They seem to have taken Yorke and Adams for a pattern, with one favouring Joe Welch more than either of the other two.
The four warblers use an exterior mountain cabin scene and carry out the minstrel idea by sitting in a circle on ordinary soap boxes, spilling over a few jokes and rendering the songs in the old-fashioned minstrel way.
She wore a blue dress and pretty hat.
She changed to character costume for a German dialect comic
The woman wears a boy’s disguise.
She made two costume changes. Neither is elaborate, but the style of songs rendered do not require any great amount of dressing.
Between the aerial flights, the two women prance about, first a Geishas, and later, as they strip down in the clothing department, as what their suits at the moment may indicate they are.
A lattice with a rope. The girls cling to the ropes by their teeth, and are swung into the air by the steel piece being run up on the role. In sining, they are not raised high, nor whiled over fast, though Monday night at the American was their first show.
Connolly sang four new songs.
The changes were quickly made and the dresses very pretty.
She makes four changes of costumes, one for each number, all very pretty and Miss Dillon knows how to wear them
The dancing, posing, and costuming are well up to the Lasky standard, as well as the scenic setting.
The chorus work of the double quartet of men and girls is quite tuneful, but in some parts weak.