Related Archival Materials
Scope and Content of Collection
Processing History
Preferred Citation
Publication Rights
Access
Biographical/Historical Note
Arrangement
Acquisition Information
Contributing Institution: Special Collections
Title: Portraits of performers
Creator: Baker's Art Gallery
Identifier/Call Number: 2014.R.4
Physical Description: 7.4 Linear Feet(7 boxes)
Date (inclusive): 1870-1951, undated (bulk 1870-1935)
Date (bulk): 1870-1935
Abstract: The collection comprises 385 studio portraits dating from the 1870s to the 1930s of variety show artists including vaudeville,
burlesque, minstrel, and stage performers. The card-mounted portraits, primarily cabinet cards, depict sketch, character,
and comedic actors; singers; dancers; acrobats; gymnasts; contortionists; clowns; acrobatic cyclists; jugglers; aerialists
and trapeze and wire artists; ventriloquists; minstrel singers and players; comedians; male and female impersonators; strongmen
and strongwomen; show riders, and other performers hailing from and photographed across Europe, the United States, Egypt,
and Latin America.
Physical Location: Request access to the physical materials described in this inventory through the
catalog record for this collection. Click here for the
access policy .
Language of Material: Collection material is in English and French with some German.
Related Archival Materials
The Gustave Soury Collection at the Musée des civilisations de l'Europe et de la Méditerranée in Maresille (Museum of European
and Mediterranean Civilizations or MuCEM) holds duplicates or other images of many of the same sitters appearing in the photographs
in this collection. They are accessible by keyword search at http://www.culture.gouv.fr/documentation/phocem/accueil.htm.
Scope and Content of Collection
The collection comprises 385 studio portraits of variety show artists, including vaudeville, burlesque, minstrel, and other
stage performers, dating from the 1870s to the 1930s. The collection, which is fairly equally divided between American and
European performers, spans the heydays of what were known as music hall or variety show entertainments in England and the
European continent, and as vaudeville and American burlesque in the United States.
Depicted are sketch, character, and comedy actors; singers; dancers; acrobats; gymnasts; contortionists; clowns; acrobatic
cyclists; jugglers; aerialists and trapeze and wire artists; ventriloquists; minstrel singers and players performing in blackface;
comedians; male and female impersonators; strongmen and strongwomen; and show riders. Some of the later performers represented
in the collection, such as Bert Coote and Billy B. Van, made the transition from stage to film. Many of the specialized variety
artists were photographed in costume and holding props such as juggling pins, fans, and riding crops to signify their specialties.
Singers and actors tend to be photographed in street or evening clothes, although some of these performers are dressed as
the characters they were most well-known for portraying. Although sitters represented in the collection such as monologist
Frank Fogerty, the "Dublin Mistrel," who won the
New York Morning Telegraph's contest for most popular vaudeville actor in 1912; the actress Blanche Walsh; Nellie Doner, boy impersonator and later ballet
mistress of the New York Hippodrome; and comedian and White Rats vaudeville labor union leader, George B. Reno, may have been
household names at the time their portraits were taken and collected, their popularity has been long-eclipsed by ever more
recent entertainers, and today their names and acts are scarcely remembered.
Photographers hail from across the United States and Europe, with New York- and Paris-based photographers predominating respectively.
Most photographers represented in the collection were local or regional portrait photographers and are not well-known today.
European photographers of some note include George Henry Hana in London, Paul Boyer of Paris, and Wilhelm Scharmann in Berlin.
Present is one portrait by the Spanish photographer Jean (Juan) Laurent. The collection also includes a few portraits from
Latin American countries, notably Cuba and Argentina, and one by the Egyptian photographer G. Lékégian.
Many of the New York photographers represented in the collection were among those who had studios located on or near Broadway
and who were patronized by theater personnel. These include Otto Sarony; Joseph Hall; Theodore C. Marceau (who also had studios
in Philadelphia and Boston); Apeda Studio, and White Studio. Other areas of the United States with established theater districts
also had photography studios which drew a theatrical clientele. W. M. Morrison is among several Chicago photographers present
in the collection. San Francisco is represented by Elite Studio, Louis Thors, and other studios. Elmer Chickering had a studio
in Boston. A number of photographers in the collection hail from Ohio including Baker's Art Gallery in Columbus, which was
run by the photographer Lorenzo Martin.
