Vaudeville Documentary PBS

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2020
  • I do not own the rights to this video
    PBS Documentary on history of Vaudeville
    VHS tape recorded off tv
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Комментарии • 238

  • @edwardbliss8931
    @edwardbliss8931 2 года назад +158

    What's great about this documentary is that at the time this was made, a lot of those performers were still with us, and were able to recount and reminisce about their days in Vaudeville.

    • @festyguy7405
      @festyguy7405 2 года назад +8

      They would have loved RUclips

    • @bostonblackie9503
      @bostonblackie9503 2 года назад +3

      You should watch the British documentary on silent films. All the people were still alive from infront of and behind the camera. It on RUclips.

    • @tangledwebb5044
      @tangledwebb5044 2 года назад +2

      @@bostonblackie9503 Please post that RUclips address. I'd like to check it out.

    • @ilahildasissac1943
      @ilahildasissac1943 2 года назад

      What year did this come out?

    • @tangledwebb5044
      @tangledwebb5044 2 года назад +2

      @@ilahildasissac1943 Oct '99.

  • @Shadywolf09
    @Shadywolf09 Год назад +36

    My great grandmother was one of Florence Ziegfeld's girls in the follies. Her husband was a grip working the stage during the elaborate performances. They traveled the country and did vaudeville road shows before settling down with a family.
    The performance bug got to the family and everyone on my father's side was a vaudeville performer.
    Drag shows, comedy skits, dance and music performances, you name it. The shed by the side of the house didn't hold yard tools..it held costumes, wigs and props. I only have one reel of footage from this side of the family, so it's nice to see what they could have been doing..it helps me understand where I come from.

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 Год назад +2

      What a wonderful legacy!

    • @phyrr2
      @phyrr2 Год назад +2

      That's amazing to hear, thank you for sharing! And the fact you have actual footage! I think it's great you get to have that reminder of your family's lineage, it's a very rare one indeed and you seem to be proud of it (as you should be). Did your immediate family ever do anything in show business or yourself? Or have you found yourself being drawn to such productions subconsciously or anything similar? I often think that children of such creative people have proclivities for such things.
      Random note about drag shows in Vaudeville - people don't know that gay rights were being fought for 100 years ago in NYC and Vaudeville. It wasn't the REASON for having drag in their shows but the activists did use it heavily. I don't mean to insert that as a political commentary or anything, just something to share.
      Regardless, the police were constantly at odds with performances being "too risque".
      My great grandfather 'Stan Stanley' worked with Mae West on "Pleasure Man" which was supposedly so offensive it made big news and that 1928 performance is what got Mae West dragged into court in 1930. You can find news on her story online quite easily now. Here's one I found rather quickly.
      bust.com/movies/194948-the-arrest-of-mae-west.html
      In the very last photo at the bottom, my great grandfather is the man immediately to the left of her.
      The only thing I have of him and his wife (who paired with him in their acts) is a giant folder full of flyers, newspaper clippings and even a letter he drafted for sending to Ole Olsen (big player in the scene back then). A submission of his was accepted by Ole and it was discussing making the production. That and a news portrait of my family, but it was missing one person - my grand mother. Written on the back was a note to the effect of "Couldn't find you, you were off with friends". Some other photo referred to Mae West as "Auntie Mae" (was just a nickname - no relation).
      I apologize if that's TL;DR, I didn't mean my response to be all about my stuff. Much of my meaning is, I bet your family has tons of stories brushing elbows with the stars of the time with all sorts of interesting tidbits. Especially in how it was all produced back then - that would be fascinating. I sometimes muse that if I had one wish, I'd like to have one day to spend with my grandparents and have them tell me all of their stories.
      Have you been able to find a way to digitize that reel you mentioned? Or anything else that you might have? That footage is precious, and I'm glad you have it but please preserve it and even upload it so it can at least float on the web for all time :)

    • @Dang3rMouSe
      @Dang3rMouSe Год назад +1

      Please, if you haven't already, convert to digital & upload the video here on YT for posterity.

    • @ditzygypsy
      @ditzygypsy Год назад

      I would also love to see the footage!

  • @ilshyf
    @ilshyf 2 года назад +23

    This episode is an episode of American Masters, a PBS documentary series, first broadcast 26 Nov. 1997.

  • @paulgartner4619
    @paulgartner4619 2 года назад +16

    now I know there is a difference between a geek and a regurgitator

  • @ScottAJacob
    @ScottAJacob 2 года назад +12

    An absolutely necessary understanding of America's intrinsic racism, industrialization, talent and entertainment development can only be gleaned through brilliantly produced documentaries such as this! With bittersweet reflection on the way Americans wanted to see themselves as being, rather than the way they were, The first hand interviews and memories of those still living performers, writers, and critics who made up the experience of Vaudeville are precious recordings that really make up the bulk of the treasure to be found within. With two ancestors of mine having worked in Vaudeville, the Ziegfeld Follies, and later, one a member of the Benny Goodman Orchestra, stories and reminisces told by grandparents and great aunts and uncles when I was little came to life in technicolor focus as this documentary took my imagination back in time to this wonderful, controversial, and important time in our history. Vaudeville is the story of Americans living in America told through the talents and creative imagination of the very people it celebrated. One of my favorite viewings on RUclips to date.

