In 1915, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Started the New Year in the right way, making a model and attending the theatre.” 1915 would prove to be a turning point at Sosman & Landis. I will start exploring the firm’s projects and Moses’ travels tomorrow, as I am on the road today.
Theatrical guides provide a
wealth of information about historic theatres, including the technical
specifications and original scenery. I have continued to reference a variety of
guides from the 1882 until 1913, with Julius Cahn’s Official Theatrical Guide
being my favorite. In 1914 he did not
publish a guide. For the 1914-1915
season, Gus Hill published his first theatrical guide. “Gus Hill’s National
Theatrical Directory.” It was published by Hill’s National Theatrical
Directory, Inc. in the Columbia Theatre Building, New York.
Initially, Hill (1858-1937) was a burlesque performer,
wrestler and juggler. One of his acts was a series of cartoon theatricals,
musical comedies based on cartoon strips. Hill later became a vaudeville
manager and producer, founding the Columbia Amusement Company.
Gus Hill’s National Theatrical Directory advertised that
it contained “The most complete list of Theatres yet compiled for the United
States and Canada. It was arranged alphabetically according to the States and
Cities, and promised, “condensed information as to Towns, Theatres, Billing,
Hotels, Newspapers, Railroads, Express Companies, etc.” as well as:
It also included: a complete list of Theatrical Managers,
Producers and Booking Agents; a list of plays, Musical and Dramatic; a list of
the Vaudeville Theatre, Agencies, Acts and Performers; a list of the Moving Picture
Houses and Film Exchanges; and a list of Representative Attorneys qualified to
handle theatrical business.”
Hill’s also book included something new – “The Reporting
System.” The Guide noted, “In conjunction with this Directory, the publishers
will establish a Reporting System, which is intended to be to the theatrical
business what Dunn and Bradstreet are to the commercial world.”
The Guide
promised, “This book is now the ONLY authentic and complete Theatrical
Directory in Existence, having just absorbed Julius Cahn’s Official Theatrical
Guide. Apply Now for advertising space and rates in the 1915-1916 Edition.”
Another page noted, “This is now the only official theatrical directory in
Existence Having recently taken over the Cahn-Leighton Official Guide.”
In 1896 Julius Cahn published his first theatrical guide.
By 1911, Julius Cahn and R. Victor Leighton created the successor to the Julius
Cahn’s Official Theatrical Guide, the Cahn-Leighton Official Theatrical Guide.
The 1912-1913 season publication noted it was “the first combined effort to
give the theatrical public a guide with many radical changes and new ideas.”
Cahn & Leighton wrote, “the object of this guide is to assist the producer
and theatre manager to reach each other in a practical business-like manner
with the least trouble. Among the new features in their guide was several
tables of freight rates, party fares and the mileage to next point from each
point in the guide.” It contained, “Authentic Information Regarding all Cities,
Towns, and Villages wherein Theatrical Organizations may find a Theatre, Opera
House or Hall to exhibit in as well as the Information pertaining to these
places of Amusement, the Railroads, Express Companies, Newspapers, Billposters,
Transfer Companies, Hotels, &c., throughout the United States, Canada,
Mexico, Hawaii and Cuba.” The publication office was New Amsterdam Theatre
Building, located at West 42nd Street, New York, New York.
For their 1913 publication, Cahn & Leighton wrote, “Today
we are offering our patrons the best and most complete edition ever
published. The past year we made a
number of changes in the construction of the guide, toward the betterment of
the publication and the present issue offers not alone the oldest, but most
reliable publication of its kind ever printed. It is the only recognized book
of reference of the theatrical profession as well as those who come in contract
or do business with this class of patronage. We bespeak from our friends an
appreciation of the merits of the book and a frank and friendly criticism of
what they consider its faults.” The Cahn-Leighton partnership was short lived and
Gus Hill took over the theatre directory business.
