the majority of theatres were forced by the Depression to economize. The shift of New York City's Palace Theatre Palace Theatre, New York

The Palace Theatre located at 1564 Broadway [i] in New York City [i], is a Broadway theatre [i] ... 

, vaudeville's center, to an exclusively cinema presentation in 1932 is often noted as vaudeville's moment of death, but like the attempts to tie its birth to Pastor's first clean bill, no single event may be accurately considered as anything more than reflective of its gradual withering. Though good-hearted conversations about its resurrection were had throughout the 1930s, the demise of the supporting apparatus of the circuits and the inescapably higher cost of live performance made any resurrection attempts of vaudeville impossible.

After the fall




Some in the industry blamed cinema's drain of talent from the vaudeville circuits for the medium's demise. Lured by greater salaries and less arduous working conditions, many early film Film

Film is a term that encompasses motion pictures as individual projects, as well as the field in general.... 

 and radio Radio

Radio is the wireless transmission of signals [i], by modulation [i] of electromagnetic waves [i] ... 

 performers, such as W. C. Fields W. C. Fields

W. C. Fields was an American [i] comedian [i] and actor [i]. ... 

, Buster Keaton Buster Keaton

Joseph Frank Keaton Jr. , known by his professional name as Buster Keaton, was a popular and influ... 

, the Marx Brothers Marx Brothers

The Marx Brothers were a team of sibling comedian [i]s that appeared in vaudeville [i], stage plays, film [i] ... 

, Edgar Bergen Edgar Bergen

Edgar John Bergen was an American [i] actor [i] and radio [i] performer, best known as a ventriloquist [i] ... 

, Jack Benny Jack Benny

Jack Benny, born Benjamin Kubelsky, was an American comedian [i], vaudeville [i] performer, and ra ... 

 and The Three Stooges Three Stooges

[i] act in the [[20th century]... 

, used the prominence they first gained in live variety performance to vault out of the medium. Largely, however, vaudeville's performers scattered to the winds. Many later appeared in the Catskill Catskill Mountains

The Catskill Mountains, a natural area in New York State [i] northwest of New York City [i] and ... 

 resorts that constituted the "Borscht Belt Borscht Belt

Borscht Belt is an informal term for the summer resorts of the Catskill Mountains [i] in Sullivan [i] ... 

". Some performers whose eclectic styles did not conform as well to the greater intimacy of the screen, like Bert Lahr Bert Lahr

Bert Lahr, born Irving Lahrheim, was an American comic actor [i]. ... 

, continued to fashion careers out of combining live performance, radio and film roles. Other vaudevillians who entered in its decline, including The Three Stooges Three Stooges

[i] act in the [[20th century]... 

, Abbott and Costello Abbott and Costello

Abbott and Costello were an American [i] comedy duo [i] whose work in radio [i]... 

, Kate Smith Kate Smith

Kathryn Elizabeth Smith was a Washington, D.C. [i]-born singer [i] best known for her rendition of Irving Berlin [i] ... 

, Judy Garland Judy Garland

Judy Garland was an American [i] film actress [i] considered by many to be one of t ... 

, and Rose Marie used vaudeville as a launching pad for their own careers. And many simply retired from performance and entered the workaday world of the middle class, that group that vaudeville, more than anything else, had helped to articulate and entertain.

Yet vaudeville, both in its methods and ruling aesthetic, did not simply perish, but rather resounded throughout the succeeding media of film, radio and television. Certainly, the screwball comedies of the 1930s, reflections of cinematic equipoise between dialogue and physicality, should be viewed as heirs of vaudeville's aesthetic. In form, the television variety show owed much to vaudeville, riding the multi-act format to success in shows such as Your Show of Shows with Sid Caesar. Even today, performers such as Bill Irwin, a Macarthur Fellow and Tony Award-winning actor, are frequently lauded as "New Vaudevillians".

Related forms


  • Concert saloon
  • Variety hall
  • Revue Revue

    A revue is a type of multi-act popular theatrical [i] entertainment [i] that combines music [i], ... 

  • Cabaret Cabaret

    Cabaret is a form of entertainment featuring comedy [i], song [i], dance [i], and theatre [i], distingui ... 

