w tnfcv V TfVr- . 5 -J Mf yvpaimr AMUSEMENT SECTION i icuemng daKb i&tixntt PHOTOPLAY THEATRES DANCING -MUSIC PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 18, 1916 WHEN THfr RUSSIANS ARE MAKING THEIR BALLETS SKETCHES PROM THE REHEARSAL ROOM CfMPLiNWGJJC saawfflj VK MP" TOO .,4 fSIS5- 4 vlt $f$m& fill WIflM e vsi Tfeisar ' ?& xmxvrmisTmxsstsgmmssnL ' " vMU chcvttm K&WyszxK k $ W ZvcitcrjPj ttKrttorty, ft Oiimpses oi ino BjrnnBo rcncarsai scenes which ppcedo tho choropnphic marvels of Sorgo do DinRlillcIT's Ballet Kusso. Durinp the first weeks of performances in New York, and to a considerable extent on tour, tho principals have spent their oparo hours working inueiatigauiy at the intricate and difficult steps of their brilliant dances. Dressed in odd sections of old costumes, with a single piano for accompaniment and tho ballet master's thumping cano to mark tho time, they filled tho low-coilingd rehearsal rooms of tho Century Theatre with strange noises and a stranger grace. Sketches by Samuel McCoy. Tomorrow I sflie Today and of the Photoplay Art In Education by Art, Not Propaganda or Trav elogues, Lies the Future of the Movies, Says Fox Star , liy UBllTiUV lVALlUii .T THINK I foreseo a futuro for tlio Jno litlon plcturo that no ono has ever pre sented beforo as I Intend to plcturo It. I co tho motion plcturo not supplanting Hlsrature. but building and creatine n great new literature of Its own. Already "the motion plcturo Is a too of Ignorance. It can bo mndo to banish Ignorance It must not bo used nnd will not bo used "later on In a propaganlst senso ; not as a 'studied and dellborato educator which iwjuld causo resentment unions tlio people bo saw It, but as an unstudied portrayor ef tho right things to do nnd tho wrong things to do. i The motion picture. In Its evolution, whether It deals with fiction or fnct, will le wonderfully educational. If a plcturo Is Inaccurate now tlio picture public Knows this quickly. If It shows wrong period costumes, wrong-period furnlturo or a con fusion of two or moro poriods Into tho same sceno thcro nro hundreds of thou sands of peoplo In America who detect this Instantly. An Ignorant producer can not exist for long. Ho Is showing his pictures, no matter who ho Is, for n timo at least, to a partially Intellectual nnd informed public If he pictures Ignorance, offends or excites rldlculo for long, tho producer ceases to exist, Theroforo, thoso producers wno uo survivo anu grow in power will be thoso who nro Informed or who engage as advisors peoplo of capacity to correct their deflnlennle.q. Correct pictures oventually must mean correct audiences. An uninformed or un lettered person who hears words spoken correctly or sees things done correctly cannot lor all tlmo remain uninfluenced bjr adherence to tho proprieties on tho part of othors or by those he is nblo to lee. with his own oyes. You may talk fomer'jo some persons without penetrat ing their consciousness, but vou cannot I hold a plcturo constantly beforo their eyes without having It shape their manners, customs or Ideals, These are Influences that are bound to grow larger all tho tlm In motion pic tures. But there are still bigger things tO hannen. Men nnil avnmnn wrlto nnvpln Ihlstorles, works of travel nnd biographies, uu minions or peoplo read them In many languages. Novels today are In the main written I mean In the United States by tnen and women whose scenes nnd tinnnln re almost wholly Imnglnary. These wrlt ert travel more than they did In others' They dlYS. hilt ntlll ha.. ..n..l - ill fcj " . --- .. bituj iltt fcUU llhliU. WINTER GARDENING PROM THE INSIDE CLIFTON CRAWFORD .Laymen, even the thentrlmi nnni ns aJLho'e. have little conception of what niuiex uarrten production entails. I will never forget the rehearsals bustle. hustle, seemingly millions of gowns, hundreds of chorus girls, carloads of soenery, musical number after musi cal number all a huge conglomeration of material things. Day by day more things were added. Familiar faces dis appeared and strange ones took their uah.... . .',aces-. in? B""- & iSXir fszrszs? l rr: KVryeryhlng Btill chaos. The curtain eS .H0 ror tha overture at night with- tiiTr" J"18 Beemtngy knowing their ST0?' anl out of the humdrum and bus. uVrra . volves perfect order. I could Vn.v. n, """ "I me wonaers or me ew n,v Jrlnter Garden, of the marvelous iFOrK Anna uv T r, ,.