    • @paulj0557tonehead
      @paulj0557tonehead 2 года назад

      Racism and segregation was real, but blackface wasn't the scourge throughout. White musicians wore it in protest on behalf of black musicians being banned from clubs. Here is something else I found:
      'Democrats called white Republicans "radicals", lynched them along with blacks.
      Tuskegee Institute recorded that from 1882-1968 3,446 blacks, and 1,297 whites were lynched. Whites being "radical Republicans" who were caught registering freed blacks to vote."

    • @Shadywolf09
      @Shadywolf09 Год назад

      Which worked with Ziegfeld? My great grandmother was one of his girls and her husband (my great grandfather) was a grip doing the stage work.

  • @sandramorey2529
    @sandramorey2529 2 года назад +19

    Thanks for this. My mom started by wandering as a 6 year old into a San Francisco dance studio which was run by Gracie Allen's mom and sister. She had no money, but was clearly talented so they gave her free lessons. At 19 she joined the A.G. Barnes circus as a dancer. The Hawaiian "roustabouts" taught her the hula & when the circus folded, they all performed in the big hotel showrooms and then she went into Vaudeville. She never took off her clothes although she did perform a fan dance. At some point traveling from town to town her trunk of expensive costumes was stolen and immediately she gave it up and married my father. She never talked much about showbiz after that. I love Studs Terkel. He is much missed.

    • @janetsolomon1413
      @janetsolomon1413 2 года назад +4

      My mother was in a dance troupe called "The Silver Strutters"--all over 65. Among the group were 2 ex-vaudevillians--Maisie was 99, and could still do a mean Charleston. They were truly wonderful people--sang & danced old favourites at nursing homes & hospitals, told sweet but very funny jokes, did a lot of sitting & listening. (I was just their photographer)

    • @Earthbound369
      @Earthbound369 2 года назад +4

      My grandfather and his 3 sisters played in the movie theaters of Havana in the 1930's. He quit to marry my grandmother so the 3 sisters formed an all girl band that toured S.America. I wish I had talked to my great aunts more when they were around.

  • @ellingtonhilligas
    @ellingtonhilligas 2 года назад +19

    Thank you so much for this. It was amazing to see that so many of the original performances survived.

  • @isolani
    @isolani 2 года назад +6

    Blown away by this documentary. Thanks.

  • @hughdismuke4703
    @hughdismuke4703 2 года назад +21

    Sure it was hard work and lousy pay but a lot of them stuck with it for the art. The performance of art is what many lived for. I had the pleasure of knowing a vaudevillian who went all the way back to the 1920's. This guy was one of the bigger acts and traveled all over the world. Sometimes he headlined and knew everyone who was anyone back in those days. World leaders, Royalty, famous performers and celebrities of other areas of society (for better or worse) as well as your average Joe. He dropped a lot of names and with those names he had stories.
    He showed me a photo of him sitting at a long table with the well-to-do at Walt Disney's mansion, with Walt himself sitting at the table! This is the kind of crowds he was associated with and that happened because of his own celebrity status as a stage performer thru Vaudeville.
    Show business was in his blood. When he was a young boy his baby sitter was Fanny Brice in Chicago. His parents knew her because his father once owned the Green Mill on the north side. A place where high musical acts performed for many decades. When he was a boy he won a dance contest on the lawn where the Uptown Theater now sits. A theater he would perform in himself later.
    When he took his act on the road he told me that they traveled in groups and whoever brought in the dough shared it and everyone ate and so they all worked as a team to survive. He told me that it was these folks who were the original rat packs as he called them.
    I saw old photos of him and he dressed sharp in Italian cut suites with shinny polished shoes. He was always ready and looking your best was key. Sometimes he did very well for himself and sometimes times were rough. During the Great Depression while he was in NYC he told me that sometimes you'd have to find a place to sleep if you couldn't afford a room. One of the places was Grants tomb in Riverside park. If you were late getting there then you'd have to sleep out on the grass and sometimes it rained. I can only imagine.
    He told me a story once where he said you could get a motel room and three square meals a day for a whole week for only $7 dollars back in the 1930's. SEVEN DOLLARS! Your lucky if you can get a burger, fries and a drink for that much today. That's how messed up inflation is! The cost of things where pretty affordable up until the early 1980's when Reaganomics took over.
    He use to cringe when I'd tell him how much something cost. His love for the stage was so strong that he skipped Hollywood when all of his friends went to become film stars. Names like Cagney, Lancaster and others. He was a true showmen. His last acts was working for Joe Saddlemier back in the 70's and 80's, who created those humous nationally televised commercials using old acts and funny people, one being the most famous characters of all, Ida, with the line she coined "wheeeeeeers's the beef!" for Wendy's commercial.
    He was in over 100 of Joe's commercials. He performed in NYC, all over these continents, many places around the world, and settled his act in Europe during the 1940s and 1950s, before coming back to America during the 1960's when vaudeville was on its last leg before it finally died out.
    He told me a ton of stories. He lived one of the most interesting lives I ever met. He passed about 15 years ago in Chicago at the age of 96. He was a true pleasure to hang out with. Everyone gave him respect.

    • @tonirose6776
      @tonirose6776 2 года назад +1

      Wow, were you lucky to know him! Thank you for sharing this with us.