From Julius Cahn’s premier issue in 1896 to the Julius
Cahn-Gus Hill Theatrical Guide and Moving Picture Directory, one can explore a
shift within the entertainment industry. There is an amazing amount of
information waiting for someone to see how quickly the popularity of “Moving
Pictures” swept the country. Many of the theatrical guides are available as
free downloads. What makes this wonderful is that one can complete keyword
searches and quickly access information.
In 1914, Thomas G. Moses wrote,
“Rupert was married to Miss Ula McNeill on November 12th, 1914.”
Rupert was the youngest of four children born to Tom and Ella Moses between
1879 and 1889. Their children were Thomas William “Pitt” Moses (b. 1879), Mary
“Mamie” Titcomb Moses (1881), Lillian Ella Moses (1886) and “Rupert” Moses
(1889).
Pitt followed his Uncle Frank Moses
and moved to Trenton, New Jersey, to work at a gas plant in 1900. Three years
later, he married Stella Martin of Trenton. Moses’ youngest son, Rupert,
entered the theatre manufacturing business and remained close to his
father. The girls married and became
homemakers; Lillian married George Salzman in 1910 and Mamie married William
Hanover in 1911. Last, but not least, Rupert married Ula McNeill of Ames, Iowa
in 1914.
Because Rupert and his father worked together, the two
families would occasionally share the same home, sharing everything from food
to scarlet fever over the years. Although his eldest son Pitt lived far away in
Trenton, New Jersey, Moses passed along fatherly advice across the miles in the
form of letters. Moses’ mourned the great
distance he lived from his adult children and their families. In 1914, however,
there were no longer little children running up to his attic studio, or young
adults to regale with tales of his trips.
His homecomings were much quieter. By his fifties, Moses recognized that
he had lost many precious moments with his family over the years while he was
travelling.
During his extended absences, Moses desperately missed his family,
and many times reached out to convey his dislike of these separations. The
children’s absences during the holidays accentuated his loneliness. At the
close of 1914, Moses wrote, “Another Christmas without Pitt and family or
Lillian. Would like to have the children
and grandchildren every Christmas. We
have a big house to entertain them, and I feel sure they all like to come to
the old house, at least once a year.”
His words, “At least once a year,” lingered in my mind.
Regret. Success does not matter if you miss so much. I think back to Moses’
many diary entries that placed him far away from the family at holidays. Now he was finally home for one and the
children were gone.
By 1917, Moses wrote, “Pitt came out for a short visit and
for the first time in twenty years, we had only the four children at home for a
dinner. They were not allowed to mention
their families. We sat each in their
accustomed place. We all enjoyed it
immensely. It carried us back many years
when we were all much younger. I wish we
could do it every year.” That same year, Moses wrote, “Stella and the girls
arrived on December 22nd. Pitt came out on the 24th. We
certainly had some family this Christmas – 17 at the table and two in the
kitchen, and we had a fine dinner. I had
Eugene Hall come to the house and pose us and he got one good negative. Had to use a flash as the light was very
poor. I have wanted this for a good many
years, and I am pleased to get it, even if it is not as good as a gallery picture.”
In the end, we are often left with pictures and memories, and hopefully enough
happiness to make us feel confident in our life choices.
In 1914, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Some new Masonic work for
Omaha, Nebr.” Moses was referring to the new scenery and stage machinery
purchased for the Omaha Scottish Rite Temple on Twentieth and Douglas streets. The
firm previously delivered some scenery for Scottish Rite degree work for the
Masonic Temple on Sixteenth and Capitol Avenue. The 1914 work mentioned by
Moses was an addition to an earlier collection delivered by Sosman & Landis.
Omaha was one of four Scottish Rite meeting places in the
state, with the other three located in Lincoln, Fremont and Hastings. In 1914,
Sosman & Landis also worked on other Scottish Rite projects that Moses
recorded, “furnished a lot of work for the boys.”