Most of the portraits take the form of card mounted photographs, with the bulk being cabinet cards (approximately 6 1/2 x
4 inches), although the card sizes range from cartes-de-visite to boudoir cards, and from Paris and imperial cards to larger
mounted portraits. Also present are both photographic and photomechanical postcards, as well as a few unmounted photographic
prints. The type of card mount or mount dimensions are noted in the item-level scope and content notes. Unless otherwise noted,
the postcard format is 5 1/2 x 3 1/2 inches.There are two sets of similar or often identical brief French annotations written
on most of the versos of the photographs. Ballpoint ink annotations on most versos in French, often found on a brown paper
label, seem to have been written by the unknown collector who assembled the present collection. These annotations echo the
second set of annotations written in a shakier, more elderly hand. Additionally, parts of two distinct large collections are
present in the overall assembly. Series I hails from Edmund Desbonnet's Collection athlétique, while Series II originally
formed part of Mike Teller's collection of stage personalities and performers. Both of these collections were originally amassed
in the vaudeville era and later dispersed.
Series I contains 76 items that originally formed part of Edmond Desbonnet's Collection athlétique and they bear his collection
wet stamp. The portraits in this series were made by a wide variety of photographers, mostly European, although a few were
taken by American photographers. None of the portraits present here are known to have been taken by Desbonnet himself. The
sitters are European men and women who performed as gymnasts, acrobats, dancers, contortionists, equestrian acts, jugglers,
trapeze artists, acrobatic cyclists, clowns, and singers.
Series II comprises a small group of 22 portraits that originally formed part of Mike Teller's collection of theatrical portraits.
The items in this series were determined to have been part of Teller's collection based on the dedications they bear. The
photographers in this series are all American portrait photographers, primarily located in New York, Chicago, and Cincinnati,
Columbus, or Toledo, Ohio, although the work of quite a few regional photography studios is also represented. Most of the
sitters are American, although a few were of British birth. Present are actors, singers, comedians, and other variety artists.
Series III comprises 287 portraits that cannot be definitively assigned to either the Desbonnet or Teller collections due
to their lack of explicit dedications or collector's stamps, although some of the images included in the series could have
originally been part of either collection. Overall, the items in this series would seem to have been collected piecemeal by
the unknown collector. The series is further divided into three subseries: III.A Portraits of women; III.B Portraits of men;
and III.C Group portraits. The series comprises relatively equal numbers of portraits of American and European performers
taken by a proportionate number of American and European photographers. The American performers are primarily dramatic artists,
comedians, and singers while the European performers are more varied in their specialties which are of a broader gymnastic
or athletic nature. Also included in the series is one circus-related pamphlet entitled
The Call of the Calliope.
Many of the cards in Series I and III bear a talent agent's or agency's label or wet stamp on their verso. These include Agence
Rubini; C. M. Ercole; E. de Rasim; Emmanuel Roche; E. Schlax; Richard Warner; J. D. Marcadet; E. Perrìer; Staveau & Wilson;
G. Hoffman American Star Agency; and the Globe Amusement Association. The presence of these agency markings is noted in the
scope and content notes for the individual items. The physical descriptions and imprints of the most prevalent agencies are
as follows:
Agence Rubini labels are buff with lines left for Nom, Genre, Libre and Conditions. The label imprint reads: Agence Rubini
/ Ex-Regisseur-Général / des / Deux Cirques / 117, boulevard Richard Lenoir, 117 / Paris / Adresse télégraphique / Agence
Rubini, Paris. This adddress is crossed out and new address stamped in purple ink: 12, Boulevard du Temple, 12. Some cards
bear only an Agence Rubini wet stamp with the later address on their versos: Agence Rubini / 12, boule du Temple / Paris.
The C. M. Ercole labels are green with lines left for Genre, No[m], and Adresse to be filled in. The label imprint is as follows:
C. M. Ercole / Théâtres / Concerts & cirques / 8 rue de Port-Mahon 8 / Paris / Adresse télégraphique / Ercole-Paris. Also
sometimes present is a purple wet stamp reading either: Théâtres - concerts / cirques /C. M. Ercole / 8, rue de Port-Mahon,
8 / Paris, or: Ercole / 22 chaussée d'Antin / Paris /théâtres / concerts / cirques.
