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EXHIBITION
CHECKLIST AND CASE CAPTIONS FOR ‘SOME SORT OF SOMEBODY’:
OHIOAN ELSIE JANIS ON THE STAGE AND IN THE TRENCHES
Physical
exhibition shown in The Philip Sills Exhibit Hall, The William Oxley
Thompson Memorial Library, The Ohio State University Libraries, 6
January – 14 April 2003.
Throughout Ohio’s history, the performing arts in many
forms have enriched the lives of its citizens, and Ohioans have worked in
the performing arts in numerous capacities. The Ohio State University
Libraries’ collections document many professionals in the performing
arts, native-born or with strong Ohio connections, such as the playwriting
team of Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee; actors from the touring
Harmount Uncle Tom’s Cabin Company, and more recently Eileen
Heckart, Robert Post, and Gigi Rice; critics Marianne Evett, Michael
Grossberg, E. B. Radcliffe, and Sam Wilson; opera singer Ruby Elzy;
entertainment writer Earl Wilson; playwrights Tom Eyen, Ed Graczyk,
Adrienne Kennedy, and Don Nigro; James Thurber whose writings included
theatrical work; choreographers Bebe Miller and Randy Skinner;
comedian/writers Richard Lewis and Bruce Vilanch; designers Mathias
Armbruster who founded the Armbruster Scenic Studio in 1875, and
Toni-Leslie James, to mention only a few. In celebration of the
Bicentennial of the State of Ohio, this exhibition honors one Ohioan,
Elsie Janis – child actor, vaudevillian, stage and film performer,
writer, director, song-writer – to represent the many performing artists
with Ohio ties.
Elsie Janis (1889-1956), born
Elsie Jane Bierbower to Jennie and John Bierbower in Columbus, first
entertained at the age of 2 ½ in various church activities at Dr.
Washington Gladden’s First Congregational Church at the northwest corner
of Broad and Third. Janis’s career in the performing arts was long and
varied – from her childhood when she began doing imitations of
celebrities, to vaudeville, to her starring roles on the stages of New
York, London, and Paris, to the battlefield where she entertained troops
in France and England during World War I, to Hollywood where she acted,
wrote for film, and supervised productions. From her teen years on, Janis
wrote songs for herself and for others as well as a number of books,
magazine articles, and poems. Janis’s mother Jennie was, until her death
in 1930, Elsie’s constant companion and manager, and was known as one of
show business’s most infamous stage mothers.
While her career took her away from Columbus, Janis
always had a fondness for Ohio and Columbus. The El-Jan Shack, the house
that she herself owned was on the northeast corner of 18th
Avenue and High Street across from The Ohio State University campus and,
at that time in the early 1920s, the athletic field. She signed her first
contract as an adult with the great producer Charles Dillingham on the
porch of the El-Jan Shack. Janis came back many summers to rest from her
hectic professional stage and travel schedules, and to visit with
relatives. Janis was always proud to be an Ohioan. As she often shouted to
the troops she entertained in France in 1918, "Do I come from Ohio?
By Damn Yes!"
"Elsie Janis" in The American Stage of
To-day: Biographies and Photographs of One Hundred Leading Actors and
Actresses. Introduction by William Winter. New York: P. F. Collier
& Son, 1910.
Little Elsie Becomes Elsie Janis: from singing for
Governor and Mrs. William McKinley to Broadway
Janis’s debut on a professional stage came in 1896 at
age seven when she appeared at Columbus’s Southern Theatre in East
Lynne. During her childhood years, Janis entertained Governor William
McKinley and Mrs. McKinley at the Neil House, singing such songs as
"Break the News to Mother," a favorite of the Governor’s.
Following his election to the presidency of the United States, the
McKinleys remembered Janis, bringing her to sing in the Blue Room of the
White House for Christmas 1899.
Janis’s New York debut was delayed by the Society for
the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, a child protection agency that
actively enforced child labor laws. Janis’s mother found other bookings
for her, alternating vaudeville with summer park theatres, and with
touring productions such as The Fortune Tellers by Victor Herbert.