-- .. 4 'mi- ; " . w. utiiiiaii, uuewiur u& Vtj. ?J&wtoa grasp and In- 7- - uucii una oi an BKuaiions. iry oau never cease to marvel at the SWr?el Ui.f " ?" -"' IS.Snder,ul for words, more remark iaS.? a bts e'reus, for in a limited W thi peP'e wero dohB many differ- WT ." cuo' sometimes in wai 'tSknf And when thls organization 'la v. -Jad J was evcn mo'e amaxed. Saliv 7 . rk tne P'ay was ba'lt eP' 03hor lta homo the Winter Garden. Svi ? ro?4 ' ,s moved weekly, and we 1 lJlay on sraa stages, with but lx eit0 take ,n' han ana set obout BriaciiMi. .. raaleai. The chorus ana KS- often ara 'oree1 to revUe their kgJnces pnd exits and work In a small rr?- M ine production is often far too rf.Jpr a stage, yet the inirenultu of the LeClOrS, the Staorn ramanlam WmnArV E,Jf electricians seem always to en- wdAr "" n'3' ana out of horrible dls- &. v.?he!, K"h'J(.r rr.. ----- iiiiuQr UiiruHii urumicLiuu. ncuiarly one as mammoth as "A iVVorld f know too little of people, of the world, of life Itself. Already tho motion plcturo Is showing nccurato photographic repro ductions of every explored and remoto part of tho earth. It Is itsolf tho great ex plorer. It Is tho modern Stanloy, the modern CJrccley. It is the Xanson, the Itnsmussen. tho Captain Scott, not of ono day, but of all days. What It depicts Is Incontrovertible. And it tho great plc turo producers think that tho picture seeing public does not remember tho things It "feecs In tho pictures, then tho producers aro greatly deceived. I moan to make this point. A novelist cannot afford to lay a plot In a Innd ho has never seen or visited when at tho moment of Its sale millions of peoplo throughout tho world nro looking nt actual motion pictures of tho spot tho novelist has described and seeing tho real people of that country as they actually aro. In stead of as they nro described In print. Books and newspapers cannot glorify nnd exalt temporarily prominent personali ties nnd make for them places In history, for overy day these, this uamo audience of millions, Is looking at those little, meagre public men In the motion pictures and forming its own permanent conclu sions us to their capacities. Even In tho matter of our women's fashions it has nn Influence. Year nftcr year you see thousands of women, scores of them your own friends, wearing gowns and Btrect costumes of frenklsh design and oven moro freakish colorings because they nro supposed to represent "tho voice of Paris." As any well-Informed person knows, most of theso falBo and offensive creations represent nothing of tho sort. They represent, on the contrary, tho money-seeking eccentricity and shrewd ness of some wholly commercial dress maker who can create demand by using them on mannequins and getting them .pictured In tho newspapers. Tho motion r plcturo now brings you the Paris fash ions, or did until the war virtually brought fashion designing to a standstill In stricken France. Hut when they do como hero In tho pictures they nro tho real, tho worn fashions, nnd not the ghastly things that shrewd commercialism Is able to market. I know that many of the picture producers of the world take no especial pride In having themselves considered as educators. But they cannot help them selves, for thoy aro, In every picture they make, unintentional educators at least. If they have bad tasto thero will be a re vulsion to create good taste. If they are Ignorant their public will educate them or eliminate them entirely. Any Instrument or device, any Inven tion or conception that can have a great and universal effect upon the human mind Is an educator. The day Is not far off when the makers of motion pictures will not resent the Implication of being educa tional by design. They will not dodge or. evade tho praise to which they will bo entitled for having accomplished legiti mately big things. It is easy to understand why they fear to be considered educators. The begin nings (and endings) of thoso