    • @ScottLandOfficial
      @ScottLandOfficial 2 года назад +2

      What was his name?

  • @joanodom2104
    @joanodom2104 2 года назад +11

    Arthur Tracy's voice - even in his eighties - was simply astounding! What a treasure that man was.

    • @TomDaly943
      @TomDaly943 2 года назад +2

      a favorite of my Grandmother, who was born in 1900.

  • @stephaniebristol3837
    @stephaniebristol3837 3 года назад +42

    Thanks for posting this. They had to be the best or they didn't eat. My favorites and still is Fanny Brice. Gracie Allen is also in there too. I must add June Havoc and her sister Gypsy Rose Lee both extremely talented in different ways. Eddie Cantor, Buster Keaton and Jack Benny are up there too.

    • @caraevans2609
      @caraevans2609 3 года назад +3

      I’m a diehard Fanny Brice fan too! I wish they would do another movie/musical that depicted her true life. I understand her daughter not wanting to air out her mother’s dirty laundry, sorta speak, but times are different now and there’s nothing to be ashamed of in my opinion. Gracie Allen was also a rare gem! I loved reading George Burns book “Gracie”.

    • @kdm71291
      @kdm71291 2 года назад

      So many, as you Google it!

    • @rosalindmartin4469
      @rosalindmartin4469 2 года назад

      Was Molly Picon a vaudey?

    • @PuffKitty
      @PuffKitty 2 года назад +1

      I think William Frawley, Fred on I Love Lucy, was an old song and dance man as well.

    • @monicalarkin4616
      @monicalarkin4616 2 года назад

      They sure did work hard for the money and tough life on the road

  • @smeltman
    @smeltman 2 года назад +7

    watched the whole thing. thanks for transferring it to here

  • @kdm71291
    @kdm71291 2 года назад +22

    in reference to the last segment where they talk about modern day "channel surfers'...and how we create our own Vaudeville type of entertainment because of the variety we provide for ourselves: This brought to mind another conveyance for entertainment that is now gone, the TV variety show!
    I remember watching Dean Martin, Sonny And Cher, Flip Wilson and, the last two of the genre, The Donny And Marie Show and Barbara Mandrell And The Mandrell Sisters!
    You could say that those shows were very inspired by Vaudeville.....I think Television and we, as viewers, could really benefit from those kinds of shows making a comeback!

    • @joanodom2104
      @joanodom2104 2 года назад +1

      Ed Sullivan launched a lot of careers on those Sunday night shows, didn't he? He was NOT the average presenter, but it worked!

    • @hughdismuke4703
      @hughdismuke4703 2 года назад

      @@joanodom2104 I saw a couple dozen of Ed's shows when I was a boy back in the 60's. I remember seeing Tom Jones and The Doors perform as well as a number of other acts.

    • @tonirose6776
      @tonirose6776 2 года назад

      Yes. Jackie Gleason, Ed Sullivan, Smothers Brothers, Carol Burnet, and more!

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 Год назад +1

      In many ways, "vaudeville" just moved to television. The same thing is happening to movies now in 2023. Audiences balked at paying money to see acts that they could see on television or hear on radio, well now, audiences are balking at paying money to see a movie in a theater when they could see it STREAMING on their flatscreen or laptop at home or on their phone! People will still pay to see top live performances like Cirque De Soleil or live concerts, but everything has to top notch to not see it at home.

    • @nataliejarosz9360
      @nataliejarosz9360 4 месяца назад

      The Muppet Show was pure vaudeville.

  • @kdm71291
    @kdm71291 2 года назад +15

    Performers like The Three Stooges, The Marx Brothers, Laurel And Hardy, William Frawley and SO MANY MORE were blessed to be able to move on to the “new” technologies of film, radio and eventually TV….and WE were blessed as a result!

  • @phyrr2
    @phyrr2 Год назад +2

    The next time you happen upon something like the Renaissance Faire, take note of the stage shows like "Broon" or "Moonie" or even the acrobatic shows. Vaudeville still exists in these forms today and you'll find some of them even have lineage back to the original Vaudevillian days.
    While my great grandfather "Stan Stanley" wrote "The Pleasure Man" with Mae West and was one of the witnesses next to her in court in 1930 (NYC kept busting their plays), the theater tradition didn't make it through the generations due to family issues. But my grandmother always had stories about her father for me and I have a small treasure trove of keepsakes (Vaudeville fliers, photos, newspaper clippings, etc.). The furthest I ever got was indeed doing street theater gigs at the Faire (you could say it's low level performance as it's all improv but it takes good skill). Faire always felt like family to me and maybe there's something to all that.
    Even when you see the actual street performers in places like Hollywood, where Batman and Spiderman have a rap-off, that's Vaudeville people. It still lives in a slew of current forms. Throw a dollar in the hat, stick around and clap before you leave. What little is left should be appreciated.

  • @kdm71291
    @kdm71291 2 года назад +8

    Here in my hometown of Ventura California, we have The Ventura Theater, now known as “The Majestic Ventura Theater”….it’s a somewhat scaled down version (although still very ornate) of the grand theater palaces built in the first part of the 20th century, such as the ones in the old theater district on Broadway in downtown LA and other areas of the country.
    It was built in 1928 to accommodate Vaudeville and the new “talkies”.

