f - i'0tiitii&mHmm,iii,,tftiiiumim,iimm ipFii in m i ih'iJ..' lEeftget AMUSEMENT SECTION imnftg SATURDAY April 22, 1916 V ONY AS WELL THE METAMORPHOSIS OF GRUMPY THE STEPS BY WHICH CYRIL MAUDE ACHIEVES HIS EIGHTY-THIRD BIRTHDAY POLICE WHISTLE DIRECTS WORK OF NEW PICTURES, MELODY IN LEttAR'S MUSIC at Last" Brines OoeratiL Herbert Brenon, Fox Film Corpor ation's Director, Deperid9 on Novel Method to Direct cIlMmjpostUon Almost Wag- -AlA. :'f 4 nerian in Type. ByfcAETANO MEROLA flnet ano itcrota, who toai formertv ivltMptor at' tho Manhattan Opera JJejts ttitclei Oscar llammeritcln, Hold conducting Franz Lchar'a ope rtiia, "Alonn at Last," now at the There Is flomellilnir nbout the music of "Aland at kast," Franis Lchnr'a light 6liorAv that lins attracted both tho real music, lover and tho Individual Whose mil Blcal diet usually consists' of mcro tunes. However the novelty of Introduc ing muslo In a light opera that approach es that of grand opera has oulte con founded many thea tregoers, even though It has pteaBcd them. The success of tho opera speaks well for the opcn-mlndcdness is of tho American pub lic for they have n&t only accepted but supported a distinct Innovation In tho realm of light opera. Many of those who have heard tho won derful, music of tho second act of "Alone at Last" have accused Lehar of plagiariz ing tho music of ntchard Wagner. This )g not true, for It Is distinctly Lehar, Jv ' j& jsusaiPTsssiTr U, uiougn. mo inuuenco ot uie niuucm iu- manuc scnool or music in me narmonic , treatment of tho themes and tho uso of r Alio .progressive tonal scale are discernible. To tho Untramed car this, of course, fcnitn.1te"1llf d,tnmnhnnv. hnt nn nnn henmnen irinrn nrnimlnlcil with the music, or to tho '..One who fa accustomed to hearing more than ,ono theme treated at a tlmo. It will be found that Lehar never abandons a , coherency of melody. It Is the substrata en .which ho has worked an exquisite musi cal embroidery. If Lehar, In this act. and especially In tho third scene. In which ho followed the two principal characters of the opera to the summit of tho Jungfrau, has found It necessary to employ tho orchestration and harmonic treatment that la usually asso ciated with grand opera, he has done It logically. No matter how little one may care" for highly developed music, one would be offended If when Franz and Dolly reached the summit ot tho Jungfrau Lehar Bhouftl have presented music with the Tythm, of a popular one-step or fox-trot. Theso two, with their hearts crying their repressed love, leaving tho sordid, scandal xnpngcrlng crowd below them, ascend to ,tha glorious heights of tho majestic Jung- Is S irau, where In the sublimity of the clouds hey are rj-co to spcau tneir love, tneir hearts untrammelcil by the baso conven tionalities and motives of the pigmy world beneath them. Could Lehar havo expressed himself any .differently than he has If he wished to Interpret their emotions and tho glorious nccno about them by means of music? A3 Franz and Dolly loft tho common tace and ordinary, so did Lehar In his music The music la symbolical of tho Isolation, of the characters; merely one thread connects them with tho world be low, and that Is tho recurring phraso of the Alpine call sounded on the French horns, Musically this scone is the most ambitious that has over been attempted In Vght opera. In this scene and In tho harmonic treatment of the melodies throughout tho entire opera, and also In tho attention bestowed on tho orchestra tion, Lehar becomes as much a revolu tionist to light opera as Richard Wngncr was to grand opera. Deforo Hlchard Wag tier burst' alt musical traditions in grand opera tho voice apd melody wero pre eminent, tho orchestration merely a means to an end, which, especially In tho Italian Kcliool of opera, was to display the singer. However. Wagner changed all that and save tho orchestra as Important n place In tha score as ha did the voice, and in many Instances permitted it to dominate YES, ALONE MfsfB Ui-ii f ttl -iiet; B&LWM fH44lWMffMM' ' 'WMMtti " 2tt9 Jl.ll 'I'll IHMpr &3U mi f 13 W ' ?T--a-,u;,-i"i.ui 1.1 .... .n-. , -.,,.,. , , ,,,,,.,,, i i ., MM I. Mr. Mnude arrives in his dressing Toom and tt hm&MmW