pioneers who Introduced Ibsen, Hauptnmnn, Hhnw, Gorki, Sudcrmnnn and others of their type to tho Amorlcan public uero not marked by nffluenco or opmenee Most of theso pioneers lost money, hut they created tastes nnd liking for strong, sin cere, earnest plnys. They began the creation of a public for Btrongth and sincerity and, once begun, tho public built Itself like the rolling snowball that en larges ns It tnneln. Tho tasto for grand opera was acquired Operatic beginnings In America wero humble and unprofitable. .Subsidized nt first by wealthy peoplo for Boclal profit, grand opera outgrow them, acquired n public that today makes It profitable. Tho lovo of good dancing was by no means widespread. Today It Is extensive and n. Ballet Ilttiso can como to America nnd carry nwny a fortune. In America we have wntched the evolu tion of better books, somewhat better nntlvo plnys, better music. Increased culture nnd refinement, growth of mental brendth, a further extension of Intellectual curiosity to learn tho unknown things nnd better motion pictures. Already there Is an audience for sincere, big motion pictures. This nudlcnco Is growing constantly. In tlmo tho members CELLULOID, THE NEW ART MEDIUM By H. 15. WARNER v Becnuso the motion picture Is a now art. In my opinion It should bo consid ered more seriously perhaps than the spoken drama. Our big Illm producers do not try to copy tho etago. Thoy have their own Held, and are seeking Its devel opment along purely original and widely resourceful lines. I was glad to seo so great a thinker as Hugo Munstcrbcrg sotting forth the postulate that tho photo, piny li not a copy of a play intended for stage production. I nm miro that the success of the Incn photoplays Is due to the fact that they are written for tho screen, without refer ence to tho spoken drama Of course to wrlto a play to suit some persons Is tho wrong method from tho start, but It la possible to write a wonderful photoplay that will express some big principle nnd drlvo homo somo largo truth In n way that cannot bo forgotton. Now, don't understand mo ns stnnding for that exalted attltudu nssumed by tho playwright or actor who tries to deliver an lntellectunl knockout to u helpless audi lenco. If thero Is anything that will kill self completely Into any part thnt Is as signed to him. If a play has a good story nnd gets nnywhrre nn actor Is contemp tible If ho does not Jump nt the chance to take thnt play and glvo it to tho people. Already In pictures wo havo begun to look for moro thought nnd less speed Tho people nro beginning to guess shrewd ly ns to tho vnltio of photoplays, and mcro tricks of tho camera u 111 no longer satisfy them. Tho fnct Is that the men who stnnd today ns the big producers of Amorlcn aro tho ones who began, llko Mr. Incc, from the very .start to sco to It that every photoplay of theirs contained a vital, grip ping story. If I were asked what was tho most modern tendency toward Improvement In photoplay production I should say that It lay In the matter of direction. Tho director Is all-powerful, for ho can make or break a story and the actor who Is to star In It An actor Is immediately drawn to his director or repulsed by him. Ho soon develops an Instinct for directors, so that tho director who understands his work and brings to It a high conception of tho story and an appreciation of tho nctor, will Inspire the star. Tho unmns terful director dooms tho play from tho start. Tho man with the megaphono voice does not really control the situation nearly TL PHILADELPHIA'S OWN "G. B. S." MANUSCRIPT U. rEj- tMX WXj H vw J h ' L J&JU AM 4!