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 fourteen minutes long.
A man dressed in Hebrew costume and a girl sing, dance, and do some comedic “talk”. For the finish, the couple comes down into the audience for some more “kidding”. They leave the stage with a dance.
The act was ten minutes long.
A man and a woman sing solos and duets. They look and sound classy.
The act was three minutes long on the full stage.
The Bounding Owens do a fast routine of ground tumbling, hand-to-hand and shoulder-to-shoulder balancing, and trampoline work.
Dyne and Dyne are club jugglers who have incorporated signing into their act. One of the Dynes does a song in a double voice after a short juggling number. He also does a ballad.
This “sister act” was fourteen minutes long.
Sterling and Hutton open with a sister act, but it is obvious that the larger “sister” is a man. The girl does a kid song in rompers and the man wears a bathing suit for a song and takes off his wig when it is over. The girl does another kid number while the man changes into men’s clothes. They finish with another song and dance.
The act was ten minutes long on the full stage.
Helen Lorraine opens with “My Hero” on the cello in semi-darkness and wears an ankle length dress. She then does a rag medley on the violin and changes into white satin knickers with military coat and hat. She plays a classical number, then a popular melody and a bird imitation all on the violin.
The act was fifteen minutes long on the full stage.
Two girls and a man have a musical routine. The man opens with a pantomimic comedy complete with a self-moving bottle and a trick table that blows flour into his face. The girls then play the bottles in a cafe scene. They also play xylophones, which are disguised as the tables.
The act was eighteen minutes long.
Swor, formerly of Swor and Mack, has a new act with his wife. Westbrook sings “coon” songs and Swor dances. They use Billy Farnum’s farewell song for the finish in which they walk out through the audience.