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There is just one who is a “star”, she may be Margaret Utter. She looked so good that the others seemed quite ordinary.
Mr. Baker does a dressing scene in "The Seminary Girls" that probably wouldn't be permitted in any theatre excepting the Eighth Avenue - or another as careless.
The olio holds four acts. Dixon opens with a character singing, Anderson and Reynolds sing and talk, Miss Reynolds wearing a neat dress. Lew Adams and Co. play "A Factory Girl," not a bad sketch at all if Mr. Adams had some people to assist him who could act. Nicodemus and White had a comedy musical turn, one playing in blackface.
A postmaster gives away ten dollar money orders for ten cents. Why this only legitimate item of first-class humor isn't made more of must be through no one in the show believing it is funny.
There are no "show girls" with the troupe; several chorus girls are along, about sixteen in all.
The "Star Show Girls" isn't a good show; it's only a few minutes in the burlesque that prevents it from being termed a very poor one.
Source:
Variety 17:4 (01/01/1910)