What Were Vaudevilles and Where Did They Go?

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SUMMARY

Vaudeville was a popular form of light entertainment in the United States during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, characterized by 10-15 unrelated acts including magicians, acrobats, comedians, and musicians. Tony Pastor pioneered the "clean variety show" format in 1881, leading to the establishment of vaudeville theater chains like Martin Beck's Orpheum Circuit, with New York's Palace Theater being the most notable from 1913 to 1932. Many famous entertainers, such as Mae West and Charlie Chaplin, began their careers in vaudeville before it declined in popularity.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of early 20th-century American entertainment history
  • Familiarity with key figures in vaudeville, such as Tony Pastor and Martin Beck
  • Knowledge of performance arts terminology, including "variety show" and "light entertainment"
  • Awareness of the cultural impact of vaudeville on modern entertainment
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the influence of vaudeville on contemporary performance arts
  • Explore the history and evolution of variety shows in America
  • Investigate the biographies of notable vaudeville performers like Mae West and the Marx Brothers
  • Examine the decline of vaudeville and its transition into other entertainment forms
USEFUL FOR

This discussion is beneficial for historians, theater enthusiasts, and anyone interested in the evolution of American entertainment, particularly those studying the roots of modern comedy and performance arts.

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Help!
I need to do a presentation on Vaudevilles and I don't even know what they are except they were around in north america in the 20s and now they're gone.. Oh and apparently they were really pretty!

Resources anyone?
Life Experience?
In Depth Knowledge?

Edit: Ooops wrong subforum, can't move it myself, guess its up to the admins.
 
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vaudeville:

Light entertainment popular in the U.S. in the late 19th and early 20th century.

It consisted of 10-15 unrelated acts featuring magicians, acrobats, comedians, trained animals, singers, and dancers. The form developed from the coarse variety shows held in beer halls for a primarily male audience. Tony Pastor established a successful "clean variety show" at his New York theater in 1881 and influenced other managers to follow suit. By 1900 chains of vaudeville theaters around the country included Martin Beck's Orpheum Circuit, of which New York's Palace Theater was the most famous (1913-32). Among the many entertainers who began in vaudeville were Mae West, W. C. Fields, Will Rogers, Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, the Marx Brothers, Berenice Abbott and Lou Costello, Milton Berle, and Bob Hope. See also music hall and variety.

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If you're looking for something as simple as the definition of a term and historical information, why not consult your nearest (full version) encyclopaedia or "Google" it?

And what did you mean by "really pretty". The performance?

:confused:
 
I have of course been laregly unsuccessfull in googling it, what I do have now might be enough to scrape by on but I was hoping someone might have experience or something with it.
 
What does this have to do with physics or mathematics?
 

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