& U $T12 a-A 4I5. Ua. 6 HI ctjf (-JLf &tt feaCT tykfitfuusOk . Uif i -U"tA JJ ' (uAxyfij VOL ftXi. iLatCTijr The title page and a short scene, in Bernard Shaw's own handwriting, from "Passion, Poison and Petri faction," a roaring burlesque now beinjr acted nt the Little Theatre by the Stage Society. Tho manuscript is owned by a local collector. of this audience will represent tho dominant type of picture-goer and great artists of tho spoken drama will do great and worth-while pictures to be remem bered. They will do pictures that year after year will be "revived," Just as famous and memory-provoking plays aro now revhed each spring. Those pictures will not be stories of temporary or transi tory value, but will bo permanent con tributions to a new type of literature the literature of motion pictures. pictures or the stago it Is tho writer or artist who thinks he Is nbovo the people and must preach down to them. An audi ence will quickly reject this Insult. Peo ple will not be publicly patronized and lorded over. The old way of writing plays about personalities was a failure because actors demanding such plays were iolatlng the first principles of their nrt. If a man Is a good actor the flrst thing he does la ignore his personality and transform him- as much as the quiet, artistic director who la willing to concede some intelli gence to tho men and women who are working with him. and who are as sincere In their desires for good results as him self. No matter how well the director knows his business, he will, It he Is truly wise man, be amenablo helpful suggestions and he will always recognize what would be natural or unnatural to the maa or woman called upon to play a big part. Flay ohaw roretot and Philadelphia Saroed The True Story of His Roaring Burlesque, "Paf sion, Poison and Petrifaction," and How It Wandered to the Quaker City mi J.n HERD are surprises In store for the man who venturos Into De Lancey strcot, botween 17th nnd 18th. Let him lay down BO cents nt tho box ofllco of tho I.lttlo Theatro nny Friday or Saturday night. Lot him step Inside and watch tho variegated cntertulnment of tho Stago Society. But lot him bowaro of tho final playlet. Thero aro nhocks In It. Shock No. 1 A play by Bernard Shaw that almost nobody knows anything about, a play that Is contained In none of his volumes of printed plays and for sale at nono of tho book stores. Shock No. 2 An absolutely non preachy, unhygienic. Irresponsible, dovll-may-enro burlesque. Shock No. 3 (If he digs deep enough) A literary mystery In which Philadelphia plays tho leading part. Hereinafter la set down tho complete history of how and why tho play was written, when and where tho farco was performed, and yet moro strangely, how tho author disposed of tho manuscript nnd then Immediately forgot It. The Evenino Ledoeh Is Indebted to Henry Longcopc, of tills city, for tho main facts set forth. In tho year 1905 Shaw was requested by Cyril Maudo to wrlto a play to be per formed for the Actors' Orphnnage Fund. Then, as now, Shaw was a very busy man, and, nccordlng to his own stntemont, tho play waB written "mostly In Great North ern express trains; honco tho Joggly hand writing." On July 14, 1905, In the Theatre Itoyal In tho Botanlo Gardens, Itegent'a Park was played for tho flrst tlmo on nny stage whatsoever "a new, startling, pathetic blood-curdling and entrancing tragedy, in nno net. nnd ten mechanical effects, en titled Tasslon, Pol3on and Petrifaction,' by the Chelsea Shakspeare, George Bernard Shaw." Thero were repeated performances of the farco nnd after the first one the man uscript was auctioned off to the highest bidder, who happened to be a second-hand book dealer In London, from whom It was secured by tho late Robert Hoo, who was one of the keenest and at the same time one of the most Intelligent collectors of his day. In 1011 Sir. Hoe's great library, containing monuments of our literature, was sold, and the Shaw manu script fell Into other hands. After another tempestuous voyage or two there at last came to light these 41 pages of manuscript, which, by the way, are, as Shaw describes, written In a "Jog gly" manner, with a black lead pencil, the underscoring being done with a red one. While there are many erasures and corrections, the manuscript Is in a perfect atate of preservation, and Is now owned by the Rosenbach Company, of this city. Two years after the production of the play, or In 1907, when Shaw desired this manuscript for purposes of his own, not being able to And It, he wrote a most strenuous letter to a firm of solicitors In London complaining about TSx. Robot Hoe, of New York city, and IntlmaUtfe that that famous collector had "rnasd factured an edition" and was tn oqnta quenco "no sportBman." So much for tho manuscript, now for th corespondonco: Halraily, Uuibeder, Mtrtontttuhlr. l sutn Hcrttemner . 