in , f Wmm ttt T5ot - t i i.. opens letters urging him to take every care of his U'lHf f , ( Mil Iir' Fnint'"g In cldcrly cycs- health, ns men of 83 aro susceptible to the climatic VllssMP W&M II as In Isolde." Lehar has dono tho same thing In his operatic mUslo. Although the first strik ing example 'this country hns had of the now treatment Is In "Alone at Last," It Is because his former operas In this country were not conducted according to tho orig inal score. When I was given tho woro of "Alone at Last" by tho Messrs. Shubert to get ready for production, they granted my request to present it as Lehar had written It, a thing to which few managers would havo consented. I was forced to make one concession to the custom of musical productions In this country, how ever, and that was to introduce the chorus. Tho original score called for no chorus, so that I had to form it from Lchar's melo dies, but In doing so I followed his stylo of harmonic treatment. In speaking of my Intention of presenting the opera ac cording to tho original score to a follow conductor, ho was astounded and pre dicted a oompleto failure, averring that tho American nubile would not appreciate It and would not accept It. Fortunately his prediction proved ot lime worm, though I confess that I felt a secret fear that ho might prove correct. Kxcept in tho music of Victor Herbert, the composers In this country havo paid but scant attention to the harmonic treat ment and the orchestration of their operas, as a result of which tho American public has been fed musically on Just tunes and melodies. There has" been absolutely no musical coloring: they, have been mere pen-and-lnis sketches. Lehar's operas 'aro musical paintings. Many dllllculties wero met with when "Alone at Last" was first put In rehearsal. Tho nature of the music demanded prin cipals with trained and tried voices. It Is not an exaggeration when I say that nearly 100 candidates were examiued for (tho roles now sung by Marguerite Xamara and John Charles Thomas before these two splendid singers were chosen. The chorus requirements were also very high, and from the first there was constant elimination of voices. I 'havo no doubt that the example set by Lehar In devoting as much attention to tho orchestra as to the voices, and the co ordination of the music with the action of the story, will havo a tremendous effect on American composers of light opera. AT LAST! i torfc, iclect a curfoc and yet a mra Die Lclbestod" of "Trlstran and VrnWrnV-WmM' mEwmmMmfflmffi&&Km VwWBFw.M &?&&&. V nf fU TJ1.,- WmWmWm - t3M8HBi ill ' syfiPjP KiTTr o'neil V. The withered hands. WWMM During the past two or three years, since the dance crnze has overwhelmed almost everything else on the stage. It was accepted that the limit of novelty and newness had been reached In this art, but It remained for Mildred Macomber, who Is making her first appearance in this country this year, to introduce some thing entirely new and unusually novel in a combination of dancing and ncquatlcs. Miss Macomber, who wilt be seen at Keiths next week, comes from a family of pantomlmlsta and Is recognized as a, marvel In "silent-acting" throughout Europe where her greater success has been attained. From the time she was able to walk, this girl studied the art of pantomime and dancing and so clearly does she tell her story without the uso of a single word that it la not necessary to read the program to find out what It Is all about. Whether It bd In her "Classlque Dance" when she appears like a breath from the clouds and gives a real atmos phere to the beautiful picture, or when she tried to learn the nationality ot the strange young man who so mysteriously Invades her domain. It Is the same. There Is all the tenderness of the young girl In her love-making and all the lire ot the tragedienne in the tragic parts of tlia pantomime. The Optical Look IJJ ALL our kindergartens, and primary departments the teach ers make much use of pictures. They must use pictures or they cannot teach anything, Pictures are always attractive; one can read them so rapidly. There- is never any brainfag in learning things we can see and grasp at a glance. That's why the "movies" have taken such a strong hold upon the people it's so much easier to read tie story in pictures than In a printed book. "Billy'' Sunday. DANOINO Colonial Dance Castle va . mrm-a I s.TV I PhJa. Hippodrome Dance Palace Iteflnsment und correct dander h keynot inpirtsv tha lfAVH& 1 that brines 700 or mora cood ppl to our Sat, rcnlnjr reoeotions. Wsdnei us- in our Mai. SU&Y-Kavetv TtA. -Novelty Ile- eeotlon. ooen vitnr evening:, with banjo ojv choirs,. Owtns to Increased business, private studios enlarged, now occupying entire bulM lnT, Private tewonn. jrtay and evcnlnc 1 for tS. Exclusive claue. 