    • @tonirose6776
      @tonirose6776 2 года назад

      Even in Vancouver, Canada, we had a theatre row which had many houses, some very ornate and gorgeous: The Stanley, the Orpheum, the Strand...

  • @aprylrittenhouse4562
    @aprylrittenhouse4562 2 года назад +6

    Vaudeville circuit reminds me of playing ing a working rock band in the 80s. Dumpy hotels, sleeping in cheap busses vans, 2 shows a night 4 or five nights a week. Just to put way some money for later. But damn it was fun. Best 3 yrs of my young life

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 Год назад

      Yup, former Heavy Metal and Hip Hop acts from the 80s and 90s have similar stories.

  • @BilgemasterBill
    @BilgemasterBill 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for getting this up here. That was lovely. I believe I'd still pay good money to watch those two fellows in closing credits.

    • @tonirose6776
      @tonirose6776 2 года назад

      Are they the Nicholas Brothers? I think the NB were of the same height, though. Anybody know?

  • @softxaffair
    @softxaffair 3 года назад +12

    Thank you for sharing this!

  • @GuruRasaVonWerder
    @GuruRasaVonWerder 2 года назад +5

    Vaudeville is alive, it just went to onto TV & You tube & whatever media....On second thought, this is unique - no longer exists in this form. The type of acts & the way presented are a cultural niche in time - nothing quite like it now.....What a culture that was! And this presentation is top notch!

  • @ChristopherHowellMagic
    @ChristopherHowellMagic 3 месяца назад

    I never knew the closing acts were usually bad so the theatres would clear out early. What a wonderful collection of interviews, clips and info.

  • @Macabellie12Crash
    @Macabellie12Crash 2 года назад +9

    Great documentary. I really enjoyed learning about that era of entertainment.

  • @jfarinacci0329
    @jfarinacci0329 2 года назад +4

    Really good production. Thank you.

  • @jmj7599
    @jmj7599 2 года назад +4

    THIS IS PHENOMENAL!! THANK YOU!!!

  • @charliechan6892
    @charliechan6892 3 года назад +8

    This was a good watch. Thank you

    • @digitaldance9076
      @digitaldance9076  3 года назад +1

      Its been on a vhs for so long .Happy to have finally transferred it .

  • @Cherryberrygirl89
    @Cherryberrygirl89 2 года назад +3

    Fabulous documentary ❤️ loved learning about vaudeville

  • @StellaWaldvogel
    @StellaWaldvogel 2 года назад +10

    53:55
    Interviewer: "Were the plays that were done in vaudeville...were they very good plays?"
    Ancient Man: "No." 🤣

  • @melindamullins9971
    @melindamullins9971 2 года назад +4

    fantastic thanks for such a great upload for us artists its a wonderful inspiration.

  • @beckyjacobsen5867
    @beckyjacobsen5867 2 года назад +6

    Way before my time,but I love it. More please

  • @robertschlesinger1342
    @robertschlesinger1342 2 года назад +6

    Very interesting, informative and worthwhile video.

  • @deno127
    @deno127 2 года назад +2

    This is awesome thanks for sharing!!

  • @tonirose6776
    @tonirose6776 2 года назад +2

    What beautiful people! This doc is exhilarating and heartwarming (and -wrenching).

  • @lilivonshtup3808
    @lilivonshtup3808 2 года назад +10

    Most of the great vaudeville acts never crossed over to movies, radio and television, but all of the early classic movie stars were once in vaudeville. I believe that's how they became great, by honing their talent week after week in front of the best critics, the public. I also believe that such talent still exists today but they have no place to perfect that talent. Movies and music especially have become so homogeneous and lackluster not because of a lack of talent but a way for that talent to be seen and judged by the public in an affordable way. Now a record/movie production company decides what the public would like, and they're so out of touch that they're the last people who should have the power to decide. The movie industry alone is hashing out nothing but sequels, prequels and remakes. The economy is such that if they had a reemergence of a vaudeville style platform for entertainers, it would be sea change.

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 Год назад +1

      Its not that easy to switch from having a stage and projecting your voice out to an amphitheater to looking at a small camera staying in the restricted filming area. Also, magnetism on stage vs. the camera- not everyone can make the transition. In fact, not many major stars from the Silent Movie era could transition to sound films for similar reasons. Thats another documentary.

    • @phyrr2
      @phyrr2 Год назад +3

      A lot of them chose not to move over to "Talkies" and stick to the stage, being left behind. This actually happened to my great grandparents who were close friends with Mae West. Mae tried fervently to get them to move to Hollywood for said Talkies but he chose to stay in New York on the stage (and also for his family). For a family where Mae West was referred to by my grandmother as "Auntie Mae", they simply disappeared into history even though they were headliners for a time in Vaudeville in NY. You can even find photos of them with Mae as ggfather wrote "Pleasure Man" with Mae and was part of the trial when she was arrested (his stage name was 'Stan Stanley').
      So just imagine how many other people, even closer to Hollywood figures that made the same choice, and simply passed into obscurity. No doubt the tale of my great grandparents happened to thousands of these performers.
      It's interesting to think "what if" had he gone having such close ties to the industry at that point. My family may have ended up as a line of B-movie celebrities or some jank like that :P But then I likely also wouldn't be here for all I know. I find it amazing how decisions like that, a SINGLE decision of yes/no can alter one's family history forever in a completely different direction. I think anyone can find this in their own family history quite honestly and it's fun as a thought experiment I suppose :)

  • @GroovyShelly
    @GroovyShelly 23 дня назад

    Thank you! This is fascinating

  • @karaamundson3964
    @karaamundson3964 2 года назад +5

    The Nicholas Brothers were truly great.