An important opportunity came in 1905 when Janis replaced Anna Held for
the tour of Florenz Ziegfeld’s The Little Duchess. During this
tour, Janis turned sixteen and was offered her first Broadway script, The
Vanderbilt Cup. That success was followed by another – The Hoyden
(1907) – setting Elsie Janis on her way to fame and salaries that could
have brought her fortune had her mother been a better manager.
Photographs of Elsie Janis alone and one photograph with
her mother. Photographers include the Baker Art Gallery, Columbus, Ohio,
and the Otto Sarony Co.
Sheet music: "Break the News to Mother" with
words and music by Charles K. Harris (Milwaukee: Harris, 1897). Sung by
Janis as a child to Governor and Mrs. William McKinley.
The Little Duchess
Janis replaced Anna Held in the tour of this Florenz
Ziegfeld production.
Sheet music: "My June-Time Rose" with
words by John W. Kemble, music by Lester W. Keith (New York: Witmark,
1914).
The Vanderbilt Cup
Postcards: Janis in The
Vanderbilt Cup
Sheet music: "My House Boat Beau" with words
by Raymond W. Peck, music by Robert Hood Bowers (New York: Remick,
1906).
The Hoyden
Sheet music: "Graetchen" with words and
music by John L. Golden (New York: Remick, 1907); "You Want Someone
to Love You" with words by Harry Williams, music by Egbert Van
Alstyne (New York: Remick, 1908).
Postcard: Janis in The Hoyden.
Elsie in New York and on the Road: starring in The
Fair Co-Ed, The Slim Princess, and The
Lady of the Slipper
According to the Columbus Citizen (21 October
1908), "The Fair Co-Ed is the best vehicle Elsie Janis ever
had…Elsie makes her first appearance in a red cape and a student cap,
and satirizes Portia’s merry speech in defending a ‘conned’ student.
In the second act she makes a stunning ‘boy’ masquerading as a naval
lieutenant. In the third act… a football song is wonderfully well done
and is predicted to make a hit with the O.S.U. contingent. Miss Janis
appears more graceful and to better advantage as a dancer than ever
before." Popular in New York as well as Columbus, The Fair Co-Ed
led to her next success, The Slim Princess, produced for Janis by
the great producer Charles Dillingham. The Slim Princess was a
landmark for Janis as the first show that featured her as a
composer/lyricist, including her song "For the Lord’s Sake, Play a
Waltz" which she also recorded. The Lady of the Slipper in
which Janis starred with Dave Montgomery and Fred Stone (arguably the most
popular music comedy team of their time) marked the beginning of Janis’s
acquaintance with composer Victor Herbert.
Photograph of Janis
Magazine cover illustration of Janis: The Theatre
(December 1909: 106).
The Fair Co-Ed
Magazine article: "Scenes in Geo. Ade’s New
Comedy The Fair Co-Ed at the Knickerbocker. Act I. The Gathering
of the College Boys; Act II. Cynthia (Elsie Janis) finds a fight on her
hands." The Theatre (March 1909: 93).
Sheet music: "Leave It to the Boys in the
Navy" with words by George Ade, music by Gustav Luders (New York:
Witmark, 1908).
Program: cover advertising Janis in The Fair Co-Ed,
the Southern Theatre, Columbus, Ohio, 1910.
The Slim Princess
Sheet music: "Let Me Live and Stay in
Dixieland" with words and music by Elizabeth Brice and Charles
King (New York: Snyder, 1910); "For the Lord’s Sake Play a
Waltz" with words and music by Elsie Janis (New York: Harms &
Francis, 1912); "Bless Your Ever Loving Little Heart" with
words by Stanley Murphy, music by Henry I. Marshall (New York: Witmark,
1912).
Program: cover advertising Janis in The Slim
Princess, the Hartman Theatre, Columbus, Ohio, 1912.
The Lady of the Slipper
Sheet music: "Like a Real, Real Man" with
words by James O’Dea, music by Victor Herbert (1912).