On May 18, 1914, the “Omaha
Daily Bee” reported:
“Scottish Rite Initiation to Be
in Last in Old Building. A class of fourteen will receive the twenty-first
degree in Scottish rite masonry Monday evening at the Masonic temple, Sixteenth
street and Capitol avenue. This is the last class which will receive the
preceptor degree in the old Masonic temple, as it is believed that the new
Scottish Rite temple at Twentieth and Douglas streets will be completed and
occupied by the order at the time of the initiation of the next class.
Refreshments will be served following the initiation Monday evening” (page 10).
The Spring Reunion boasted a
class of forty-cone candidates who received the fourth to eighteenth degrees,
using Sosman & Landis scenery previously purchased for degree productions.
During the two-day reunion, Scottish Rite degree work for the fourth to
fourteenth degrees were completed on Tuesday and degree work for the fifteenth
to eighteenth degrees were completed on Wednesday. This means that the original
Scottish Rite stage in Omaha only had scenery to use for the fourth to
eighteenth degrees. A list of all the candidates was published in the “Omaha
Daily Bee” on 25 March 1914 (page 3). By the next spring reunion, there were
one hundred Scottish Rite candidates in the class at the new building (Omaha
Daily Bee, 25 March 1915, page 8).
The dedication ceremonies in the
new building were held on November 16. The Omaha Scottish Rite was erected at a
cost of over $225,000. Of the Omaha Scottish Rite’s new home, the “Omaha Daily
Bee” reported, “The new Scottish Rite Cathedral is a three story structure,
with high basement, built of Bedford granite, with imposing Ionic columns and
porticos. The auditorium on the second and third floors where the initiations
will take place, is an attractive modern theater, with a stage 30×40 feet and a
seating capacity of about 1,000. It is tinted in cream with pink decorated
panels and has all the arrangements for lighting, stage settings and
precautions against fire, of the most up to minute theater. It has a wardrobe
and paraphernalia room adjoin” (1 Nov. 1915, page 25). The size and scope of
the project increased over course of the year.
M. C. Lilley & Co. of Columbus, Ohio, received the
contracted for Omaha’s Scottish Rite theater. They subcontracted the 1914 set
of scenery to Sosman & Landis. Keep in mind that by 1914, Moses had been
associated with Sosman & Landis since 1880.
He was the current vice-president of the firm and supervised all design,
construction, painting and installation. He also negotiated many of the contracts.
After Landis’ passing, Moses’ role in the company continued to expand, while
Sosman’s responsibilities diminished. It
was not easy sailing for Moses during this time; especially when studio
projects continued to increase, necessitating the use of annex studios and
regional offices.
In 1914, the Omaha Scottish Rite project also encountered a
series of snags during planning and production. First and foremost, there was a
misunderstanding concerning who was responsible for the
structural work necessary to support the scenic drops. It was unusual for
anyone else besides M. C. Lilley or Sosman & Landis to install the stage
machinery, so I m perplexed that this was an issue. Part of the standard
procedure for Scottish Rite scenery installations at that time was that they
were suspended from “Brown’s special system.” There was always a company
representative who was there during the first reunion to help supervise the
operation of the system.
Furthermore, the Omaha Valley Scottish Rite reduced the
number of drops to less than half due to the expense, likely deciding to reuse
much of the original scenery collection; a common practice for many Scottish
Rite’s at the time, but this bit into the expenses expended by the studio
during the planning and designing process. The original plan for eighty line
sets sixty line sets was reduced to sixty, greatly affecting the final workload
and anticipated profits. These two factors, contributed to a delay in the final
delivery of the scenery, so it was not until the Spring Reunion of 1915 that
everything was in place. That scenery remained in place for the next eight
decades.
In 1980, Dr. John R. Rothgeb of the University of Texas in
Austin inquired about the original scenery. He received a response from the Secretary
D. William Dean that April. Dean responded that the Omaha Scottish Rite
currently owned 47 “beautiful curtain drops.” He then wrote, “…and they are all
originals. They are remarkably in good condition considering their age as is
also the Building which we have tried to keep in the very best of repair.” Over
the course of the next sixteen years, however, someone would make the decision
to get rid of these drops and purchase a the used scenery from the Kansas City
Scottish Rite.