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 2 года назад

      They take my breath away. Watching films of them can bring tears to my eyes because of their absolute genius.

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 Год назад +1

      @@inkyguy They have a PBS documentary too if you can find it. After touring in Europe in the early 1950s, one of the brothers chose to stay and remain in France till the late 60s. Didn't want to deal with the disgusting racism of American society. They were treated with DIGNITY in Europe.

  • @mediamanny53
    @mediamanny53 2 года назад +13

    This is an interesting excellent documentary worth every minute of watching 👀 👌 👍 👏 🙌 😀

  • @inkyguy
    @inkyguy 2 года назад +4

    When you hear of the kind of money one could earn in vaudeville, then the premise on “I Love Lucy” that Fred and Ethel were retired vaudeville entertainers who had used their savings to buy a brownstone walk-up apartment building in Manhattan to support themselves for the rest of their lives makes a lot of sense.

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 Год назад

      That was a brownstone walk-up?!? I always thought it was a highrise from that window in the living room.

  • @djmaineycashe
    @djmaineycashe 2 месяца назад

    My mom was a ballet dancer….she brought me up in theater….my parents exposed me to show business at an early age….i got to see backstage at plays concerts and recitals …..I learned it’s all about creating the hype then the show if the show is engaging then the people will eat it up…..THEY WANT TO BE ENTERTAINED…..SO GIVE THEM A SHOW…..BIG MOVES BIG PASSION = BIG APPLAUSE 🎉

  • @Ravenoflight2275
    @Ravenoflight2275 2 года назад +4

    Love this documentary

  • @violet.senderhauf2187
    @violet.senderhauf2187 3 года назад +9

    I came here in wonder to know what is this vaudeville that the likes of Tiny Tim, Alice Cooper and Davy Jones keep referring to.

  • @carolwilson8620
    @carolwilson8620 2 года назад +3

    Love this documentary I learn alot.

  • @browningautomatic2393
    @browningautomatic2393 Год назад +1

    GREAT DOCUMENTARY ! WEDNESDAY 10/5/22 OCTOBER 5, 2022

  • @joanodom2104
    @joanodom2104 2 года назад +28

    The world owes a HUGE amount of gratitude to the Jewish people for improving comedy. From Lenny Bruce to Rodney Dangerfield, Joan Rivers to Fanny Brice, as a comic myself, I fell in love with Ernie Kovacs when I was seven years old! 😄 Vaudeville, the Catskills and Yiddish theatre altered the course of comedy. I, for one, am eternally grateful.

    • @joanodom2104
      @joanodom2104 2 года назад +5

      Comedy is oft borne of adversity. Myself, I was very bullied and I learned early to disarm them with humor and they'll stop kicking you. 😬 African American comics and the Jews have been through hell, historically. My Jewish and black buddies are, hands down, able to crack me up with just one LOOK. Comedy beats hell outta taking Prozac (for me, anyway). Cheers, all.

    • @comedywriter8408
      @comedywriter8408 2 года назад +2

      I was thinking of the Marx brothers when you mentioned the Jewish influence on vaudeville. That of course is where they made their start. And what an impact they had.

    • @Pstephen
      @Pstephen 2 года назад +4

      Most American popular culture seems to have come from the Jews, the Blacks and the Gays; without them there'd be Charles Ives (who I love) and Stephen Foster.
      Ok, I'm exaggerating; but there's some truth in there.

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 2 года назад +3

      @@pashadyne, don’t lose your day job.

    • @tonirose6776
      @tonirose6776 2 года назад +2

      @@Pstephen I'd include the Irish who were at one time banned from many public places, jobs, and restaurants. James Cagney, Bertie O'hearn come to mind. The English music halls too: Bob Hope, Cary Grant, Fred Astaire

  • @raymondhummel5211
    @raymondhummel5211 Год назад

    So many talented acts performing live to their audiences. Each with their own unique style of entertainment. Such an exciting time to be in show business! Loved by people from all walks of life, from small towns to large cities from ordinary people to Presidents.

  • @Redmenace96
    @Redmenace96 2 года назад +6

    Great history lesson!
    What The People find entertaining/sensational tells us a story about the society, culture, and human condition from another era. How else to understand them?

  • @brettinoloverromantico4095
    @brettinoloverromantico4095 11 месяцев назад

    Excellent upload 👍

  • @josephcollins6033
    @josephcollins6033 Год назад +4

    THIS IS FANTASTIC!!! Thanks a million! Can anyone tell me how all of these clips of Vaudeville acts come to us? They are clearly filmed. Lucky us! At least, most of them don't look like the performer is live in a theatre.

    • @Dang3rMouSe
      @Dang3rMouSe Год назад +1

      From my understanding when silent film started to became popular it was pushing Vaudeville to the back door. The filmmakers needed to put ppl in theater seats so what better way than filming the solid acts from Vaudeville that had a history of filling theaters.
      Some of the acts translated well to film & certain Vaudevillians like Charlie Chaplain & Buster Keaton grasped & developed this new art really well becoming some of the first major film celebrities.
      Because of this we now have historical film documenting these long lost stage acts.