Souvenir program: The Lady of the Slipper.
Program: The Lady of the Slipper, the Hartman
Theatre, 1914.
Elsie Janis: songwriter, charter member of the American Society of
Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP)
Janis’s earliest published song, "I’d Rather
Love What I Cannot Have, Than Have What I Cannot Love," marked the
addition of songwriter to her growing credits. She wrote songs for herself
and her productions as well as music not specifically related to the shows
in which she was appearing. Because of her growing body of work, including
the popular vaudeville song "Anti Rag-Time Girl" (1912), Janis
joined a distinguished group of writers and publishers to become a charter
member of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers
(ASCAP) founded by Victor Herbert in 1914. Janis enjoyed collaborations
with some of the most important songwriters of her day including Irving
Berlin and Jerome Kern.
Photographs of Janis
Sheet music:
"I’d Rather Love What I Cannot Have Than Have
What I Cannot Love" with words and music by Elsie Janis (New York:
Remick, 1911). Janis’s earliest published song.
"Anti Rag-Time Girl" with words and music by
Elsie Janis (New York: Remick, 1913).
"The Castle Walk Song" with words by Elsie
Janis, music by Wm. E. MacQuinn (New York: Remick, 1914).
"Some Sort of Somebody" with words by Elsie
Janis, music by Jerome Kern.
From Very Good Eddie (New York: T. B. Harms, and
Francis, Day & Hunter, 1915); as sung by Mlle. Regine Flory and Nelson
Keys in Alfred Butt’s Palace Theatre production Vanity Fair
(London: Francis, Day & Hunter, 1915); from Miss Information (New
York: T. B. Harms and Francis, Day & Hunter, 1915).
"A Little Love (But Not for Me)" with words by
Elsie Janis, music by Jerome Kern.
As sung by Janis in Miss Information (New York:
T. B. Harms and Francis, Day & Hunter, 1915); as sung by Mlle. Regine
Flory in Alfred Butt’s Palace Theatre production Vanity Fair
(London: Francis, Day & Hunter, 1915).
"I Never Knew." Words by Elsie Janis, music by
Irving Berlin (New York: Irving Berlin, Inc., 1919).
Elsie Before and After the War: The Passing Show, It’s All Wrong, Elsie Janis and Her Gang
Janis made her debut in London in April 1914 where she
became a hit in the first of Alfred Butt’s series of revues, The
Passing Show, at the Palace Theatre. She had a huge success with
"Florrie Was a Flapper" which she considered the best song ever
written for her. In London she renewed her acquaintance with actor Basil
Hallam with whom she appeared in The Passing Show of 1914 and 1915.
These trips to England were a heady time: professionally because her
performances were extremely successful; personally because of the growing
affection she and Hallam (who died in uniform in 1916) shared; and
politically because she was caught up in the European war effort.
Following the war, Janis maintained her commitment to the fighting men to
whom she had become so attached. Charles Dillingham agreed to produce Elsie
Janis and Her Gang, a revue which Janis created for returned
out-of-work soldiers, some of whom she had entertained during the war.
Even though she was told no one wanted to hear about the war any more, the
Gang was a success, due, according to Janis, to "the boys [who] were
the real thing and the public realised it from the moment they stuck their
heads through the curtain…."
The Passing Show of 1914
(Palace Theatre, London)
Sheet music: "Florrie the Flapper" sung by
Elsie Janis. Words by Arthur Wimperis, music by Herman Finck (London:
Francis, Day & Hunter, 1914); "I’ve Got Everything I Want
But You" sung by Elsie Janis and Basil Hallam. Words and music by
Marion Sunshine, Charles Wilmott and Henry I. Marshall (London:
Francis, Day & Hunter, 1914).
The Passing Show of 1915
(Palace Theatre, London).
Sheet music: "The Same Old Song" duet sung
by Elsie Janis and Basil Hallam. Words by Arthur Wimperis and Hartley
Carrick, music by Herman Finck (London: Hawkes & Son, 1915).
