Vaudeville & Folk
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London’s Grand Guignol and the Theatre of Horror
London’s Grand Guignol was established in the early 1920s at the Little Theatre in the West End It was a high-profile venture that enjoyed popular success as much as critical controversy On its…
May I Have the Pleasure?
The long awaited reprint of Belinda Quirey’s famous history of the development of social dancing, from its origins in the ancient ring dances of antiquity to the teenager’s beat dancing of…
More Variety Days - A collection of Memories from Fairs & Music Hall & Variety
More Variety Days follows the success of Those Variety Days and offers another another collection of vivid showbiz memories. Spanning two centuries, it starts with early 19C Fairs & Fit-ups and ends with…
Mosley Street Melodramas - Volume ONE
3 Male, 3 Female
With the Mosley Street Melodramas you’ll sigh for the dainty Heroine, cheer for the righteous Hero, and boo and hiss the dastardly Villain But these ain’t your Gramma’s melodramas! These hysterical, audience-participation…
Mosley Street Melodramas - Volume TWO
3 Male, 3 Female
The laughs never stop with this collection of four Holiday themed Melodramas No holds are barred as television favorites to some traditional Christmas classics get skewered in these light-hearted parodies…
New York City Vaudeville
New York City Vaudeville provides a unique pictorial record of America’s preeminent entertainment medium in the late 1800s through the early 1930s New York’s Palace Theatre served as the flagship…
No Applause - Just Throw Money - The Book That Made Vaudeville Famous
A seriously funny look at the roots of American Entertainment When Groucho Marx and Charlie Chaplin were born, variety entertainment had been going on for decades in America, and like Harry Houdini, Milton…
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