  • Burlesque Burlesque

    With its origins in nineteenth century music hall [i] entertainments and vaudeville [i], in the early twentiet... 

  • Music hall
  • Borscht Belt Borscht Belt

    Borscht Belt is an informal term for the summer resorts of the Catskill Mountains [i] in Sullivan [i] ... 

  • Nightclub Nightclub

    A nightclub is an entertainment venue which does its primary business after dark.... 

  • 21st Century Vaudeville

Noted vaudeville performers


  • Abbott and Costello Abbott and Costello

    Abbott and Costello were an American [i] comedy duo [i] whose work in radio [i]... 

  • Don Ameche
  • Adele Adele Astaire

    Lady Charles Cavendish , better known as Adele Astaire was an American dancer and entertainer.... 

     & Fred Astaire Fred Astaire

    Fred Astaire , born Frederick Austerlitz in Omaha, Nebraska [i], was an American [i] ... 

  • Belle Baker
  • The Barrison Sisters Barrison Sisters

    The Barrison Sisters were a risque Vaudeville [i] act who performed in the United States [i] and Europe [i] ... 

  • Nora Bayes Nora Bayes

    Nora Bayes was a popular United States [i] entertainer [i] of the early 20th century [i].

... 

 & Jack Norworth
  • Milton Berle Milton Berle

    [i] and [[actor]... 

  • Jack Benny Jack Benny

    Jack Benny, born Benjamin Kubelsky, was an American comedian [i], vaudeville [i] performer, and ra ... 

  • Edgar Bergen Edgar Bergen

    Edgar John Bergen was an American [i] actor [i] and radio [i] performer, best known as a ventriloquist [i] ... 

     & Charlie McCarthy Edgar Bergen

    Edgar John Bergen was an American [i] actor [i] and radio [i] performer, best known as a ventriloquist [i] ... 

  • Sarah Bernhardt Sarah Bernhardt

    Sarah Bernhardt was a French [i] stage actress. ... 

  • Ray Bolger Ray Bolger

    Ray Bolger was an American [i] entertainer of stage and screen, best known for his portra ... 

  • Fanny Brice Fanny Brice

    __FORCETOC__

Fanny Brice was a popular and influential United States [i] comedian [i], singer [i], and entertainer [i] ... 


  • Joe E. Brown
  • George Burns George Burns

    For other people named Burns, see Burns [i].For the Jewish philosopher and Sionist figure, see Nathan Birnbaum [i] ... 

     & Gracie Allen Gracie Allen

    Gracie Allen was an American comedian [i] who became internationally famous as the zany partner and comi ... 

  • Frank Byron, Jr.
  • Marie Cahill
  • Eddie Cantor Eddie Cantor

    Eddie Cantor was an American [i] comedian [i], singer [i], actor [i], songwriter [i], and ... 

  • Alan Carney
  • Charlie Case
  • Vernon and Irene Castle Vernon and Irene Castle

    Vernon and Irene Castle were a husband-and-wife team of ballroom dance [i]rs of the early 20th century. ... 

  • Charlie Chaplin Charlie Chaplin

    Sir [i] Charles Spencer Chaplin, Jr. KBE [i], , better known as Charlie C ... 

  • Charmon
  • Ching Ling Foo
  • George M. Cohan George M. Cohan

    George Michael Cohan was a United States [i] entertainer [i], playwright [i], composer [i], lyricist [i] ... 

  • Marie Dressler Marie Dressler

    Marie Dressler was an Academy Award [i]-winning Canadian [i] actress.

... 


  • Jimmy Durante Jimmy Durante

    James Francis Durante, better known as Jimmy Durante, was an American [i] singer [i] ... 

  • Cliff Edwards aka Ukelele Ike
  • Julian Eltinge Julian Eltinge

    Julian Eltinge, born William Julian Dalton, was an American [i] stage [i] and ... 

  • Frank Fay
  • W.C. Fields W. C. Fields

    W. C. Fields was an American [i] comedian [i] and actor [i]. ... 

  • Eddie Foy Eddie Foy

    Edwin Fitzgerald Foy was an American vaudeville [i] actor and comedian.

