Tom Dingle and Esmeralda Sisters
The act was eleven minutes long.
Tom Dingle and the Esmeralda Sisters do eccentric and acrobatic dancing. They dance together and each do a solo song and dance.
Mabel and Dora Ford and Co.
This pantomime entitled “Legends of Mythology” was twenty minutes long on the full stage.
The pantomime follows the legend of the boy Narcissus, who fell in love with himself when he saw his reflection in a pond. The setting is a woodland, with a space in the middle for the women to change costumes. Dora Ford plays Narcissus and Mabel Ford plays Echo, the girl who is vainly in love with him. The first scene is a Nymph number. Six chorus girls also dress in Grecian costumes and create the background of each scene. Both the Fords and the chorus girls dance in a floating and graceful style.
Bessie De Voie
Edna Aug
The act was sixteen minutes long.
Edna Aug sings and does character impersonations. She impersonates a chorus girl and two other characters in one gown and without her usual makeup.
Ward and Curran
The act entitled “The Stage Door Tender” was twenty-seven minutes long. “Pop” is the stage doorman. Curran is first a Dutchman with a “funny dog”, then a girl who sings “What a Beautiful Dream”, and lastly, just John Curran.
Peggie Lennie and Co.
This sketch entitled “Cleopatra’s Needle” was fifteen minutes long.
Peggie Lennie is an English actress who teams up with American Walter Hast for some light comedy. Hast plays an English tourist lost in the tomb of Cleopatra thinking about the legend of her annual reappearance. Cleopatra then appears, but turns out to be his English sweetheart playing a joke on him. He pretends to be Marc Antony in return.
George Rolland and Co.
The act entitled “Fixing the Furnace” was sixteen minutes long. A woman (Mae Gerald) leads the plumber (George Rolland) and his helper (Billy Kelly) downstairs to fix the coal heater. The plumber is “roughly made up”, while the helper wears a fur overcoat. The setting is a cellar with a “well made” prop furnace.
Maurice and Florence Walton
The act is nine minutes long. Maurice and his partner do four dances, and they close with a “Tango”; however, all the dances are “rags”, and the biggest hit is the “Trot”.