Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 867: Ringling Bros. Grand Circus Spectacle ‘Solomon and the Queen of Sheba,’ 1914

Copyright © 2019 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett

Thomas G. Moses designed the scenery for the Ringling Brothers grand circus spectacle, “King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba.” Sosman & Landis delivered the scenery for the production in 1914.

In 1914, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Jan. 6th, went to Baraboo, Wisconsin, to see the Ringling’s for the new spectacle, ‘King Solomon.’ Another big show. Made a model for one scene and got $2,900.00.” Moses was referring to the 1914 Ringling production “Solomon and the Queen of Sheba” that toured throughout the United States. Later in 1914, Moses wrote, “Ringlings’ work came out very good.  Everyone was pleased and that is saying a good deal.”

I have mentioned this grand circus spectacle, or spec, in the past, but it is worth repeating. It provides an additional layer of context for the painted tradition preserved in Scottish Rite theaters.

“King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba” was presented in a series of dramatic pantomimic pictures staged with “all the lavish splendor and opulence that marked the period when the wise Solomon ruled the Kingdom of Israel, the action of the spectacle is laid in Jerusalem, at the time of the historical visit of Balkis, Queen of Sheba” (Star Gazette, Elmira, NY, 21 May 1914, page 3).  The Star Gazette reported, “The spectacle is presented on an enormous, specially constructed stage, which occupies nearly one entire side of the main tent.  The tent measures 560 by 320 feet and seats 14,000 people at a performance” (21 May 1914, page 3). Remember that two shows were given daily; one at 2pm and one at 8PM, and the doors opened an hour before show time, allowing spectators to visit the 108 cages in the Ringling zoo and purchase candy and souvenirs!

In 1914, the “Indianapolis Star” reported, “Nero has watched his Rome burn to a cinder beneath a circus tent. Pompeii has fallen to ruins in the scattered sawdust of the ring and Cleopatra has taken her last look at Egypt before the clown’s entry.  And now the wise King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba have been made the hero and heroine of the circus spectacle, surrounded with all the gorgeous pageantry and lavish costumes a showman can devise” (4 May 1914, page 3).

Thomas G. Moses designed the scenery for the Ringling Brothers grand spectacle, Solomon and the Queen of Sheba” in 1914.

On May 21, 1914, the “Star Gazette” reported:

“Nearly half of the entire train section is used to transport the scenery and costumes used in the massive spectacle, ‘Solomon and the Queen of Sheba.’ The spectacle includes a cast of more than 1,250 characters and a ballet of 300 dancing girls under the personal direction of Ottokar Bartik, ballet master of the Metropolitan Opera House, New York, and late of La Scala, Milan.  The music for this spectacle has been written by Faltis Effendi, formerly bandmaster of Khedive of Egypt, and is rendered by an orchestra of 90 musicians, 400 trained singers and a chorus of 1,000 voices accompanied by a cathedral pipe organ, costing $100,000.  The Ringling Brothers’ have expended $1,000,000 in the production of this mammoth spectacle which faithfully and accurately portrays the pomp and ceremony, life and wisdom of a period a thousand years before Christ, and introduces Solomon in all his glory and Balkis, Queen of Sheba, the most interesting woman of her day” (Star Gazette, Elmira, NY, 21 May 1914, page 3).

From the “Reading Times,” 16 May 1914, page 9.
From the “Pittsburg Press”, 5 May 1914, page 16.

The US Inflation Calculator measures the buying power of $1,000,000 in 1914 to be the equivalent of $25,200,600.00 in 2018. Fifty men were needed to handle scenery and special effects (Dayton Daily News, 26 April 1914, page 31).

When the circus arrived in Elmira, New York during 1914, the “Star Gazette” included a large article about the early morning arrival and events, advertising:

“The big circus is almost here.  Tomorrow morning in the small hours just before dawn, four long red and yellow trains, made up of 86 cars will roll quietly into Elmira coming from Binghamton, over Lackawanna railroad.  They will be unloaded immediately and within a few hours the big aggregations of world wonders which comprises Ringling Brothers’ ‘world’s greatest shows’ will be safely sheltered under twenty acres of white canvas on the show grounds.”