... 


  • Irene Franklin
  • Trixie Friganza
  • Joe Frisco
  • Gallagher & Shean Gallagher and Shean

    Gallagher & Shean was a highly successful double-act on vaudeville [i] and Broadway [i] ... 

  • Judy Garland Judy Garland

    Judy Garland was an American [i] film actress [i] considered by many to be one of t ... 

  • William Gaxton William Gaxton

    William Gaxton was a star of vaudeville [i], film, and theatre. ... 

  • L. Wolfe Gilbert
  • Charles E. Grapewin Charles Grapewin

    Charles E. Grapewin was an American [i] vaudeville [i] performer, and a stage and film act ... 

  • Gene Greene Gene Greene

    [i]

... 


  • Gypsy Rose Lee Gypsy Rose Lee

    Gypsy Rose Lee was an American [i] actress and burlesque [i] entertainer, whose 1957 [i] m ... 

  • Great Lester
  • Jack Haley Jack Haley

    Jack Haley was an American film actor best known for his portrayal of "The Tin Man" in The Wizard of Oz [i] ... 

  • Ted Healy
  • Buxter Jake, Sr.
  • Anna Held Anna Held

    Helene Anna Held was a Polish [i]-born stage performer, most often associated with impresario [i] ... 

  • Hildegarde
  • Bob Hope Bob Hope

    Bob Hope, KBE [i], KCSG [i],, born Leslie ... 

  • Harry Houdini Harry Houdini

    Harry Houdini was one of the most famous magicians [i], escapologist [i]s, and stunt performer [i]... 

  • May Irwin
  • George Jessel
  • Johnson and Dean
  • Al Jolson Al Jolson

    Asa "Al Jolson" Yoelson was an acclaimed American [i] singer [i] and actor [i] whose caree ... 

  • Ada Jones Ada Jones

    Ada Jones was a popular singer who recorded between 1905 to the early 1920s [i]. ... 

  • Buster Keaton Buster Keaton

    Joseph Frank Keaton Jr. , known by his professional name as Buster Keaton, was a popular and influ... 

  • Bert Lahr Bert Lahr

    Bert Lahr, born Irving Lahrheim, was an American comic actor [i]. ... 

  • Harry Lauder
  • Stan Laurel Stan Laurel

    Arthur Stanley Jefferson, better known as Stan Laurel was a comic actor, writer and director, famo... 

  • Lew Leslie
  • Ted Lewis
  • Beatrice Lillie Beatrice Lillie

    Bea Lillie was a comedic actress.... 

  • Alice Lloyd
  • Marie Lloyd Marie Lloyd

    Matilda Alice Victoria Wood, was an English [i] music-hall [i] singer.

... 


  • Vincent Lopez Vincent Lopez

    Vincent Lopez was a United States [i] bandleader [i] and pianist [i].

... 


  • Nick Lucas
  • The Marx Brothers Marx Brothers

    The Marx Brothers were a team of sibling comedian [i]s that appeared in vaudeville [i], stage plays, film [i] ... 

  • Winsor McCay Winsor McCay

    Winsor McCayJuly 26 [i], 1934 [i]) was a prolific artist and pioneer in the art of comic strip [i]s and ... 

     & Gertie the Dinosaur Gertie the Dinosaur

    Gertie the Dinosaur is a 1914 [i] short animated film [i] by Winsor McCay [i] ... 

  • Ethel Merman
  • Tim Moore
  • Victor Moore Victor Moore

    Victor Moore was a star of stage and screen.

... 


  • Jimmy Nelson
  • The Nicholas Brothers Nicholas Brothers

    The Nicholas Brothers were a famous black tap dancing [i] pair. ... 

  • Olsen and Johnson
  • The Original Creole Orchestra
  • Isabella Patricola
  • Joe Penner
  • Molly Picon Molly Picon

    Molly Picon was an American star of stage, screen and television, as well as a lyricist.... 

  • Eddie Quillan
  • George Raft George Raft

    George Raft was an America [i]n film [i] actor [i] most closely identified with his portra ... 