The Omaha Scottish Rite purchased from the Scottish Rite
scenery collection from Kansas City, Kansas in 1996 for $40,000. The Kansas
City, KS, Scottish Rite scenery dates from the 1950s. It was painted by Maj.
Don Carlos DuBois, representing the Great Western Stage Equipment Co. I was
able examine all of the current backdrops at the Scottish Rite Theatre in
Omaha, Nebraska, on June 15, 2018, while driving south for “The Santa Fe Scottish Rite Temple: Freemasonry,
Architecture and Theatre” book signing.
The used scenery was available for purchase because the Kansas
City Scottish Rite put it’s building on the market in 1996 and moved to a new
location. I initially learned of the collection’s relocation to Omaha while
researching Scottish Rite compositions for my doctoral dissertation. For a
while, the entire set of backdrops was posted online at the time. In the end
$140, 000 was spent to purchase, remove, transport, and install the new drops
in Omaha. Stylistically, the painted aesthetic of each collections was decades
apart.
I still don’t know what happened to the original 1914 Sosman
& Landis scenery, as only bits and pieces of stage machinery remain in
lobby display cases.
In 1914, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “We received an order for
Masonic scenery for Asheville, N.C.”
Moses was referring to the scenery collection still housed
in the 270-seat theatre. I only know the contents of the scenery collection as Lance
Brockman and Larry Hill gifted to me their slide collections. There are also
many images posted online, showing the stage area during a variety of events
from musical performances to yoga classes.
The yoga class on stage beneath historic scenery surprised me,
especially when considering the likelihood of dusting dry pigment, flash powder
and other contaminants).
From various websites, both public and fraternal, I discovered
that the building is currently the only one on the National Register in
Asheville retaining its original use. At least it has note ben sold and
divided to make apartments. Like a few other Masonic stages across the country,
the Asheville Masons decided to partner with a local group. In 2010, the
Masonic Temple in Asheville, North Carolina, formed a partnership with the
Montford Park Players. One of the stated plans was to integrate dinner with
live performance.
Of the historic stage used by the community theater, a
MountainXpress.com article noted, “There are 48 backdrops, all hand painted by
Chicago artists Thomas Gibbs Moses, hanging in the eaves and rafters above the theatre
(which haven’t been moved since 1915). The article continued, “These backdrops
are visually stunning, and will add to the dimension an quality of the Montford
Park Players’ performances.”
Unfortunately, much of the information in the article was incorrect,
such as Moses painting the drops in 1951; that would be almost three decades
after his passing. Moses’ supervised the painting, but certainly did not
painted every drop for the venue. Unfortunately the article at Mountainx.com
has since been removed and the images are no longer available.
Here is what I discovered about the venue, as noted in
historic newspapers. During 1912, several plans for a new temple were brought
forward, and an arrangement was entered into between the York Rite bodies and
the Scottish Rite bodies in the City of Asheville (“Asheville Citizen-Times,” 2
July 1913, page 5). The architect for
the endeavor was Richard Sharp Smith. Smith designed Asheville’s Masonic Temple
in the same year that he founded the North Carolina chapter of the American
Institute of Architects. Interestingly, Smith was the same a British-born
Freemason hired to supervise the construction of Biltmore Castle.
In the end, Asheville’s Masonic building was erected at the
cost of $50,000, with the funding being equally divided between the Scottish
Rite and york Rite. The Scottish Rite paid for the third floor furnishings that
included the stage and equipment. The York Rite paid for the second floor
furnishings. Both Scottish Rite and York Rite bodies furnished the first floor,
as it was complete with offices, lodge rooms, banquet hall, and kitchen. The
cornerstone laying ceremony was under the Grand Lodge of North Carolina and
took place on July 1, 1913.
1914 marks a significant moment at Sosman & Landis in regard
to Scottish Rite scenery and stage machinery. That year, several collections were
produced and shipped across the country to Scottish Rite theaters, including
Grand Forks, Tucson and Asheville; each was mentioned by Moses in his diary.