Program: It’s All Wrong: A Musical Complaint
(Queen’s Theatre, London, 1920). Book, lyrics, some music, direction
by Elsie Janis who also performed.
Elsie Janis and Her Gang
Sheet music: "The Bonus Blues." Words by
Elsie Janis, music by Carey Morgan and Arthur Swanstrom (Irving Berlin,
Inc., 1922); "I’ve Waited All My Life." Words and music by
Elsie Janis. (Irving Berlin Inc, 1922); "Apres la Guerre."
Words and music by B. C. Hilliam. (M. Witmark & Sons, 1917);
"Just a Little After Taps." Words by Richard Fechheimer, music
by William Kernell. (London: Chappell & Co., Ltd., 1918).
Theatre Magazine cover and
photographic features on Elsie Janis (March 1917, July 1919, May 1922)
Elsie after the Gang
The period following the war and after Elsie Janis
and Her Gang was hard for Janis. Her assessment in her autobiography So
Far, So Good! was, "[T]he war was my high spot and I think there
is only one real peak in each life!" The experience of entertaining
the troops had been exhilarating, and she still found the excitement when
veterans were in her civilian audiences. As the years went by, however,
the veterans were fewer and fewer, and the excitement much less. In
addition to Elsie Janis and Her Gang, she appeared in The
Follies of 1921 and Puzzles of 1925. She returned to London and
Paris periodically through the 1920s for It’s All Wrong which
Janis wrote, directed and acted in, and revues (Elsie Janis at Home,
La Revue d’Elsie Janis). As her stage appearances became less
frequent, Janis continued writing and songwriting, and moved into
production supervision with such shows as New Faces of 1934. Her
final Broadway appearance was Frank Fay’s Show in 1939 with Eva
Le Gallienne, whom, as a young actress, Janis had mentored.
Photograph of Janis with pearls
Miss 1917
Sheet music: "The Land Where the Good Songs
Go" sung by Elsie Janis. Words by P. G. Wodehouse and Guy Bolton,
music by Jerome Kern (New York: T. B. Harms Co., 1917.
The Follies of 1921
Sheet music: "All the World Is Wonderful"
with words by Elsie Janis, music by W. B. Kernell (London: Chappell
& Co., Ltd., 1921).
Autograph: Elsie Janis
Elsie and the Movies: actor,
writer, director, songwriter
Janis did film work in the early years of the medium
beginning with The Caprices of Kitty, Betty in Search of a
Thrill, Nearly a Lady, and Twas Ever Thus, writing the
screenplays and acting in all four (Bosworth Studios, 1915). After her
return to the United States following the war, Janis did several films for
Selznick Pictures, including A Regular Girl (1919) for which she
wrote the screenplay, co-wrote the title song, and acted. Janis recognized
that she performed best with a live audience, and in later years her work
was behind the scenes rather than in front of the camera. She wrote screen
treatments and songs for films, as well as served as production supervisor
for such projects as Paramount on Parade. Her film music writing
included such songs as "Love Your Spell is Everywhere,"
originally sung by Gloria Swanson and later recorded by Peggy Lee, and
"Oh Give Me Time for Tenderness" sung by Vera Van for the Bette
Davis film Dark Victory.
Nearly a Lady, The Caprices
of Kitty; and Betty in Search of a Thrill
Magazine: Paramount Magazine, March 1915.
Paramount Pictures advertisement: in The Saturday
Evening Post, 7 August 1915: 40.
Paramount Pictures advertisement: in The Ladies’
Home Journal, September 1915: 46.
A Regular Girl, Louis Selznick
Pictures (1919)
Sheet music: "A Regular Girl." Words by
Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby, music by Elsie Janis (New York: Waterson,
Berlin & Snyder Co., 1919)
Button: Booster American Legion and Elsie Janis in A
Regular Girl.
Lobby cards: "Selznick presents Elsie Janis in A
Regular Girl." On loan from the Richard E. Teichert
Collection, The Cartoon Research Library, The Ohio State University
Libraries.