13 lesions, J5. Phone, Utn. 4370. DANC5 the old Danceland dances tonight aieaa The School ot refinement Broad & Tioga St. MODEHN DANCES Honda? and Thursday. OLD DANCES WED. AND SAT. EVGS. SoX Special Easter Repep.DiM UQUYENina TO Aldi ' IB PRIZE BON BON PARTY WEDNESDAY EVE.. APtUL. 20TH. THE CLAYTON CASINO wf"" OPENING DANCE SATURDAY BVBNINO, MAY 6TH Eicd attd Grcrmtra, Pontlousua SttiafBta, Chafer uvmuBHAtatA Am4 Ttwwte AcsUay ligssr ia Tuuetit In ia 'h... iiMt t x m. mtaKTmt, VI. The finished Will Deming Be Poet Laureate? The following Is tho application made by Will Deming which Bccurcd for" him his summer engagement with Manager Walter Baldwin, of tho Baldwin-Melville Company. Mr. Ualdwln. let ma say. llavlnx nothlnc on today Cold outside, can't take a tramp. Have to spare a two-cent stamp. Jut a Una to let you know. Things with ma aro rather alow. Thoush I'va hustled like a Turk, mill you tlnrt me out ot work. Advertised Dramatic Mirror, Situation .not much clearer, not iom wires, two or three, JUnaser sent them C. O. D, Had one offer, wouldn't so-Well-fed Komedy Kompany show, Could have Joined a camr of nchters. Or Duean's Dlzsy Dlma Dellshters. Hope your plans have now matured, This suspense l''e lonir endured. If you'd keep ma out of hock, Orsanlze another stock; Put ma on your comic stair. I lonff to make the people Isuxh, Won't take up our busy time With this d n bad dosrerel rhyme. Just remember, if you will. Will Demlns. known aa Hill. Who wants to join your little flock. The famous Haldwln-Mehillo stock. DANCJNO PI All IT" I tit SCKQOL OF CLEAN DANCING inni mm !WS vj uNTiiuT4' The Only Original School of Old Dancing ADI'LTB' BEOINNERS' CLASS MONDAY. I'iLHMJAX. 'lllUilBUAI U flllUAX ttvua, ..a.;... , ' witm" "xi d a mr n.tr.i Recention Wed. and Sat. Eves. - . a - Easter Reception Monday Lvg. miCCPDICMKON THEATRE 1H.DO. LtUiOCit 0 81 S. C34 St. Class Tues. and Fri. Orchestra EASTER RECEPTION Monday Night, Dancing Till 12 mail school class fri. aft-, s to e Receptions Mon Wed. and Sat, COCRSB 0 PRIVATE LESSONS 9 The Fricke Academy 1701 KOUT1I I11IOAD ST, SPECIAL EASTER RECEPTION MONDAY NIOHT, APRIL 24TH Open Claas &'lgnt Tues. It I'M. RECEPTION SATVRDAy EVENING ASHER'S SWIMMING SCHOOL A S, COM. ?W AND WALNIW STS, Dolg tebeol wty rat $osl lor Umtructlctu I w Ada in mi j ii i j t rvas ,-wtrm. t WQ-rxurt xiwt Grumpy of tho stage. Philosophy of the Theatre THEN. There are excellent comedians who, outside of their art, are very silly. Coquelin. NOW. There are silly comedians who, outside their art, aro very excel lent. George Jean Nathan, in' Puck. TW ii Ml ffi DANC CHAS. J, COLL 88TH AND MARKET 1QTREETS " Dances Monday and Saturday Monday 12 o'Clof-k Dance New Drawing Rooms 2BrSkr0TU s!ondav 12 O'CLOCK DANCE EXHIBITION DANCE ' WEDNESDAY EVO. DANCINO TILL 13. CLARAL ag N:Br SCHOLARS EVERY TUES. A THURS. EVO. Philadelphia Six-Step Taught BABY TO LEARN BY OUR METHOD Easter Dance Tonight BOUYEN1B TO ALL Clarence H. Brady and Eva L Baraf The Towers Classes r.iat l.,0, CAMDEN'S FINEST ACADEMY OPEN ALL" YEAR fl.-- MONDAY and FRIDAY EVQ8. ViaSSeS T.in. Leuon H V, U. Danclna- till II Pir(i Dccar Urui. Pus Larsa Ore " af . ' - - -L.- . i.r . .,biii i i. J finaclal No Vakv Fartv Ttday st , MaaaiMiaa aunaftlaWai.)' 