    • @josephcollins6033
      @josephcollins6033 Год назад +1

      @@Dang3rMouSe You are very kind. I know that movies began to kill vaudeville. But, I wonder why they needed to fill the seats IF silent films were so very popular? I'm still confused, but I certainly appreciate your information. Thanks so much!

  • @suziecreamcheese211
    @suziecreamcheese211 2 года назад +2

    It’s gratifying that so much has been preserved for future generations, however I do have to question what the people of those times considered entertainment, but then I’ve heard rap.

    • @clovergrass9439
      @clovergrass9439 2 года назад

      Its crap for the masses ultimately for social engineering purposes. Read the protocols of zion.

  • @jonhilderbrand4615
    @jonhilderbrand4615 2 года назад +7

    An article I found online which appeared in "Everybody's Magazine," 1905, says, "I should say that not less than $10,000,000 represents the salaries paid to vaudeville performers in this country every year, and that the public pays considerably more than twice that amount for its vaudeville entertainment. I am sure that this rough estimate is under, rather than over, the actual figures." In today's dollars, that's close to $380 million. When they worked, vaudeville paid well, but work was very unsteady and the competition was fierce. The same article says, "So great is the demand for really good acts that salaries are steadily advancing. There seems to be no limit to the price managers are willing to pay. Of late years the former vaudeville performers who have gone on the 'legitimate' stage as stars have frequently returned, at least for a part of a season, and many distinguished 'two-dollar stars,' as vaudeville managers designate those from the 'legitimate' stage, have been drawn into vaudeville. These, including the two or three people who assist them in a one-act sketch, may receive at first from $1,000 to $1,500 a week, because they will attract many who have not been in the habit of going to vaudeville theatres. Managers have learned that the established vaudeville performers almost always please more than the distinguished high-priced star, and the casual visitor who sees them usually becomes a regular patron. If the 'two-dollar' star remains in vaudeville, his salary is likely to drop nearly half unless he makes an exceptional success."
    Interesting article, and great video!

  • @erpthompsonqueen9130
    @erpthompsonqueen9130 2 года назад

    Thank you.

  • @joannnelson9847
    @joannnelson9847 2 года назад +1

    ...that littlest Nicholas brother had such dancing eyes !!!!!

  • @KingOFuh
    @KingOFuh 2 года назад +2

    Gus Visser and his Singing Duck. LMAO!!! I love quacking ducks

  • @scotnick59
    @scotnick59 Год назад +1

    June Havoc had a wonderful speaking voice; she lived to 97, too

  • @Seabacon346
    @Seabacon346 Год назад +1

    Ooooh no. I’m in the rabbit hole.

  • @suziecreamcheese211
    @suziecreamcheese211 2 года назад +2

    OMG Rubie Blake! The house of I’ll repute! I loved him and will miss him forever.

  • @FionaOfMountLawley
    @FionaOfMountLawley 2 года назад +2

    1:14:47 "The Duncan Sisters were vaudevilles last minstrels". The Black and White Minstrel Show ran on television from June 14th 1958 until July 21st 1978. They also had a touring company which performed in theatres, beginning in 1960 and continuing through to 1989. Meanwhile Vivian Duncan had died of Alzheimers at the age of 89 in 1986 (surviving her older sister Rosetta by 27 years).

  • @punkyduckscn2732
    @punkyduckscn2732 2 года назад +1

    I’ve been going to pantos since I can remember, I absolutely love them! I think it’s a very British thing .

  • @shariberry3123
    @shariberry3123 5 месяцев назад

    In the early 1990's, I was living in a rural smaller town area called Blackfoot, Idaho. I would stare at an old framed photo on the wall, a gathering of men wearing women's clothing. I always wondered what in the heck it was. Decades past, I moved out of Idaho but I found the picture again on an Idaho history FB page. There was a clue in the picture, a circus poster. People in the FB group helped me figure out the mystery, it was a Vaudeville group that was travelling thru Idaho by train, pre WW1. They had stopped in downtown Blackfoot and posed for the picture.

  • @elmerkilred159
    @elmerkilred159 2 года назад +3

    I've already seen several Bugs Bunny, Loony Tunes, and Mickey Mouse skits in the first 40 minutes!

  • @eckankar7756
    @eckankar7756 2 года назад

    in the 60s there were multiple variety shows like Vaudeville, I think the last I can remember resembling it was Hee Haw with southern skits through out the program.

  • @davidcouch6514
    @davidcouch6514 2 года назад +1

    In the late 70’s Atlanta a building demolition exposed an adjacent brick side with Vaudeville Advertisement.

  • @LazlosPlane
    @LazlosPlane 2 года назад +1

    Jolson never sang "Mammy" in vaudeville. He actually spent a very short time in vaudeville as an adult.

  • @sdgakatbk
    @sdgakatbk 2 года назад +1

    Molly Picon. I think of the Car 54 episodes. She would be trying to match up Muldoon or someone else and would always be up against the NYC government and winning. She was very funny in those roles!!