From the “Sheboygen Press,” 7 July 1914, page 1.
From the “Sheboygen Press,” 7 July 1914, page 1.

The circus included an elaborate parade that traversed the principal streets of each town on the morning of their arrival.  The “Star Gazette” announced, “The cavalcade which, it is promised, will be the longest and most gorgeous display ever seen in the streets of this city, will start from the show grounds promptly at 10 o’clock.  It will be more than three miles in length and will include all the performers and animals, in addition to the long procession of handsome tableau wagons and allegorical cars, filled with pretty dancing girls in gay costumes.  Six bands and two calliopes will furnish the music for the cavalcade and the fifty famous Ringling clowns will be on hand to keep the sidewalk spectators in good humor.  A striking feature of the procession will be the long line of elephants, forty in all, and a team of sixteen camels, broken to bit and harness driven the same as horses. These beasts draw a huge parade wagon and this is the first instance on record where the ‘ship of the desert’ has ever been successfully broken to harness and bit.”

The “twenty-four hour man” arrived a day ahead of the circus to set up the infrastructure needed to feed an enormous amount of people and animals. Other circus staff that arrived a day early included “a number of stage and electrical experts who precede the show to make arrangements for the staging and lighting of the big spectacle “Solomon and the Queen of Sheba.” It is important to remember that the King Solomon spectacle was just one of the principal features for the Ringling Brothers’ program that season; it was not the whole show.  This makes theatrical touring shows, such as “Ben-Hur,” seem like child’s play when compared with the logistics of a touring circus with thousands of moving parts.

The first train to arrive was the commissary department and the first tent to be pitched on the show grounds was the “cook house.”  The second and third trains pulled the heavy red wagons, loaded with canvases, properties, the elephants, the 730 horses and the other animals.  On the last train, composed entirely of sleeping cars, arrived all of the performers and ancillary staff members for the show.

The Queen of Sheba was played by Mme. Bartik, a Russian actress and a pupil of M. Pierre Devereau, the French teacher of pantomimic art.

From the “Indianapolis Star,” 4 May 1914 page 3.

One of the things that I keep thinking about is the logistics of organizing and managing a touring circus a century ago, especially the 1914 Ringling Brothers’ “King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba.” The Pittsburgh Press published an article that provides insight into the 1914 circus (11 May 1914, page 14):

“The big enterprise bearing the name of the five brother showmen arrived in Pittsburgh in the small hours of Sunday morning and with very little noise and no confusion an enormous tented city was quickly established on the show grounds in East Liberty.  The show came from Wheeling, W. Va., where it exhibited on Saturday, and it was met in the yards of the Pennsylvania railroad by a vast horde of excited youngsters who had braved both the displeasure of parents and Sunday school teachers in order to be on hand to help unload the elephants and lead the spotted ponies to water.  All day yesterday they loitered around the East Liberty grounds watching the erecting of the tents and other unusual sights.

Twenty-four tents are required this season.  The main canvas – the big top is the largest the Ringlings have ever used – is especially constructed, not only to accommodate the circus with its three rings, stages and hippodrome track, but also arranged for the massive spectacle ‘Solomon and the Queen of Sheba,’ which is presented on a stage five the size of that found in the largest theater. The Ringling circus is a perfect city in itself traveling every night, making a new city every day and morning with more system, rapidity and less fuss and noise than any branch of the army.  To prepare for its coming exactly 106 representatives, each with a various mission to perform, have visited this city.

