Copyright © 2020 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett
In 1917, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Another ‘Katz’ show, $1,050.00, and one vaudeville act from Brazee $300.00, and from Banda Rosa for $445.00, a big act.” There were hundreds of projects that filtered thru the Sosman & Landis shops during 1917. We may have entered a war, but the theatrical business was still booming, having yet to feel the full effects. The three projects mentioned by Moses all hit the shops simultaneously that spring. Each project brought in a little more income to keep the stockholders happy.
I am going to start with Moses’ mention of a vaudeville act setting for J. C. Brazee.
In 1917, Sosman & Landis provided the scenery for Brazee’s production of “The Honey Bees.” The “Spokesman-Review” reported, “Brazee is a great believer not only on adequate but artistic scenery. His big set for ‘Honey Bees,’ for instance, is an interior of the ‘Honey Bee’ seminary with a flower garden in the rear. It is the work of Sosman & Landis, scenic artists of Chicago, and was painted for the act” (Spokane, Washington, 11 Nov. 1917, page 45). “The Victoria Daily Times” commented, “The most elaborate set is an interior view of the ‘Honey Bee Seminary’ with a flower garden in the rear, a scenic masterpiece of Sosman & Landis, of Chicago, which is winning high praise in every city visited” (4 Dec. 1917, page 8).
J. C. Brazee was a producer for the Pantages Circuit. On Oct. 15, 1917, the “Edmonton Journal” reported, “J. C. Brazee, a standby among producers who builds acts for the Pantages circuit, having sent out ‘Broadway Revue’ and ‘At Ocean Beach,’ both which scored big hits, has a new offering entitled ‘The Honey Bees,” which will headline the Pantages bill for this week. Mr. Brazee’s new offering is said to measure up to the high standard he established in the past as far as comedy and musical numbers go and is claimed to surpass anything of that kind yet offered at the Pantages theater in the way of scenery” (Edmonton, Alberta, page 11). This was likely the vaudeville act with scenery produced by Sosman & Landis that year. The article continued, “‘The Honey Bees’” is a novel introduction of bee titles into a program of a girl act in which the scenery is suggestive of the bee industry and a girl’s school is called the ‘Busy Bee Seminary.’ The chief comedian is styles the ‘King Bee’ the matron of the seminary is called the ‘Drone Bee,’ the prima donna is known as the ‘Queen Bee,’ the Soubrette as ‘Honey Bee,’ and the chorus of girls are ‘Busy Bees.’ The act lends itself to this novelty assignment of names inasmuch as the girls are ‘honies’ and theatregoers insist that if all vaudeville attractions were of equally high merit there would never be complaints of being ‘stung.’”
“The Daily Colonist” reported, “‘Honey Bees’” carries one lone man, completely surrounded by girls. The fortunate individual is Billy Browning, a comedian strange to Victoria, but well known in the East. All Browning has to do in ‘Honey Bees’ is to impersonate a mail carrier, a Swede Janitor, a stuttering ‘boob’ and a Frenchman — work enough for four men — yet Browning is said to negotiate all the roles without turning a hair” (May 12, 1917).
To be continued…