  • @richardnailhistorical3445
    @richardnailhistorical3445 2 года назад +7

    'continued their act up to a dozen times a day' - are you kidding me? Who in the name of Ra could do their act 12 times in one day? Insane!

    • @boointhelotus5332
      @boointhelotus5332 2 года назад +2

      Vaudeville performers would put together a 7-10 minute act and some spent years polishing it till they could rely on it “going over” (succeeding) with the audience. Think of stand-up comedy open mics, where comedians put together a “tight 10” (10 min. of material that “kills” the audience-making them laugh). I think the whole vaudeville shows only lasted 60-90 mins. total. So doing it 6-8 times per day was normal “on the circuit” - traveling from town to town, city to city through the months the houses were open. (I don’t think 12 was a realistic number) The acts that became big names who played the best houses (like the Palace in Chicago & New York) changed their act every season (fall through spring, since vaudeville houses were closed during summers, very similar to theater seasons today). The big names like Fred & Adele Astaire, George Burns & Gracie Allen, Jack Benny, W.C. Fields, The Marx Brothers, Houdini, The Three Keaton’s-featuring Buster, etc., would perform only matinee & evening performances at the best theaters. They got paid more so they could work less frequently. But the ordinary acts that never made it big, (and all the acts when they first started) just survived with enough to get them through winters & summers when theaters were dark. These acts would do the same bits (songs, dances, comedy routines, magic tricks, etc.) in smaller houses in every city and town that the trains stopped in. Some performers did the same acts year after year. They got around by train, and in cities, by trolley. The number of shows per day were a like movie showtimes now (though movies now are 2+ hrs, so they can only have 3-4 per day on each screen). Most vaudeville houses became movie houses in the late 1920s & ‘30s. Their movie showing times were based on the old vaudeville showtimes. And movies were only 60-70 minutes for most of the silent film era. Only big, major titles like Abel Vance’s Napoleon ran for 2 hrs. Once sound came in around ‘29, features ran for around 90 mins. This time slot schedule carried over to radio shows, & eventually to TV (so, the 60-90 min. program became the standard on TV that we still have today, for nighttime talk shows (think Colbert, Kimmel, Meyer, etc.) which are the last remnant of the TV variety shows that vaudeville morphed into. So while I don’t think 12 was likely, 6-8 was probably the standard.

    • @richardnailhistorical3445
      @richardnailhistorical3445 2 года назад

      @@boointhelotus5332 Thank you for that history of Vaudeville, was very interesting, certainly was not easy on those that didn't make it big, the traveling alone would kill me. Some of those acts were quite marvelous regardless how many times they trained to learn them. Recently watched Paul Whiteman, King of Jazz and he had a number of short players on, they were very entertaining (especially the 'girl slapping guy' routine) love it. Guy playing fiddle was also great. I thought that show Whiteman did was far ahead of it's time.

    • @yuglesstube
      @yuglesstube 2 года назад

      Sun Ra

  • @jerryjohnson8485
    @jerryjohnson8485 2 года назад

    A wonderful history it is

  • @bostonblackie9503
    @bostonblackie9503 2 года назад +3

    The word Vaudeville has sneaked into UK English, Britain never had Vaudeville they had Music Hall which was more high class. I love documentaries such as this, including the British series on silent movies.

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 Год назад

      The British "Panto" was never high class. The Dame and some guy in horse costume?!?!?

  • @mj6962
    @mj6962 2 года назад +2

    Very first scene…. Was that a duck sound, or the actual voice?

  • @memyselfandeye76
    @memyselfandeye76 Год назад

    It's crazy that "Cary Me Back to Old Virginny" Was VA's state song until 1997!

  • @Johnnycdrums
    @Johnnycdrums 2 года назад +5

    Great to hear from Carl Ballantine, never would have heard of him if not for "McHale's Navy", but I always wondered if he began in Vaudeville.

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 Год назад +2

      I think the majority of sitcom comedians from the '50s, '60s and '70s were Vaudeville alumnus.

  • @stepawayful
    @stepawayful 2 года назад +3

    Why didn't they include the names of all the people interviewed? Only some names appeared - but not all. Why?
    Also, great choice having Ben Vereen narrate this!

    • @tonirose6776
      @tonirose6776 2 года назад

      Yeah. We all wanted to know their names. But thanks a lot for the upload.

  • @Dang3rMouSe
    @Dang3rMouSe Год назад

    42:32 That joke still hits 100+ years later

  • @mamiemonrovia7654
    @mamiemonrovia7654 2 года назад

    Oh my gosh, who is that @25:40? I've always heard of Gypsy Rose Lee and seen her famous fan dance. this dance is so lovely. i was also wondering, given that many family histories are simply lost thru time or embarrassment that "GGrandma was on the stage", how many ppl don't have a clue about their ancestors' participation in this art form?

    • @Vintageskater
      @Vintageskater 2 года назад

      My maternal grandfather and grandmother met in Vaudeville. She was a dancer in the chorus line and he and his brother had a headliner act. From the stories I heard, they loved every minute of it.

  • @rogermansour993
    @rogermansour993 2 года назад +2

    GREAT DOCUMENTARY.LOTS OF RESEARCH.FOR THOSE WHO COMPLAIN THE FILM'S ARE FUZZY.THIS IS VERY OLD FOOTAGE. FANTASTIC!!😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃

  • @curtisasman6555
    @curtisasman6555 2 года назад +1

    Anybody know when this documentary was made? I’m just curious. Thanks for posting it!