The Imp
Selznick Pictures advertisement for The Imp in Monsieur
Beaucaire program (New Amsterdam Theatre, 1919).
Elsie Janis: Inspiration, Author
While she is little remembered today, Janis was one of
the most popular stars of her time as can be seen by the number of works
dedicated to her. Most honored Janis the public performer, but "Don’t
Wait Too Long" was written by Irving Berlin to Janis after she turned
down another proposal of marriage from one of her many admirers. Janis was
perhaps most proud of the recognition that came to her for her war work,
especially from veterans.
Janis began writing very early in her career, not only
songs and scripts, but individual poems as well as the collection, Poems
Now and Then. In 1911 she published A Star for a Night: A Story of
Stage Life, a novel adapted from her play of the same name. She
published her first autobiography in 1919, The Big Show: My Six Months
with the American Expeditionary Forces and followed up in 1932 with So
Far, So Good!. Beginning in the 1930s, as she moved from performing to
writing and production, Janis wrote a number of articles for various
magazines, drawing from her friendships and working relationships with
many stars such as John Barrymore and Helen Hayes.
.
Sheet music dedications: "The Girl You Can’t
Forget" sung by the stars of Vod’vil. Words and music by W. R.
Williams (Chicago:
Will Rossiter, 1906); "If You Were I, and I
Were You." Words and music by Daniel Orin Hubbard (Columbus,
Ohio: D. O. Hubbard, 1908); "Was That Somebody You?" Words,
author unknown, music by Francesa Porter Ross (New York: Fraser Ross
Company, 1922); "Don’t Wait Too Long" by Irving Berlin
(New York: Irving Berlin, Inc., 1925).
Loving cup presented to Janis by the American Legion,
Detroit, Michigan, 1923
Janis Real Human Hair Net. Double Cap. Lazarus. Named in
Janis’s honor
Books by Janis:
The Big Show: My Six Months with the American
Expeditionary Forces. New York: Cosmopolitan
Book Corporation, 1919.
Love Letters of an Actress.
New York; London: D. Appleton and Company, 1913. On loan from Rare Books
and Manuscripts, The Ohio State University Libraries.
Poems Now and Then: Dedicated to My Friends.
[Colorado Springs: Gowdy Printing & Engraving Co., 190-].
A Star for a Night: A Story of Stage Life;
with pictures from the play taken especially for the book. New York:
William Rickey & Company, 1911.
Elsie Janis: songs she sang as "Sweetheart of the
A.E.F"
Janis’s involvement in World War I began in 1914 in
London where she watched England’s young men march off singing "It’s
a Long Way to Tipperary." Back in the States, she created a
vaudeville act that doubled as a recruiting tool – she created
imitations of stars who were all singing patriotic songs – Eddie Foy,
Sarah Bernhardt, Will Rogers, Ethel Barrymore, ending with George M. Cohan
doing "Over There." Following the U.S. entry into the war, Janis
left for France where she entertained American, British, French, and
Canadian troops from truck backs and table tops, on the road, in camps and
hospitals, in mud and rain. She sang multiple shows a day, always trying
to reach more men far from home with her customary greeting, "Are we
downhearted? No!" A highlight for Janis was finding troops from Ohio
who welcomed her with the Ohio State University yell "Wah hoo, Wah
hoo, Rip, Zip, Bazoo, I yell like Hell, O.S.U." The men of the
American Expeditionary Forces, from privates to generals including
Pershing, were indeed heartened by Janis’s funny, gutsy, touching,
patriotic act, and named her "Sweetheart of the A.E.F."
Sheet music:
"It’s a Long, Long Way to
Tipperary."
Words and music by Jack Judge and Harry Williams (New York: Chappell
& Co., Ltd., 1914)
"It’s a Long Way to Dear Old Broadway."
Words and music by Ernest Breuer (New York: Leo. Feist Inc., 1918)
"The Jazz Band" from Hullo America!
Words by Elsie Janis, music by Elsie Janis and Dan Kildare. (London:
Ascherberg, Hopwoods & Crew Ltd. B. Feldman & Co., 1918).