Many of these collections are still used, but falling into various states of
disrepair.
For decades the scenery was only used twice a year, at each
Scottish Rite reunion in the spring and fall.
Citing decreased membership and increased expense, many Masonic theater buildings
have opened their buildings for public rentals.
One rental feature is the Masonic stage and historic scenery collection.
The painted settings are popular for weddings, banquets, community theatre
productions and musical performances. Many stages are encountering more use in
six months that the previously six decades. This causes a problem as most
theater systems have never been maintained or repaired since their original
construction.
Those who currently step on a Scottish Rite stage marvel at the
condition of many elements, much of the pristine appearance is from lack of
use. Some stages that have been excessively used over the century show it, as
both scenery and operating lines look quite tattered. It will be interesting to
see how the historic scenes stand up to increased use across the country and if
any lines fail during a public performance in the near future. So far, any
drops that have fallen to the stage have occurred after performers departed the
building. The guardian angels may be working over time.
On Dec. 4,
1914, the “Twice-a-Week Dispatch” mentioned scenery produced by Sosman &
Landis for Price & Bonelli’s Greater New York Minstrels (Burlington, North
Carolina, page 1). Here is the article:
“Greater N.
Y. Minstrels
James
Bonelli, of Price and Bonelli, is very well known here in our city through his
annual visits in former days in the white face version of Dickson and Mustard’s
‘Humpty-Dumpty.’ He has amused both old and young in many seasons gone by, but
last night he appeared at his topmost success in the grand after piece
following the Minstrel Olio – Humpty Dumpty in black face with an entire
setting of special scenery from Sosman & Landis. Truly Bonellis a world
beater for clean cut comedy. We welcome his return at the head of his own
Minstrels or in any other production. Price & Bonelli, Greater New York
Minstrels is a winner and will make good before any audience.-Evansville (Ind.)
Democrat. Price & Bonelli will exhibit here at the Piedmont Opera House
Soon.”
In 1907 Bonelli starred in Dickson &
Mustard’s production of Humpty Dumpty and the Black Dwarf. Although a popular
vaudeville actor, this show really brought Bonelli into the spotlight. The
“News-Journal” reported “For many years [Bonelli] has been one of the best
known and most popular vaudeville performers both in this country and abroad,
and has met with great success in such musical comedies and pantomimes as
Devil’s Auction and Eight Bells, and Fantasma Metropolitan critics have praised
Mr. Bonelli insistently for his droll eccentric comedy and odd methods of his
works. Reynold Wolf, of the New York Telegraph declares him without a doubt to
be the funniest man on the American stage, and many other well known critics
have vouched for his ability in much the same manner. (News-Journal, Mansfield,
Ohio, 21 Oct 1907, page 7).
The “Humpty
Dumpty” musical olio first appeared in the 1880s, remaining a popular act when
Bonelli entered the picture in 1907. That year, the “Palladium-Item” published,
“Humpty Dumpty. Bright, exhilarating, sparkling, hilarious, ‘Humpty Dumpty,’
which will be seen as the Gennett tonight, in all its gorgeous splendor
presented by one of the most capable companies that has ever appeared in a
musical comedy pantomime in this country, headed by the inimitable clown and
comedian, James H. Bonelli, one of the most notable laugh producers of the
present day, is a production that should certainly appeal to every theater goer
as it is said to be the most complete and refined presentation of Mother
Goosie’s fairy story ever given” (Richmond,
Indiana, 15 Oct. 1907, page 6).
The “Marysville
Journal-Tribune” reported that the Price & Bonelli Company numbered thirty
performers, noting they were selected for their ability as minstrel artists of
merit. The article advertised, “singers, dancers, comedians, musicians and
novelty artists vie with each other to make the performance bright and
entertaining. Good comedy is a prominent feature of the programme and has
justly earned for Price and Bonelli’s Minstrels the title of Big Laughing Show”
(24 Oct 1916, page 4). By 1917, the
Price & Bonelli Minstrel Show included six vaudeville acts, with the show lasting
two hours and twenty minutes (Columbus Daily Advocate, 15 Dec. 1917, page 1).