    • @tonirose6776
      @tonirose6776 2 года назад

      Look above in comments: I think it was 1997-ish

  • @maryduhon9769
    @maryduhon9769 Год назад +1

    These articulate have their career and lives destroyed now. We need to get back to when we could laugh at ourselves, instead taking everything and everyone so seriously. What we need to "wake up to" is how miserable we are making ourselves now

  • @blakelowe9079
    @blakelowe9079 Год назад

    I can't believe this documentary left out the immortal Kid Jersey. He invented the term 'thank you,' for pete's sake.

  • @scotnick59
    @scotnick59 Год назад +1

    Ginger Rogers pretty much "kept" her real name: Ginger came to be because her little neice couldn't pronounce "Virginia" Legend says that Ginger and Lucy Ball were distant cousins - both born in 1911

  • @kasia3582
    @kasia3582 2 года назад +4

    41:41 immediately looked this guy up. he was full blooded italian 😑

  • @StevenJBosch
    @StevenJBosch Год назад

    People who favor old bookshop'smay find a copy of Fred Allen's memoir "Much Ado About Me." The characters deal ing with his years in Vaudeville. He recounts the condition s and the personality who made it.

  • @gaelenhess3484
    @gaelenhess3484 2 года назад +1

    So this is where all my weird co-workers came from when moving pictures came along.

  • @Psychedelic_TimeTraveller86
    @Psychedelic_TimeTraveller86 2 года назад

    who is the girl with the ukulele at 35:24?

  • @503punxoioioi9
    @503punxoioioi9 2 месяца назад

    Is LeVar Burton from Reading Rainbow the narrator?

  • @MikeSmith-bn1qr
    @MikeSmith-bn1qr 6 месяцев назад

    It was the tic tock of its day.

  • @festyguy7405
    @festyguy7405 2 года назад +4

    Oh; to have a time machine!

  • @Newton14alan
    @Newton14alan 2 года назад +1

    00:40 - My gosh, what was Gus doing to that duck?!

  • @lordcron
    @lordcron 8 месяцев назад

    I read once that the world almost never heard of the Nicholas Brothers because there were some folks who didn't want them filmed or seen in or on anything mainstream. They were actively trying to destroy children! Can you believe it?! Sad.... What I feel bad for is all you didn't get to see. The people in this video were only the ones who got famous enough to be filmed. There was a ton of talent that never got the spotlight....

  • @hilarylawrence4588
    @hilarylawrence4588 Год назад

    1. I don't think I've ever seen Gypsy Rose Lee's little sister (June Havoc) in a documentary
    2. That clip with Trixie Friganza singing about the hula girl has to be one of the strangest songs I've ever heard, and believe me, I've heard many.

    • @hilarylawrence4588
      @hilarylawrence4588 Год назад

      P.S. Al Jolson said, "you ain't heard nothin' yet," and blacked up to say so... (my own grandfather sang in a barbershop quartet in the 1930s as a young man and he and his fellow singers, all white folks, blacked up, too....I remember asking my dad why Grandpa would do that. Daddy explained that was just how people entertained back then).

  • @eunicestone838
    @eunicestone838 2 года назад

    It was the best of times....it was the worst of times..

  • @xxcelr8rs
    @xxcelr8rs 2 года назад

    TV ruined socializing. Musicians. People entertaining each other face to face.

  • @seamantrade7919
    @seamantrade7919 2 года назад

    When a symphonic orchestra is playing Mozart or Beethoven where does they ask the (so called) rights from?

  • @FlickMobb
    @FlickMobb Год назад

    Studs Terkrel in the house!

  • @scotnick59
    @scotnick59 Год назад +1

    Lucy Ball was a riot in real life at times. Claimed that she didn't know Vaudeville was pretty much "dead" by 193O, she forgot to put bananas in banana splits working behind the counter of a drug store!

  • @MorpheusOne
    @MorpheusOne 2 года назад

    @43:10: That looks like a scene from "the Exorcist".

  • @rogermansour993
    @rogermansour993 2 года назад

    JOE FRISCO.WOW.I SEE WHERE JAMES BROWN , MICHAEL JACKSON, M.C.HAMMER GOT SOME OF THEIR STUFF.

  • @sciencedavedunning3415
    @sciencedavedunning3415 Год назад

    Vaudeville was the fire under the ' great melting pot' from which emerged the American sense of humor, good spirited, self effacing , ethnic humor. " Laugh at me, I'm German, or Irish, or Jewish, or Black.......... but you wouldn't be laughing if you didn't understand what I am saying."

  • @carbonatedwater8739
    @carbonatedwater8739 3 года назад +13

    Watching this was splendid, thank you!

  • @yungsolopath2603
    @yungsolopath2603 3 года назад +10

    Make America Vaudeville again

  • @BWZ420
    @BWZ420 3 года назад +3

    25:27
    Sounds a lot like RUclips.

  • @deafviolinist
    @deafviolinist Год назад

    it hit an off beat at 43:00 ... but 54:00 might be the actual funniest thing I've seen in a video, at all.

  • @janetgies8698
    @janetgies8698 2 года назад

    Rose Marie was so cute!