The act ran for ten minutes.
Mae West is now trying out a vaudeville show with the Girard Brothers, who were in the Follies Bergere show on Broadway.
Miss West wears a “nifty harem outfit” and works hard. A cold prevented her from doing her best work, but she is “a lively piece of femininity.”
The act was ten minutes long.
The act was formerly a quartet and sings rag numbers. The trio looks and sings well.
The couple performed a sketch called “The Rube” which ran for twenty-eight minutes.
Jimmie Barry plays a country yokel who arrives at the stage door of Daizie Dazzleman (Mrs. Barry). He bets his friend Si Terwilliger that he can get a kiss from the starlet, which he does. The audience begins to feel sorry for Jimmie Barry’s character, who seems to fall in love with the married Daizie. He asks for one last kiss, which he again receives. Si bursts through the stage door and hands Barry’s character money exclaiming “You win, Zeke!”
The playlet entitled “The Denunciation” was twenty minutes long on the full stage.
Andrew Robson plays Mr. Kean, who clashes with the Prince of Wales (Walter Hitchcock) over the Countess Felsen (played by Mabel Carruthers).
The act entitled “The Father” was fifteen minutes long.
Mr. Jose plays a father who finds his long lost daughter after receiving a letter from his estranged wife on her death bed. He procures a job as a copyist for a production that the daughter is acting in. He then has a chance to run lines with her and reveals that he is her father.
The sketch entitled “A One Night Stand in Minstrelsy” was twenty-one minutes long.
The act revolves around a colored porter who joins a minstrel troupe. The Leighton trio assumes their usual characters [which are not explicitly mentioned].
The stage is transformed into a railroad tank station, with a section of the troupe’s private car showing.
The act was ten minutes long.
Laurence delivers a poor imitation of Bert William’s work. He performs songs and monologues. The Subway monologue was just as dull as a subway commute.
The act was eight minutes long.
The two women perform a “Sister Act”, though they are not sisters and do not dance or do comedy. They sing well and present an attractive appearance in their many gowns.
One of the girls does an Irish number, but it does not seem to fit into the act.
The act was fourteen minutes long.
Musette is a violinist who is “a combination of Yvette and Trovato.” She opens with a classical section which runs too long, which she follows up with several rag numbers.
The act was fifteen minutes long.
Hirsch is a cartoonist who works with colored pencils and has an African American assistant who he draws. He and his assistant attempt some comedy “comments” during the act.