Elsie Stirk sings in a double voice and tells some stories. She then does a short routine on the trapeze.
The act was fifteen minutes long.
The man plays a “Dutchman” comedian and the girl is the straight. The comedian opens with a song in a pleasing voice.
The act was eleven minutes long on the full stage.
Ors does comedy juggling in tramp makeup.
The act was nine minutes long.
Jack Sheppard does several Marathonic songs and parodies. He has added a new verse about the present political controversy to one of the songs.
The act was thirteen minutes long.
The duo sings. The girl did a toe dance and the man did well with a “Yiddish” number.
The act was seventeen minutes long.
Aubrey Rich and Ten Lenore sing and play the piano. Lenore is the straight and Rich attempts comedy by bouncing on her piano stool. They do duets and Rich does an Italian number that does not land with the crowd.
This blackface “sister act” was thirteen minutes long.
The Frank Sisters work like the old minstrel duos. The shorter of the two does comedic talk. “A dirty looking dog was used at the close to put over the old joke about the pup being an entomologist.” They sisters also do some singing.
The act was ten minutes long.
Florence Bowes is a young woman who seems as though she just graduated from the Cabaret school. She wears a white serge Norfolk outfit, a green costume, and a black spangled dress. She sings several songs with a good voice.
The act was eleven minutes long.
Gibson acts as a “singing souse” in English dress clothes. He holds a tailor’s dummy under his arm and proceeds to tell a tale about how he and his friend got into a fight in front of a tailor’s shop so he picked him up and ran. He leaves with the dummy and returns to sing two “blue” English songs.
The act was thirteen minutes long on the full stage.
Spissel, Quail and Mack perform an acrobatic routine in front of a hotel kitchen backdrop. They do some comedy tumbling.