The purple Schlax wet stamp reads: Agence générale / artistique / E. Schlax / 37, ruede Trévise, / Paris.
The purple wet stamps for Roche read either: Emmanuel Roche/ Agent for variety artistes / 72, rue du Château-d'Eau, 72 / Paris;
or: Cirques-variétés / A. E. Roche / 72, rue du Château-d'eau, 72 / Paris.
The Warner wet stamp reads: Richard Warner Cie, Ltd. / Agence internationale / pour théâtres / music halls et concerts / 45
rue Richer, 45 / Paris.
The Marcadet wet stamp reads: Théâtres, concerts, cirques, music-halls / J. D. Marcadet / Imprésario / [various dates] /Correspondances
en toutes langues / Agences succursales: Bruxelles, Londres, Berlin / 4,rue de l'Échiquier, 4 - Paris. Variant wet stamps
are noted under the portrait on which they appear.
The Perríer stamp reads: E. Perríer / Agence théâtrale internationale / 20 bould. St. Denis / Paris.
Staveau & Wilson wet stamp reads: Staveau & Wilson / Agence artistique / 19, rue d'Enghien, 19 / Paris.[telephone] 1524.
The individual items in the collection were numbered prior to final arrangement. Thus, while items are sequentially filed
within each box, the arrangement in the finding aid is not sequential.
Processing History
Processed by B. Karenina Karyadi, who also began the finding aid, under the supervision of Beth Ann Guynn in 2014. Finding
aid written by Beth Ann Guynn and Linda Kleiger in 2016.
Preferred Citation
Portraits of performers, 1870-1962, undated, The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, Accession no. 2014.R.4.
http://hdl.handle.net/10020/cifa2014r4
Publication Rights
Access
Open for use by qualified researchers.
Biographical/Historical Note
The present collection was assembled by an unknown collector or collectors. It was formerly part of the Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center collection, where it had been donated in 1998 by Mark Story. It is not known how Story obtained the collection or whether
he was in any way responsible for its assembly. There are two sets of similar or often identical brief French annotations
written on most of the versos of the photographs. One set is written in a shakier hand, often in pencil and could belong to
the original assembler. The second set is written, usually in ballpoint pen, on brown paper labels adhered to the versos.
These appear to be the more recent annotations. Parts of two distinct large collections are present in the overall assembly.
One group hails from Edmund Desbonnet's Collection athlétique, and the other from Mike Teller's collection of stage personalities
and performers, both of which were originally amassed in the vaudeville era. The remainder of the items would seem to have
been collected piecemeal by the unknown collector(s).
A French academic, photographer, gymnast, and fitness theorist and instructor, Edmond Desbonnet (1868-1952), was an early
proponent of the physical culture movement that was a response both to the perceived decadence of the Belle Époque and to
the physical weakness that France's recent loss of Alsace-Lorraine to Germany seemed to signal. Desbonnet was the creator
of the eponymously-named méthode Desbonnet of gymnastics and founder of a chain of physical culture or fitness centers, opening
his first rooms in Lille in 1895 and then in locations such as Roubaix, Paris, Geneva, and Brussels. Using the slogan "Santé,
Beauté, Force," his method was based on analytical exercises, weightlifting, and stretching.
Desbonnet authored numerous books on physical culture including his most well-known volume
Les rois de la force, histoire de tous les hommes forts depuis les temps anciens jusqu'à nos jours (1911), and published five journals on the subject, the most popular of which were
La culture physique and
La santé par les sports. He was the first person to use photography to illustrate fitness methods, and his stereographs, along with stereo viewers,
were available for purchase through his magazines.
A sickly child, Desbonnet was required to perform gymnastic exercises as part of his treatment. When still a boy he found
his first photograph of a strongman, which spurred his interest in collecting images of athletes. These athletes were often
performers - strongmen and strongwomen, acrobats, gymnasts, and jugglers - in vaudeville shows, cabarets, and theaters. Desbonnet
amassed a large collection of perhaps thousands of photographs. Little is known of the history of his Collection athlétique
and its ultimate dispersal.