11th Ausutt; 1S0T. It. S. O. (until 30th September I wondor whore Mr. n.obrt Ho purchawd. Inn Mfl n, lla..l.n llnl... .....4 I.i.1,.uImi (1 It was certainly not put on the market or me; and I had no idea that It had paeied tut of my hands. it has been published In America for ood: risht purpoeee. I'or collcctor'apurpoaea, tlio urlclnnt edition In Horry Furness' with his Illustrations. Is the only one worth i purposes, surely Furness' Annua), hating. A collector who manufactures an edi tion is no sportsman. Messrs. Doil.l. Mend t Co. actually an nounced an edition without consulting me. and would probably have Issued It if my own publishers had not called their attention tp the fact that tho work was copyrighted In tho United States. o. uep-nap-d shaw. This letter Is addressed to Messrs, Stovcns & Brown, Trafalgar Square, Lon don, E. C, who, under dnte of August 13, wroto to Robert Hoe, Esq., of which the following Is an extract: We made two calls at Adelphl Terrace to soe Mr. tihaw, and found him from hornet left a ietter for him we enclose his reply. as we nave torn mm tnai we aciea? as your sim y5:'as''e' l cease to wonder it the KffilSL01 ap 'l' he taking caze of Igjwaed, eciUiDnlnir etu for ij-uiv ggaflng a biff Wlnttr Garden production SWtilaa tha -umbtr inuead in tho jeyv. ,. ex JMfm arft i A Dramatic Fable in Slang a Being the humorist's speech at the dinner given William II. Crane in New York on the 50th anniversary of hia stage life. Tonight-, at the Adelphi, Philadelphia looks upon the veteran actor for what oill probably be the last time, as Mr. Crane makes no secret and no advertising either of his intention to retire. V . eorgettae rnllE Drama Is roughly divided Into Two parts Tragedy and Comedy, Just O. now it is more xiougmy utviaea man iver uaiuro. According to all traditions of the Legitimate stage, the only Distinction between Tragedy and Comedy hinges on the Last Act In the good old days. If most of the principals curled up and Died in the last act, the play was a Tragedy, If they stood In a line and Bowed, the play was a Comedy, Our guest of Honor and You, gentlemen, can recall the time when a Play in which some one was Shot, Stabbed, Assaulted and Battered and left Upconsclous at Centre was a genuine Tragedy, entitled to come under the Observation of William Winter. Thanks to the Southern California School of Art, all that has been Changed. Nowadays, .when the Hero is Shot, the Play-house resounds with Shrieks of Laughter, When he Is struck on the head with some Blunt Instrument and falls Unconscious the Large Lady seated Next to you goes Into a Paroxysm of Mirth. If he is seen to disappear beneath the Wayes, with Bubbles arising to mark the spot at which he sank, the Film Exchanges announce that the Comedy ,1s Sure Fire. Mr. Crane can remember when the Comedian received his training In the Library.. Now he gets It in the Gymnasium. He can remember when Comedy was a Dramatic Treatment of Conflicting Purposes, with a Happy Ending. He can recall a Later period in which. Comedy was anything that would make them Laugh. I am Wondering if he can revise some of his Quaint Old-fashioned Notions and accept the New dictum that Comedy has its headquarters Below the Watst-ltne. However, we are not hero to Brood over the Degeneracy of the times. Doubtless it Is True that the Drama is having more things Done to It at present than Ever before. Real Tragedy is found Only In the New Tork Office of the Producing Managers. The most Serious contributions to Current Theatrical History are the State ments from the One-night Stands. Thespls has temporarily stood aside to make room for St. "Vitus. The gentleman who could not write Home for Money Five Years Ago is now writing Scenarios. The delirium seems to be at the. most Acute Stage temperature about 104, When the fever Breaks, the Patient Is going to be very Weak, but probably he wll) be out of Danger. And so, in these times, when there are more Theatres than Delicatessen Shops and all you have to Do to be an Actor Is to have your picture Taken, It is well to be Philosophical, knowing that Art is Long and Salary-Contracts are Short. At tha risk of repeating what All the other speakers may say, I wish to assure Mr. Crane that He isx respected by the men who try to write tor the stage because he has Stood for Reputable Plays. He has proceeded upon the Theory that the Patrons of the Drama live at Home with their Own Families. He has stood for Home-Grown Plays of the Kind that strengthen tha Self- respect of Americans. fi -f I know what Mr. Crane has Stood For, because I have written two Plays IjOTYlPCiy tor tiwi. I. ' . 