To be continued…
(Published in the “Billings Gazette,” April 12, 1914, page
1).
In 1914, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Closed
a contract September 29th with Chas. Kohl for Academy of Music work,
$2,234.00. A big minstrel first part for
Miller and Draper. Came out very good –
something entirely new.” I believe that Moses was referring to the first part
of Draper and Miller’s show as part of the Elks Minstrel Show (Billings
Gazette, April 12, 1914, page 1).
On April 12, 1914, the “Billings
Gazette” announced, “This year’s Elks Minstrel To Be Best Performance Ever
Staged in the City” (page 1). The production was advertised as “Fast and snappy
show replete with up-to-date features is assured theatre-goers next Wednesday ,
Thursday and Friday evenings. The article reported, “Miller & Draper of New
York city, under whose direction this show is presented and who so ably served
the local lodge two years ago, are the best known producers in the business. For
twelve years they have been staging the annual Elk’s Minstrels over the United
States, During that tome they made for Elks lodges approximately a half million
dollars (Should they fail to make a half-million for Billings No. 394 there
will be things doing not on the program). The leading Elks grand lodge offices
and the lodges where Miller and Draper have played are enthusiastic in their
endorsements. Harry Miller is an experienced show man of real value under whose
system Elks lodges have started home building funds and furnished lodge rooms.
Mr. Miller has a connection with the biggest publishers to supply him with the
Cohan music he carries with his productions. Clint Draper comes to Billings
well known as a performer of experience, having been with leading minstrel
productions of the country. He is one of the very best black-face comedians and
dancers in the country and under his tutelage dancing acts of exceptional merit
are staged at Elks Minstrels. …Miller and Draper have invested thousands of
dollars in scenery and costumes, all of which making a full carload, has been
brought to Billings for the coming Minstrel [show].”
The article continued, “Program
– First Part. The curtain will arise upon a scene entitled ‘Carnival Night at
the Panama-Pacific Exposition, 1915. The scenery for this was built and painted
from drawings furnished by the architectural commission of the exposition of
the exposition. The scene represents the East Court of the Grand Court of Honor
at the San Francisco Exposition, and is as authentic as canvas and paint can
make it. The electrical effects introduced render the scene one of unparalleled
beauty and elegance, achieving a distinct triumph from an artistic standpoint
of what the great exposition will be.
Following the opening chorus the ‘end men’ and the balladists will early being
to get in their work. Joke will follow joke in quick succession, all of them
localized to suit all sorts and condition of men in this city and vicinity –
and all who know anything at all about the ability of these comedians – and
everybody should, because they have an international as well as home reputation
– may figure out in advance the side-splitting laughs that are in store. The
real test of a minstrel show, nonwithstanding all the fun cropping out of the
first part, is the Olio, or second part. Almost anybody can put on a pretty
good first part. The Booster could do it itself, if it had a mind to. But most
minstrels fall down woefully on the second part of the entertainment. This
isn’t going to be the case with Billings No. 394, however, as the second part
bids fair to eclipse in many ways the first part.”
As the Night approaches, the
article noted, “men and things are getting busy at the Babcock [theatre] in
preparation for this big event, Paper hangers, painter, ratcatchers, old
clothes men, vacuum cleaners and the local fire department are now at work
making extra preparations to accommodate the big crowds. The said walls of the
theater are being pushed back, the roof raised, the floor dropped, and peep
holes let in all around so as to let out the noise. The seating capacity will
be increased to 2,371. Some seats have been greatly widened in order that
visiting brethren of unusual avoirdupois may not be choked. These will be
reserved for the heavy weights who come. Strong disinfecting germicides have
been attached to the places where opera glasses ought to be and you are advices
to use these freely after such jokes as may appear to require application.”
