We may be Actors and Actresses (with
capital “A’s”) to the public; we
may have our names in big letters on the billboards
and in the programs; but to The Old Folks At Home
we are just the same no-account boys and girls we
always were. We may be Headliners in New York,
Boston, Chicago and San Francisco, but back home we
are still just Jimmie and Johnnie and Charlie that
“went on the stage.”
Charlie Smith, of Smith & Campbell,
in his younger days used to drive a delivery wagon
for his father’s fish market. But tiring
of the fish business he started out to be “a
Acter.” At the end of five years he
had reached a point where the team commanded (and
sometimes got) a salary of eighty dollars a week.
As driver of the fish wagon he had received eight.
And he determined to go home and “show them.”
Dressing the part properly for his “grand entre”
put a fearful dent in his “roll”; so much
so that he had to change what remained into one and
two dollar bills in order to “make a flash.”
But when he struck the old home town
he was “a lily of the valley”; he had
a Prince Albert coat, a silk hat, patent-leather shoes,
an almost-gold watch and chain, a pretty-near diamond
stud and ring and the roll of ones and twos, with
a twenty on the outside.
After supper, sitting around the fire,
he started in telling them what a success he was;
he told them of all the big theaters he had appeared
in; how good the newspapers said he was; what a large
salary he received, etc., etc.
All seemed highly impressed; all except
Father; finally, after a couple of hours of it, he
could contain himself no longer, and burst out
“Say, when are you going to
stop this dumb fool business and come back and go
to driving that wagon again?”
Ed Grey, “the Tall Story Teller,”
went from a small country town on to the stage.
It was ten years before he ever came back to play the
home town. When he did the whole town turned
out en masse; the Grey family ditto; after
the show the family was seated around the dining-room
table, talking it over. Mother sat beside her
big boy, proud and happy. The others were discussing
the show.
“That Mister Brown was awful good.”
“Oh, but I liked that Blink & Blunk the best.”
“That Miss Smith was awful sweet.”
But not a word did any one have to
say about “Eddie.” Finally he burst
out
“Well, how was I?”
There was an ominous pause, and then
Mother, reaching over and patting his knee lovingly,
said,
“Now, don’t you care, Eddie, as long as
you get your money.”
Cliff Gordon’s father doesn’t
believe it yet. Cliff was playing in New
York and stopping at home.
“Vere you go next veek, Morris?” asked
Father.
“Orpheum, Brooklyn,” replied Cliff.
“How mooch vages do you get dere?”
“Three fifty.”
“Tree huntret unt fifty tollars?”
“Uh huh.”
Father nodded his head, sighed deeply, thought a minute,
then
“Then vere do you go?”
“Alhambra, New York.”
“How mooch?”
“Three fifty.”
“Then vere?”
“Keith’s, Philadelphia.”
“How mooch you get ofer dere?”
“Just the same; three fifty.”
Father sighed again, thought deeply
for a few minutes, then, with another sigh, said,
half to himself,
“Dey can’t all be crazy.”
Tim McMahon (McMahon & Chapelle) had
a mother who did not believe theaters were proper
and Tim had a hard time getting her to come to see
him at all. But finally she came to see her “Timmite”
act. It was a big show, ten acts, and Tim was
on number nine. After the show was over Tim went
around in front of the house to meet her; she came
out so indignant she could hardly speak.
“Why, what’s the matter? Wasn’t
I good?” asked Tim.
“Yis, sor, you was; you
was as good as iny of them; you was better
than any of thim; and they had no right to let thim
other eight acts on foreninst ye: You ought
to have come on first, Timmie.”
The first time Josephine Sabel’s
father and mother saw her on the stage she was in
the chorus of a comic opera company and was wearing
tights. Mother ran out of the theater and Father
tried to climb up over the footlights to get at Josephine
and got put out.
Charlie Case had been on the stage
for years before he ever got a chance to play his
home town; then he came in with a minstrel show; he
had a special lithograph, showing him standing beside
an Incubator, which was hatching out new jokes every
minute.
The house was crowded and Charlie
was even more nervous than usual. Everybody else
in the show got big receptions; Charlie walked out
to absolute silence. He talked five minutes to
just as absolute silence; then, discouraged, he stopped
to take a breath; the instant he stopped the house
was in a pandemonium; they really thought he was great,
but hadn’t wanted to interrupt him. After
that he would tell a joke and then wait; he was a
knockout.
Later he was talking it over at home:
“Why, that awful silence had
me rattled,” he said; “I couldn’t
even remember my act; I left out a lot of it.”
“Yes,” said his father;
“we noticed you forgot to bring on your Incubator.”