The choisters appear from the darkened stage one after the other, their faces alone being illuminated in the centre of a picture frame.
The stage setting is neat and tasteful. Miss Haney is well provided with fine feathers.
The opening has the stage in almost utter darkness for fully three minutes.
The woman looks well and plays quietly.
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 house gains a larger capacity from its width, a feature of theatre construction which, where possible, brings the stage “to the audience” helping the performance.
Dr. Herman had an elaborate and showy apparatus upon the stage, among the many being a “Herman coil.”
There is just one who is a “star”, she may be Margaret Utter. She looked so good that the others seemed quite ordinary.
It is two rooms in the hotel and the consequent mix-up of husbands and wives.
There are about fourteen chorus girls in all. One blonde is unusually lively. A few are good looking and a few just the opposite.