Even though Thomas G. Moses was
vice-president of Sosman & Landis in 1914, he was on the road a lot. At 58
years old, Moses remained at the top of his game. Working as both a scenic
artist and designer, well-known personalities throughout North America
continued to seek him out.
Since his return to Sosman & Landis in 1904, Moses had full control over the design, construction, painting, and installation of all projects. By 1914, however, much of Moses’ time was consumed with making models and securing contracts.
When Sosman & Landis opened,
it was Perry Landis who crisscrossed the country, securing scene-painting
contracts for opera houses, music halls and other entertainment venues. Sosman and Moses followed Landis, rapidly
completing one project after another. Moses admitted that it was a full six
months after being hired at Sosman & Landis in 1880 before he was even able
to meet Landis.
In 1902, Landis’ illness caused him
to withdraw from studio work until his passing in 1905. This prompted Sosman to get Moses back to the
studio by 1904. At the time, Moses was
running the successful scene-painting firm of Moses and Hamilton in New
York. It took a personal plea from
Sosman, plus the promise of full artistic control, position of vice-president, and
Sosman & Landis stocks to bring Moses back to Chicago. However, this meant that Moses’ increased
responsibilities pertaining to artistic supervision and marketing meant less
time painting.
A decade after his return to
Sosman & Landis as vice-president, Moses’ responsibilities had primarily
shifted to that of a designer, with him painting fewer and fewer drops. His design
services were also in high demand.
In 1914, Moses wrote, “I then
went to Atlantic City to make a model for the Colonial Theatre, and I found
Atlantic City was a good place to make a model, so I remained there a
week. Got back home May 4th,
feeling fine after my little vacation.” The Colonial Theatre was located two
blocks from the boardwalk at 1517 Atlantic Avenue near Mississippi Avenue.
Seating 1,391 patrons, it was later renamed the Center Theatre in 1954. The
sun, the sea and sketching must have been a welcome break from the hustle of
the studio. Making models on site was a sure way to secure a contract. The
client would be able to fully see what was being proposed and be amazed at the
speed with which the model was built to his specifications. It also required an experienced hand to
quickly craft a professional presentation, hence Moses going on the road again
as a designer and salesman.
Sosman & Landis delivered
scenery to Atlantic City the previous year too. In 1913, Moses wrote, “We did a
New York Studio job for Atlantic City – a theatre on the pier.” B. F. Keith’s
Garden Pier Theatre of was located on the 700-foot Garden Pier at the end of
New Jersey Avenue, opening in 1913. The firm was a well-known quantity, having
been in business for 35 years.
Other 1914 trips for Moses included French Lick Springs.
That fall Moses wrote, “I made the second trip to Indiana and French Lick
Springs, then back to West Baden – a wonderful big hotel. Got a frightful cold at French Lick Springs
and November 28th, I went to bed with bronchial pneumonia. Pretty bad.
Was three weeks before I could get out. The doctors wouldn’t listen to
getting up after I had been in bed for two weeks. I was stubborn enough to get up and I made
six models and felt better, forgot my worries and sold one set to Hopkinson of
the Hamilton Theatre or $975.00. He
called at the house to see the model and we started work right away. The
illness was the worst I ever had. I
ought to go south.” Ironically, French
Lick Springs and West Baden boasted spas and luxurious hotels, attracting those
in search of cures for their illnesses. Modeled
after famed European spas, these luxurious locations were less than a half-day
from Chicago. Here is a delightful post by Elizabeth Dunlop Richter that
highlights the French Lick and West Baden resorts: https://www.classicchicagomagazine.com/french-lick-and-west-baden-resorts/
Moses turn for the worse in 1914
was likely a relapse after pushing through his illness and deciding to make the
models. But this also signaled the beginning of respiratory concerns for Moses
that would remain throughout his life. After years of questionable working
environments an long hours, the frantic pace was taking its toll. At 58 years
old, Moses could not sustain the same lifestyle and work habits that he
established in his 20s without suffering some consequences. Although travel is
never easy, making models on location may have been preferable to cranking out
backdrops day in and day out, 10 to 12 hour days, six days a week. However,
Moses was trying to do both.