41 la uovauH lie u imb epuitcauiuii vi 4ug wjimuj u , -.v.t w i. TT ll -LP American play when it didn't havo give hlra our verbal Bouquets. Friend in the House that we are here to . -. . .Li .nn purcnasinir axeius in ouiaminc tne juod., that we got It from a London second-hand bookseller and understood that ha had It di rect from the society or body for whom Shaw did the work or to whom he eave the MS. A copy of tho text of tho enclosed letter from Shaw Is as follows: Dear Sirs I quite forgot that the MS. of P. P. & I', was sold by nuctton at the con clusion ot the flrst performance. So tha title Is quite valid, and I owe Mr. Hoe an apology, yours faithfully, O. BERNARD 8HAW- Tho first performance ever given In this country was by tho Young Men's Hebrew Association of Philadelphia on a Sunday night last winter. It proved highly suc cessful and amusing, despite the lack, oi nn adequate stage and the kind ot Bcenery that tho play demands. The existence of, such a Shaw play wan known only to o. few, and that it was played by the Young Men's Hebrew Association was due to the suggestion of Prof. Thomas D. O'Bolger, of tho University of-Tennsylvanla, an ardent admirer of Shaw, who had read tho manuscript and laughed. The Stage Society production was the first perform anco tn a theatre In this country. The Stage Society production, designed by II. Devltt Welsh, is unique BcenicaU?. The piece Is played between twp huge posters on either side of tha stage, an nouncing "Passion, Poison and Petrifao- Contlnued on Pate Fear SHE WAS ALWAYS JUST A "PRINCESS TRA-LA-LA" s i i Miss Emmy Nlcklass, who Is the lead ing comedienne with the Andreas DIppel opera, "Princess Tra-La-La," opening at h rtrnad Street i " I Theatre on Monday, has a few Ideas of her own, both on life and the theatre. "You know," said ehe, "I ara the daughter Frau Nlcklass Kemper,' tho German operatic singer, and although xay father was a merchant In Berlin, and, when I was a child, was very much opposed to the Idea ot my going on the stage, I managed to get his consent eventually, although perhaps in a rather unusual manner. "J wag known as a child as "weather witch,' because the children I playad with said I was always dancing about Ilka the leaves on an autumn day. My father objected violently to my dancing, and also refused to allow me to take vocal lessons. My mother, who had re. tired from the stage and who was equally anxious to keep me from undertaking a professional career, agreed with him, and I was brought up like any other Httlo falr-halred daughter of a German manu facturer, "Unfortunately for my parents' ideas, however, my playmates wera always In sistent on my dancing and singing for them, and the neighbors always said. There Is a young woman who soma day is going to leave heme and go on tha stage, nq matter what her 'after and mother have' to say about it' "And It happened just about that -way. One day, after a quarrel with my poor father over vocal lessons, I deliberately ran away from home and managed to gtt an amused manager to let me slnff or him. I told him that I was an orphan without a guardian, and that If he would be my guardian I would accept a pojltUa, in his company and sing for htm. Thl apparently tickled him so much, that b took me at my word, and gave ma a &ft to study for a child's part i a loft comng production. "It was not UntU I was actually atwV Ing my eoig; that I lit my father and mother know where I was. la lUr wt Uef at finding me they were only teo Mad: to let me du u 1 pleased in th utUr (t goLng on th stage,"