1 J. My ather, a native of Tlpperary Coun ty, Ireland, was educated In London, Eng land, and became well known as a news paperman and lecturer. My mother was nn Australian, whom ho met and married In San Francisco. Tho couple went to Honolulu, for their honey moon, and liked tho country eo well that they remained there a nulnber ot years. My father was a warm' personal friend of King Knlakow, and a frequent visitor to tho royal palace. He was ono of tho pallbearers at tho King's funeral. Ho took n great Interest In tho "Itauakas" (natives) and wrote nnd produced tho first Hawaiian play. Tho Hawallans aro naturally musical, the Queen herself being a rare musician and composer. Few Americans know that slip wroto tho Hawaiian song, "Aloha Ohe," meaning "till wo meet again." She ga-o my father an autograph copy years ago. When I was six years of ago, we moved to Seattle, Wash., and a few tyeara later located In a small mining town in British Columbia, Canada! Tho place was having a "boom" and the cost of living very high, There wero only two pianos In the town, and when I expressed my desire to take up music, I learned tha't I had to pay EO cents nn hot..' for 'the privilege of practicing. My lessons were vo'ry Infrequent, hav ing to depend on a strolling musician that visited tho town occasionally, bo I might say I wan self-taught. I also learned Ho play tho guitar. At tho ago' of ten I was playing the piano in the local orches tra and the big pipe organ In tho church. Two years later the choirmaster died, and I was made choir director, a position I held until I was 16. In the meantime. I had developed what my friends called a flno voice, and I retired from the choir to Join an opera compajiy. Later I be came Identified with tlio Savage Opera Company, remaining with It several sea sons. I then went to Doston and Btudled tho piano at the Now England Conserva tory of Music. Completing my musical educatkn, I ; enteied vaudeville doing a singing and . planologuo act. Manager drover, of ' "Lost In N'ow York," saw me and offered , mo the part of "I'cggy" In tho play. I hesitated, as r;y experience had been mostly In the concert and operatic field, but Mr. firovcr. prevailed, and after I played t'i role, he declared I was a "find." . I am ery happy. When in Atlantic City Call at Our Studio 935 BOARDWALK JUHT ABOVE 87BKL PIER UNDER THE DIRECT HUPERVJSION OP , ilRS. S, W COWTISEOZ 6 PRIVATE d -LESSONS PO CHAPERON. DELL PHONE 8020, Iff PHILADELPHIA YOU CAN QUICKLY LEARN TO DANCE in our Mirrored Studios, where you can watch your own progress 6 Lessons $S Open Day and Evening Phone. Locpst 0105 THE CORTISSOZ SCHOOL 1520 Chestnut Street WAGNER DANCING 1T30 K Qroad. 'PhnnM llln HQ 0 Prlv. lisons $3. otter is noon MATINEE P.f- EVENING 2 s3o.u p m c-asier dance APRIL 21 MONDAY Usual SSS"' Dance This Week Tues. & Thurs. Evas. DlBc.Wed.&Sat.& Sena tic 9tamp4 tgr compUta tiyrour Chio JOauct fridauTlv.. Avrtl i BSW May Ball DaS Maya tljllroout tiorteouslr DecawteJ EDWARD A. COLL TE.HC11ER 41st and Lancaster , ORIGINAL LEADER THEATRE Chanticleer Dance MONDAY EVE., APRIL 24 SOUVENIRS TQ ALL Preparatory Cl Moa Wed., Fri. Week-End Dance vrr Saturday vo. ' L. COLL. Alu.ii.1 Director FOWLER'S rWVATE STUDIO ffsrcMt bumtte c y- I, ir. fljy ir vsr. t;a t Almost any good motion-picture direc tor can handle a small cast ot players In front of a camera and produce a pleas ing nnd worth-while shor.t feature film. Almost any director of nblllty can tak a man or Woman of Intelligence before a' camera and tnako the player do a ''big iceiro" well. But In all the world there are scarcely more than two or throo directors who can handle 10,000 psrsons at onco before) a camera and prodtlco results that as tonish the human eye and brain, At the very front rank of these few men stands Herbert Ilrcnon, the motion ploturo genius to whom William Fox, th big American film producer, lias In trusted the tremendous job of making; the Annetto Kcllermann million-dollar picture at Kingston, Jamaica, This picture was begun the middle ot last August at Kingston. It la now muCh moio than half completed, and up to date the Fox bookkeepers and auditors havo their books to revenl that more than JT0.0CO hns been paid out In actors' sala ries and for equipment. This picture will bo finished n round tho middle of April, and by tho tlmo the last Instalment of Mini is laid down In the Fox offices In New York Its total cost will bo in th neighborhood of Jl,100,0O0. Many detnlls about thin picture and tho Incidents connected with Its produc tion havo been