The act was twelve minutes long on the full stage.
Marco is a shadowgraphist who wears a tuxedo. A lighting apparatus and lens are placed on center stage and he stands in front of the lens to make shadows with his bare hands.
The act was fifteen minutes long.
The woman opens with some comedic talk and two lively songs with some violin imitations. The man plays a “rube”.
The act was four minutes long.
Two brunettes sing three songs with light voices and dance. They change costume twice and wear tasteful evening gowns. They look enough like one another to be twins.
The Dolly Varden Girls sing three or four old songs in Victorian hoop skirt costumes.
The Colette Trio (all male) consists of two violinists and one pianist. The trio plays “My Rosary” and then the pianist does a solo. He begins with an operatic medley and ends with a rag number. They finish with a rag ensemble.
The act was fourteen minutes long on the full stage.
A man and a woman sing and dance. Both wear evening clothes and dance in “the polite ballroom style.” The woman sings an impressive high note.
The act was nine minutes long on the full stage.
They open with a posing dance in which the woman is dressed in Greek costume and the man wears black velvet and a white frilled blouse. The man then does a single dance and the woman does some toe dancing and “legmania.” For the finale, the man is dressed in evening clothes and the woman wears long skirts for a “ragtime Apache dance”.
This “school act” was fourteen minutes long.
John J. Black plays the professor at a school and two men and a woman play the students. They sing and dance and inject some comedy into their routine. One of the actors plays a “hare-lipped Patsy” who handles comedy well and gets a lot of laughs.
Mlle. Italia is an equilibrist. She is assisted by a comedian in a straight costume and an acrobatic dog. She performs in front of a special backdrop and on a platform adorned with electric lights.
The act was thirteen minutes long.
The woman opens with a song which is interrupted by the man who plays a stage manager. They argue and then sing two songs. The man dances and “talks” unnecessarily.