In 1914, Thomas G. Moses wrote,
“Several hustle up jobs came our way.
Flint, Michigan, Muscatine, Iowa, Geo. Dameral, Kansas City, Mo. And
several drops for the Kedzie Avenue Theatre.” The majority of projects that
passed through the Sosman & Landis studio each month will never be
known. I use Moses’ typed manuscript as
a guide, supplementing his entries with newspaper articles.
One project not mentioned by Moses during 1914 was scenery for
the Rex Theatre in Iowa Falls, Iowa. The Rex was a theater “devoted to moving
pictures.” A small snapshot in time, in 1914 new movie theaters were still
purchasing painted settings as a “frame” for the projection screen. This setting established a unique atmosphere
that bridged the gap between the old and the new.
Here is the article: published in the “Evening
Times-Republican” on 28 July 1914, (Marshalltown, Iowa, page 5):
“NEW THEATRE COMPLETED.
Fine Modern Picture House to Be Opened at Iowa Falls Soon.
Iowa Falls, July 26 – About Aug. 15, one of the finest
theaters in Iowa devoted to moving pictures will be opened in this city by
Middleton & Gephart. The new house s now in the hands of the finishers and
the seating is being put in place this week. This new theater is modern in
every detail. Architectural, it is a gem and reflects much credit on the men
who are back of the improvement. It will seat 350 people and has a stage
equipped with Sosman & Landis scenery and a fine plate glass mirror screen.
The interior decorations are in the best of taste and the front of the building
makes a fine improvement to the business district. The theater will be known as
the Rex and a large electric sign in front of the building heralds its location
to the public. The lobby is most attractive and the best of equipment has been
installed for the projection of pictures. A fine electric piano has been
installed to furnish music for the place. The second floor of the building is
being finished off as flat.”
In 1914, Thomas G. Moses wrote,
“Got an early start on the Globe Theatre, Philadelphia, for New York Studios.”
Two years earlier, Moses wrote
that he also painted a New York studios set for “a new theatre in Philadelphia,
the Globe.” New York Studios was the eastern affiliate of Sosman & Landis,
founded and run by a one-time employee David H. Hunt. Hunt was a theatrical
manager, as well as scenic studio founder. In the 1890s he convinced Sosman and
Landis to establish the theatrical management firm of Sosman, Landis &
Hunt. By 1910, Hunt convinced Sosman to
invest in New York Studios, run by Hunt and his second wife, Adelaide.
In 1914, the “Philadelphia
Inquirer” reported, “New Globe Theatre to Open Tomorrow” (May 31, 1914, page 25). Located on the corner of Market and
Juniper Streets, the seating capacity of the Globe Theatre was 2000, with a
stage, “equipped with every modern improvement in the line of gridiron,
lighting devices, scene shifting apparatus.”
The article noted that the stage also had a clearance of 30 by 50 feet,
noting that the Globe Theatre was “located in the shadow of City Hall and in the
heart of the business section.” It provided “a suitable place for those who,
with business finished still have an hour or two to while away recreation
before taking a train for home” (31 May, 1914, page 9). Of the theater, “The
Globe stage is large enough to accommodate the most pretentious of vaudeville
acts and the acoustic properties are such that in every nook and corner of the
building the audience will have no difficulty in hearing as well as seeing all that
is transpiring on the stage. A competent orchestra under the direction of
Charles Kitch, formerly of the Metropolitan Opera House, has been engaged and
the orchestral effects will be supplemented by a $15,000 pipe organ.”
The new Globe Theatre featured vaudeville
acts and motion pictures from 11:30AM until 11:30 PM daily. “Continuous vaudeville” was to prevail at the Globe;
with two complete shows every day. Prices for the matinees were 10, 20 and 30
cents, with loges and boxes at 50 cents.