told to tho public. Thar have been descriptions of the rejuvena tion and reconstruction of a large part of tho Island of Jamaica under William Fox's own experts' direction. There also havo been stories of tho gnome city, Tvlth its thousands of child actors In tho roles of dwarfs. Out thlTs far there have been no stories printed about tho wonderful Moorish city which cost J200,MO of William Fox's inoney for construction work; of the slave mart and bazaars with thousands of men and women costumed with Oriental opulence. In tho marlno scenes, with hundreds of mermaids In tho picture simultaneously, Herbert Brenon revealed once more hla artistry as a director. For some scenes these mermaids practiced and rehearsed for weeks that they might have perfec tion nnd slmultnneousncss of atroko. Scores of theso girls wero dashed again and again against jagged rocky ledges and mado to stick at their tasks till the camera had recorded Just what Director General Brenon wished recorded. nut tho peoplo in these scenes were tho very pick of their kind brought down from the "States." They were the quick witted, alert and quick-observing Ameri can girls from tho natatorlums and sands of our two ocean coasts and our lake, beaches. Tho 10,000 persons In tho slavo market and Moorish city scenes, were of quit different type. Several thousand of them wero negroes. Other thousands were Hindus, and still .more of them were alert V but untrained native Jamaicans totally unused to being "shot" by tho motion picture camera operators. Day after day theso vast "mobs" wera swung through their evolutions. Under broiling suur they wero sent again and again through their paces, tho signals for them to start or atop being given bf Director General Brenon or his assistants with New York police whistles, .such as r.rc used to handle the 5th avenue nuto niobllo trafllc or the crowds at 43d street und Broadway at 1 1 o'clock at night, when tho Metropolitan- Opera House has turned Its vast audience into tho streets to Join the hundred thousand other theatre goers Just out of tho other amusement, places. When you seo this gigantic Kcllermann picture exhibited some time In Juno and throughout the summer ypu will witness a vast uprising of tho slaves and see the armed troops hold back the maddened thousands. You will 6co a made-to-order city of huge proportions a city built of concrete and structural steel Just as "reg ular" cities are built filled with surging humanity, tugging, swaying, striking and being struck. And It will be worth re membering at tho time that every movement- In this great panorama was made at tho direction of one man Herbert Brenon. , You will sea a speaker delivering an Inflammatory oration from the balconada of n hugo building to an audience of 10, 000 persons. You wllj see this great throng worked up gradually Into frenzy. You will with cataclysmic abruptness sea 20,000 hands upraised as If all were pulled up at onco by Invisible strings, and your memory will go hurrying back to this advance description of the staring of Jhls part of the picture, and perhepa In your brain thero will be the sound of the policeman's whistle that tells this mob when to begin "action" and when to 'stop. Martel's Academy Ztat. Prof, Figle and Mis3 Cope INSTRUCTORS AND DEM0.SBTHAT0B8 t Easter Monday Matinee 2:30 to 6 P. M. Reception 8:30 to 12 P. M. KM. ROTJia BANJORINE RCHESTRA Beginners' Class Tuesday Night IfOLLQWED BY RECEPTION.' ORCHESTRA Recept. Wed,, Fri & Sat. AI White' S. E. Cor, 15th S and Chestnut Easter Ball Easter Monday Ev. DANCINO UNTIL 12 O'CLOCK Novelty Party Wednesday RECEPTION" BATURDAY WE ARE PREPARED! imi tjilgtO, gt. ' poplar I V PNOApS WR0W3 KB1TH BALLROOM yo YOtR , WUVATB pANCE-vW X DAINTY iiodsm. Otitis fe4,tliasf BseEfi ngM(j I 1715 Chestnut Street V I world K?lrJ ""' In the ii aria ror reducing- stout people .ttart thnn Uanclnr. Takes olt " KTV-TZ very round ot super ZxlM53n lluous Ann. My method jrTLfiBr nf leachlnt; reduce! you . YufflMor vv""e adding- to your i SSll IrlVte and nss I.es ?I WIS "" '1:,v '"" r"n,ns 'I U WE Six Strictly Private - 1 trLjyr Lessons, $5 I lV-LU3 Cracticu tiki Jiond.i. tl Tafil "lJ Vimisdjy ijivs V m vnXBJ u'"' Lpcu,t SiQi y m