  • Buddy Rich Buddy Rich

    Bernard "Buddy" Rich was an American [i] jazz [i] drummer [i] and bandleader [i]. ... 

  • Blanche Ring
  • A. Robins
  • Bill "Bojangles" Robinson Bill Robinson

    ----

Bill "Bojangles" Robinson was a pioneer and pre-eminent African-American [i] tap dance [i] performe... 


  • Will Rogers Will Rogers

    William Penn Adair "Will" Rogers was an American [i] comedian [i], humorist [i], social commentator [i]... 

  • Pat Rooney
  • Rose Marie
  • Lillian Russell Lillian Russell

    Lillian Russell was an American [i] actress [i] and singer [i].

... 


  • Chic Sale
  • Jimmy Savo
  • Blossom Seeley
  • Red Skelton Red Skelton

    Richard Bernard "Red" Skelton was an American comedian who was best known as a top radio [i] ... 

  • Smith & Dale
  • Bessie Smith Bessie Smith

    Bessie Smith is largely regarded as the most popular and successful blues [i] singer of 1920s and 1930s ... 

  • Kate Smith Kate Smith

    Kathryn Elizabeth Smith was a Washington, D.C. [i]-born singer [i] best known for her rendition of Irving Berlin [i] ... 

  • John Steel
  • Valeska Suratt
  • Chief Tahachee as Chief Buffalo Nickel
  • Eva Tanguay Eva Tanguay

    Eva Tanguay was a singer [i] and entertainer [i] known as "the girl who made vaudeville [i] famous." ... 

  • The Three Stooges Three Stooges

    [i] act in the [[20th century]... 

  • Vesta Tilley Vesta Tilley

    [i] [[Drag king|male impersonator]... 

  • Arthur Tracy
  • Sophie Tucker Sophie Tucker

    Sophie Tucker was a singer [i] and comedian [i], one of the most popular entertainers in America during ... 

  • Ben Turpin Ben Turpin

    Ben Turpin was a comedian [i], best remembered for his work in silent film [i]s. ... 

  • Van & Schenck Van and Schenck

    Van and Schenck were a popular United States [i] Vaudeville [i] duo in the 1910s [i] and 1920s [i], cons... 

  • Rudolph Valentino Rudolph Valentino

    Rudolph Valentino was an Italian [i] actor [i]. ... 

  • Jules Vernon
  • Weber & Fields
  • Ethel Waters Ethel Waters

    Ethel Waters was an Oscar [i]-nominated American [i] blues [i] vocalist and ... 

  • Donald "Monk" Watson
  • Señor Wences
  • Mae West Mae West

    Mae West was an American [i] actress [i], playwright [i], screenwriter [i], and sex symbol [i] ... 

  • Bert Williams Bert Williams

    -

||}
Bert Williams was the pre-eminent African American [i] entertainer [i] of his era.
... 


  • Paul Winchell Paul Winchell

    Paul Winchell, born Pinkus Wilchinski in New York City [i], was an American [i] ventriloquist [i] ... 

  • Ed Wynn Ed Wynn

    Ed Wynn was a popular American [i] comedian [i] and actor [i].

... 


  • Henny Youngman Henny Youngman

    Henny Youngman was a British [i] born American comedian [i] and violinist famous for "one-liners [i] ... 



See also

  • Hello Nurse
  • Slowly I Turned
  • Chesaning Showboat Chesaning, Michigan

    Chesaning is a village in Saginaw County [i] in the U.S. state [i] of Michigan [i] ... 



External links

  • 9,856 images collected by drama critic and theater promoter J. Willis Sayre. They consist of autographed portraits of actors, vaudeville performers, movie stills, singers, dancers, musicians, comedians and acrobats representing American theater history primarily from the 1890s and onward.
  • 230 Photographs and ephemera relating to the career of Pat Prior and Effie Norris documenting their life on the road while performing on the American vaudeville circuits around the turn of the century, 1886-1915.
  • Cartes-de-visite studio portraits of entertainers, actors, singers, comedians and theater managers who were involved with or performed on the American stage in the mid- to late 1800s.