All of the cooking for this enormous enterprise is done by steam and in ranges built in a wagon weighing six tons and drawn by eight horses.  As a mere detail of the marketing the circus consumes daily 4,500 pounds of fresh beef, 300 dozen eggs, 800 pounds of bread, 150 pounds of sugar and other items equally as large.  The first order to the cooks in the morning is for 5,200 griddle cakes and yet, as large a number as this may seem, it is only four a piece. For the stock and animal department there are used daily: 10 tons of hay, five tons of straw, 300 bushels of oats, while no well behaved elephant would think of starting his day’s labor without his morning cereal – a bale of hay.  Most of all, these purchases are made from local merchants.

The circus travels on its own trains and only requires engines and crews from the railroads.  The show also carries its own blacksmiths, horseshoers, wagon and harness makers, tent makers, rope splicers and a corps of decorators are kept on hand continually touching up the gilded and brilliantly painted tableau wagons and cages.  Two men are employed eight hours a day doing nothing but greasing axles.  In the wardrobe department presided over by Mrs. George Hartzell, known as “the little mother of the circus,” nearly 6,000 costumes have to be handled daily and kept in repair. Five dressmakers and six tailors, besides armorers, are in this department.  The circus has its own physician who carries with him a complete surgical and medical outfit. There is also a barber shop and, incidentally, no driver or man appearing before the public is allowed to leave the show grounds until he is shaved. This also suggests another rule strictly enforced by the Ringling Brothers’ which absolutely forbids the use of whips by any of their drivers.

It costs $8,000 a day to run the circus and it represents and investment of nearly $4,000,000.  The show maintains winter quarters and shops at Baraboo, Wisconsin, and Stoke-on-Trent, England. The firm is now planning an expedition of its own to trap animals in the jungles of India and the wilds of the Egyptian Soudan.  In every part of the world its agents are on the alert to secure novelties.

Starting as mere boys with a borrowed tent in which they were given a few juvenile attempts at entertainment, these five brothers have seen their dreams realized and have become master showmen of the world.

The afternoon performance began at 2 o’clock and the big tent was crowded.  Opening the bill came the spectacle, “Solomon and the Queen of Sheba.” Nothing so richly costumed or so effectively presented has ever been given here before.  The opening pageant, the ballet of dancing girls and the dramatic action were veritable surprises.  The spectacle was followed by surprises.  The spectacle was followed by the circus performance in which 400 men and women appeared.  More novelties that ever before are presented, the Ringlings having brought from Europe the majority of their people.

The final performance will take place Tuesday night at 8 o’clock.  The doors open an hour earlier, allowing time to visit the extensive menagerie and also enjoy the operatic concert rendered by the military band of 80 pieces.” To be continued…

Author: waszut_barrett@me.com

Wendy Rae Waszut-Barrett, PhD, is an author, artist, and historian, specializing in painted settings for opera houses, vaudeville theaters, social halls, cinemas, and other entertainment venues. For over thirty years, her passion has remained the preservation of theatrical heritage, restoration of historic backdrops, and the training of scenic artists in lost painting techniques. In addition to evaluating, restoring, and replicating historic scenes, Waszut-Barrett also writes about forgotten scenic art techniques and theatre manufacturers. Recent publications include the The Santa Fe Scottish Rite Temple: Freemasonry, Architecture and Theatre (Museum of New Mexico Press, 2018), as well as articles for Theatre Historical Society of America’s Marquee, InitiativeTheatre Museum Berlin’s Die Vierte Wand, and various Masonic publications such as Scottish Rite Journal, Heredom and Plumbline. Dr. Waszut-Barrett is the founder and president of Historic Stage Services, LLC, a company specializing in historic stages and how to make them work for today’s needs. Although her primary focus remains on the past, she continues to work as a contemporary scene designer for theatre and opera.

2 thoughts on “Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 867: Ringling Bros. Grand Circus Spectacle ‘Solomon and the Queen of Sheba,’ 1914”

  1. Thank you for this exquisitely researched history.
    My question: Who was the lovely star cast as Sheba?

    1. I can’t remember if I ever came across a name, or jotted it down. However, it may be listed in one of the many advertisements that were published that year. If I stumble across it again, I will email you.

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