Michael "Mike" Teller was the proprietor of the Teller Theatrical Hotel in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a business that he
founded in 1871 and ran until his death in 1914. The hotel or boarding house, ultimately located at 701 Vine Street, was the
temporary or seasonal residence for innumerable theatrical "artistes" passing through Philadelphia during the heyday of American
variety theater. Teller, Civil War veteran-turned-hotelier, was apparently much beloved by his guests. Following in the tradition
of collecting celebrity portraits that had begun with the carte-de-visite craze in the 1860s, he amassed somewhere between
1,800 and 2,000 photographs, most of which hung in his hotel in large frames containing between 100 and 300 portraits each.
He received most of the portraits directly from his guests, who usually wrote dedications to him across the photographic image
or on the mount. Philadelphia's
Evening Public Ledger noted in a brief obituary published the day after Teller's death that, "His autographed pictures of old-time stage favorites
is considered a rare collection, of which he often boasted" (26 December 1914).
Teller's Theatrical Hotel closed at the end of May, 1915. Teller had bequeathed his collection to the comedian Billy B. Van,
who was one of Teller's first guests and a life-long friend. Van moved the collection to Georges Mills, New Hampshire, and
installed it in the Van Harbor Casino Movie Company, his own moving picture studio. The collection was apparently dispersed
at some later date and its subsequent whereabouts have remained unknown to the cataloger.
Sources consulted for Edmond Desbonnet:
Early Visual Media, Photography section, "Early French Culture Physique Photography: Professor Edmond Desbonnet," ©2003, http://users.telenet.be/thomasweynants/culturephysique.html.
Legendary Strength, Stongman Mastery section; "Edmond Desbonnet," October 18, 2013, http://legendarystrength.com/edmond-desbonnet.
Sources consulted for Mike Teller:
New York Clipper. "Mike Teller Dead," January 2, 1915, p.10.
Philadelphia Record. "Famous Hostelry is Discontinued," June 6, 1915, p. 3.
Public Ledger (Philadelphia). "Michael Teller," December 26, 1914, p.15.
Arrangement
Arranged in three series: Series I. Desbonnet collection, 1889-1906, undated; Series II. Mike Teller collection, 1886-1909,
undated; Series III. Other entertainers and personalities, 1870-1951, undated.
Acquisition Information
Gift of Advisory Council for the Arts of Cedars Sinai Medical Center. Acquired in 2013.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Jugglers
Gymnasts
Entertainers
Dancers
Clowns
Musicians
Show riders
Singers
Animal trainers
Aerialists
Acrobats
Studio portraits -- 19th century
Collotypes -- 19th century
Cartes-de-visite (card photographs) -- 19th century
Gelatin silver prints -- 19th century
Collodion prints -- 19th century
Group portraits -- 19th century
Gelatin silver prints -- 20th century
Photographic postcards -- 19th century
Picture postcards -- 19th century
Group portraits -- 20th century
Ventriloquists
Boudoir photographs
Albumen prints -- 19th century
Carbon prints -- 19th century
Cabinet photographs -- 19th century
Card photographs (photographs) -- 20th century
Card photographs (photographs) -- 19th century
Actresses
Photographs, Original
Imperial photographs -- 19th century
Picture postcards -- 20th century
Platinum prints -- 19th century
Comedians
Studio portraits -- 20th century
Relief halftones (prints) -- 19th century
Actors
Photographic postcards -- 20th century
Male actors
Lékégian, G.
Desbonnet, Edmond
Teller, Mike (Michael)
Laurent y Minier, Jean, 1816-1886
Sarony, Otto
Hana, George Henry
Chickering, Elmer
Fogerty, Frank
Hall, Joseph, (Photographer)
Reno, George B.
Doner, Nellie Mordecai
Marceau, Theodore C., 1859-1922
Coote, Bert (Albert)
Van, Billy B.
Morrison, W. M. (William McKenzie), 1857-1927
Apeda Studio (New York, N.Y.)
Thors, Louis
Elite (Photographic firm)
Boyer, Paul, active 1900-1909
Walsh, Blanche, 1873-1915
White Studio (New York, N.Y.)