Postcard of Janis in Hullo America. With back cover listing
other Hullo America! songs.
"Over There" with cover by Norman Rockwell.
Words and music by George M. Cohan (New York: Leo. Feist Inc., 1917)
"When Yankee Doodle Learns to ‘Parlez Vous
Français.’" Words by Will. Hart, music by Ed. Nelson (New
York: A. J. Strasny Music Co., 1917)
"Give Me the Moonlight, Give Me the Girl and
Leave the Rest to Me." Words by Lew Brown, music by Albert Von
Tilzer (New York: Broadway Music Corp., 1917)
"Just a Little Touch of Paris." Words by
Richard Fechheimer, music by W. B. Kernell (New York: T. B. Harms and
Francis, Day & Hunter, 1919)
"Ooh La La I’m Having a Wonderful Time."
Words by Bud Green, music by Ed. Nelson (New York: A. J. Stasny Music
Co., 1918)
"I Don’t Want to Get Well." Words by
Harry Pease and Howard Johnson, music by Harry Jentes (New York: Leo.
Feist Inc., 1917)
"Are We Downhearted? No! No! No!" Sheet
music: Words by Ray Sherwood, music by Will Donaldson (New York. F. B.
Haviland Pub. Co., 1917) with postcard: "Are we downhearted? No,
We’re too busy training."
"Just a Little After Taps." Words by
Richard Fechheimer, music by William Kernell (London: Chappell &
Co. Ltd., 1918) with postcard of Janis in helmet.
Theatre Magazine photographic feature on Elsie Janis
(January 1920)
The contents of this exhibition are drawn from the Elsie
Janis Collection of the Laura M. Mueller British and American Theatre and
Film Collections, with additional materials from the Jerome Lawrence and
Robert E. Lee Theatre Research Institute, the Cartoon Research Library,
and Rare Books and Manuscripts.
The Theatre Research Institute is grateful to Ms.
Mueller for the use of her research notes and draft manuscript for her
biography of Elsie Janis currently in progress. Historian, author, and
collector Laura M. Mueller is a life-long resident of Columbus, having
attended St. Joseph Academy and The Ohio State University. She has
published articles in Films in Review, for publications of numerous
organizations including the British Compact Collectors Society, the
International Perfume Bottle Association, Remember That Song Sheet Music
Organization, the Ohioana Library, and the Newberry Library, and was
responsible for writing film notes for the outstanding Ohio Theatre Summer
Classic Film Series. Her two-volume Encyclopedia of Compacts, Carryalls
& Face Powder Boxes has been recognized as a major resource in
this field and has enjoyed an international distribution. Ms. Mueller has
published an article on Columbus’s Baker Art Gallery’s photographic
history, and currently is working on 100 Years of Columbus
Photographers. She has long been involved in the arts both
professionally with the Ohio Arts Council and the Columbus Association for
the Performing Arts, and personally through her collecting interests which
have included the Stratford Festival of Canada and British and American
actors including Elsie Janis, Van Johnson, Laurence Olivier, Anthony
Quayle and others. In addition, Ms. Mueller has built significant
collections on Columbus history through postcards, sheet music, and
photographs. Her collections reside in the Newberry Library, the Ohioana
Library, the Columbus Metropolitan Library, and the Ohio State University
Libraries.
The Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee Theatre Research
Institute would like to acknowledge the following who have made
contributions to the exhibition and to the development of the Janis
collection: Harry Campbell, Lucy Caswell, Raimund Goerler, Sandy Marrone,
Val Pennington, Donald J. Stubblebine, Shannon Tippie.
Nena Couch
Curator, The Lawrence and Lee
Theatre Research Institute
The Jerome Lawrence and Robert
E. Lee Theatre Research Institute
The Ohio State University
1430 Lincoln Tower
1800 Cannon Drive
Columbus, OH 43210
614-292-6614
614-688-8417, fax
http://www.lib.ohio-state.edu/triweb/
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