This sketch entitled “Coyote Gussie” was twenty-five minutes long on the full stage.
Bryon plays a “cissy” who goes West and ends up on a ranch. He is frequently almost killed by a cowboy who turns out to be his father. Langdon does not have much in the way of dialogue, but her emphatic exclamation of “Dan!” to prevent the cowboy from killing the “cissy” is explosive every time. The company includes eight chorus girls dressed in pretty western costumes. They provide the background for three numbers.
This sketch entitled “Her Excellency, the Governor” was nineteen minutes long on the full stage.
The sketch involves the daughter of a wealthy American widow who becomes infatuated with a foreign nobleman who marries her mother. Amelia Summerville plays the widow.
The sketch opens with a drop representing a house in a well-to-do part of the city.
Mrs. Walters makes a change of costume, reappearing as the Swedish girl, and then the woman of the house.
The act was seventeen minutes long on the full stage.
This suffragette sketch sees a wife attending political conventions while her husband is forced to stay home and do housework. “She is finally brought to see the errors of her way by having her baby fall sick.”
The act was sixteen minutes long.
Miller and Zollman play a married vaudeville team who fight about the wife’s love of her little black dog. They continue to fight and threaten to leave each other until a fire breaks out in their hotel. They see a picture of a dead baby when the fire subsides and vow to return to their home in the South and quit vaudeville. The comedy includes the man wearing a bedspread as pants because his only trousers are at the cleaners.
This “school act” was twenty-eight minutes long on the full stage.
Four boys and four girls sit in desks opposite to each other. The teacher sits at the front. The schoolmaster wears a comedy chin piece. The children put a pin on their teacher’s chair and use a putty blower.