From Traveling Show to Vaudeville: Theatrical Spectacle in America, 1830-1910

From Traveling Show to Vaudeville: Theatrical Spectacle in America, 1830-1910

by Robert M. Lewis (Editor)
From Traveling Show to Vaudeville: Theatrical Spectacle in America, 1830-1910

From Traveling Show to Vaudeville: Theatrical Spectacle in America, 1830-1910

by Robert M. Lewis (Editor)

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Overview

Before phonographs and moving pictures, live performances dominated American popular entertainment. Carnivals, circuses, dioramas, magicians, mechanical marvels, musicians, and theatrical troupes—all visited rural fairgrounds, small-town opera houses, and big-city palaces around the country, giving millions of people an escape from their everyday lives for a dime or a quarter. In From Traveling Show to Vaudeville, Robert M. Lewis has assembled a remarkable collection of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century primary sources that document America's age of theatrical spectacle. In eight parts, Lewis explores, in turn, dime museums, minstrelsy, circuses, melodramas, burlesque shows, Wild West shows, amusement parks, and vaudeville.

Included in this compendium are biographies, programs, ephemera produced by theatrical entrepreneurs to lure audiences to their shows, photographs, scripts, and song lyrics as well as newspaper accounts, reviews, and interviews with such figures as P. T. Barnum and Buffalo Bill Cody. Lewis also gives us reminiscences about and reactions to various shows by members of audiences, including such prominent writers as Mark Twain, William Dean Howells, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Carl Sandburg, Walt Whitman, Louisa May Alcott, Charles Dickens, O. Henry, and Maxim Gorky. Each section also includes a concise introduction that places the genre of spectacle into its historical and cultural context and suggests major interpretive themes. The book closes with a bibliographic essay that identifies relevant scholarly works.

Many of the pieces collected here have not been published since their first appearance, making From Traveling Show to Vaudeville an indispensable resource for historians of popular culture, theater, and nineteenth-century American society.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801899942
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 10/01/2007
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 400
File size: 5 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Robert M. Lewis is a lecturer in American history at the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom.

Table of Contents

Introduction: From Celebration to Show Business
Part I. The Dime Museum
Early Museum Shows
Selling and Seeing Curiosities
Commentary
Dog Days of the Museum
Part II. Minstrelsy
Routines: Songs, Speeches, Dialogue, and Farce
Commentary: Rise and Fall of "Slave" Creativity
Reminiscences
Musical Comedy: Harrigan's Mulligan Guard
Confessions of an African American Minstrel
Part III. The Circus
The Circus Debated
The Early Circus
Big Business
The Audience
Part IV. Melodrama
A Plea for an American Drama
Classic Melodrama
Classic Melodrama's Audiences
The Ten-Twenty-Thirty Melodramas"LEG SHOW"
Part V. Burlesque Extravaganzas
The Black Crook
A Burlesque of Burlesque
Reactions to the Controversy
The Popular-Price CircuitTHE WILD WEST SHOW
Origins
Extracts from Buffalo Bill's Wild West Programs
Exhibiting Indians
Part VI. Summer Amusement Parks
Journalists and the "New" Coney
Showmen and the "Amusement Business"
Popular Responses
Two Critics of Coney's Banality
Part VII. Vaudeville
Vaudeville Defined
The Business
Routines

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Robert Lewis offers a revealing look at the rich scope of America's popular entertainment past. Through a series of marvelously chosen primary sources, he vividly brings to life the dime museums, circuses, melodramas, extravaganzas, and other amusements to which nineteenth-century audiences flocked. Ultimately the book affords us a new perspective on today's popular culture and shows that despite great advances in technology, the essence of public entertainment has changed little during the last two centuries.
—Mark Evan Swartz, author of Oz before the Rainbow: L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz on Stage and Screen to 1939

Mark Evan Swartz

Robert Lewis offers a revealing look at the rich scope of America's popular entertainment past. Through a series of marvelously chosen primary sources, he vividly brings to life the dime museums, circuses, melodramas, extravaganzas, and other amusements to which nineteenth-century audiences flocked. Ultimately the book affords us a new perspective on today's popular culture and shows that despite great advances in technology, the essence of public entertainment has changed little during the last two centuries.

Mark Evan Swartz, author of Oz before the Rainbow: L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz on Stage and Screen to 1939

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