Beyond the Jersey Shore: 1920s Snapshots From a Chorus Girl's Scrapbook

Today's guest blog is by Suzanne Lipkin, who processed the Marion Lichtman Setlowe papers for the Billy Rose Theatre Division at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.

Marion Lichtman, 1920'sMarion Lichtman, 1920'sFriday April 9, 1926 I left Atlantic City to go on the road. I was in Second Year High School. I was 16 years of age on March 25, 1926. I joined the Dancing Debs. at Levoy Theatre, Milville, NJ.

So begins the scrapbook of a young Marion Lichtman as she embarked on a series of vaudeville tours that would take her across the country and back again. Marion meticulously recorded her tour schedules alongside newspaper clippings and programs of her performances with the Dancing Debutantes and the Shuron de Vries Revue. Her labor of love in carefully pasting in mementos and writing memories may not have made for an optimally preserved archival scrapbook, but it brings us her genuine excitement of being young and on tour decades later to generations that have never seen live vaudeville.

“Great bunch of fellows. Great F U N!” she writes of the Vincent Lopez Hotel Statler Dance Orchestra, which shared the bill with the Shuron de Vries Revue in their third week on the Pantages Circuit in Toronto. “Wonderful week!” is written on many a scrapbook page and, on the occasion of her 17th birthday, she simply could not contain her joy: “I also posed for my first professional pictures and oh! I was so H A P P Y.”

The Shuron de Vries Revue. Marion is marked with the X,circa 1926-1927The Shuron de Vries Revue. Marion is marked with the X,
circa 1926-1927
 

The Shuron de Vries Revue, described in the Reading Eagle newspaper as an “elaborate dancing musical comedy skit with seven girls and one man,” set off on the Pantages Circuit in January 1927. Pantages tours began in Canada and traveled to many of the 80+ theatres owned or operated by Alexander Pantages in Canada and the western United States. The tour undoubtedly served as a springboard for Marion’s own brief but exciting career. By the following year, she had her own billing as a dancer on a number of programs touring the East Coast and, in 1929, she joined the cast of the Broadway revue Good News, where she met her future husband, Ernest Setlowe.

NYPL received the Marion Lichtman Setlowe papers from her daughter Karen. In addition to the scrapbook, the collection includes a photograph album depicting Marion’s offstage adventures in the cities she visited on the Pantages Circuit. From hijinks with the young male performers also on tour, to poses of bathing beauties by the sea in California, the girls of the Shuron de Vries Revue appear to be having the time of their lives, and why wouldn’t they? It is hard to imagine an equivalent opportunity for the talented high schoolers of today, except perhaps the few who “make it” on reality TV competitions.

As vaudeville left a lasting impression on the teenage Marion, a stack of autographed photographs from fellow performers shows the impression she made on them. The latest dated photograph, from 1933—as her performing career gave way to starting a family—sums up her effect on others: “If all girls were as sweet and charming as you, this would be a great world.” Though neither vaudeville nor Marion’s performing days would last much longer, her papers provide an invaluable entrée into the magical world of the touring stage revue, as seen through the eyes of a young girl from the Jersey Shore.

Marion and fellow dancers posing in Long Beach, CA, 1927Marion and fellow dancers posing in Long Beach, CA, 1927 

 

 

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My favorite part of history

My favorite part of history -- shows us how people really lived, rather than our own tired ideas of what 'they' were like. Also happy to see that ALL CAPS is not a new phenomenon. :)

Hi there! Is Marion

Hi there! Is Marion Lichtman's scrapbook on display or available to be looked at? Thanks!

open for research!

Hi Vanessa, the Marion Lichtman Setlowe papers are open for research, just go to the link given at the top of the page. No appointment is needed, but you will need to request them by following the location link "OFFSITE Rose".
Hello Librarians, When I was a little boy growing up in the 1950's, my grandparents would daily set me in front of a black and white television screen, and what I saw had a tremendously major impact. During that time I saw on the Jackie Gleason show the June Taylor Dancers, they mesmerized my young imagination with the charm of their elegance, their precision tap, jazz and high kick routines, and their geometric figures inspired me to pursue achieving a dance troupe of my own. As the 1950's and the following years progressed, I began to see different groups like: Lew Leslies Blackbirds, Oscar Micheaux's Chorus Girls, Las Vegas Black Moulin Rouge Chorus Girls, The Apollo Theater Girls, The Cotton Club Girls, The Connie's Inn Hot Chocolate Chorus, Josephine Baker Chorus Girls, Katherine Dunham's Troupe, The Alvin Ailey Dancers. The Bluebell Girls with Margaret Kelly, The Copa Girls, Radio City Rockettes, The Latin Quarter Chorus Girls, The early Las Vegas Showgirls, Lido de Paris Chorus Girls, and The Moulin Rouge Can-Can Dancers. As this child grew into an adult, the fascinating rhythms of these synchronized dancers who owned the stages of the early twentieth century still inspired my artistic dance ambitions. Today I was searching the internet for chorus line dance troupe information, and I found an exciting, motivating article that I immediately resonated with! With all this in mind, the major reason I am sending this email is because you created on Google an outstanding article that hypnotized my ambition. Here's what I found online: Beyond the Jersey Shore: 1920s Snapshots From a Chorus Girls Scrapbook, that article highly motivated me to write to you immediately, and request your help. I am searching for books, articles, photographic images, and performance footage on dvd that will allow me to review this material and then be able to develop my own chorus line dance troupe. I've tried on my own to find this material, searched as many libraries that would respond to my request, even tried to reach archives, universities, but since I am not connected with a dominate research organization, I've been limited to what I can find. Locating your article has allowed me to find hope that maybe I can obtain assistance, my reason for this email is to ask can you help me find this material? Thank you for your time, truly I appreciate your cooperation, and I look forward to your response. Cheers, Richard

Hi Richard, Please contact

Hi Richard, Please contact the librarians at the Library for the Performing Arts for assistance researching this topic. You can find several ways to contact LPA here: https://www.nypl.org/locations/lpa

Marion Lichtman Setlowe papers

This is a great posting of a very important part of theatre history. It would be great if someone brought back vaudeville's structured yet improvisational style, which showcased so much talent. I'd like to see a definitive documentary of vaudeville. If it exists, please let me know the title so I can figure out where and how to view it. If it's available online at LCPA, please advise. So many of our current entertainment media and styles capture tiny bits and pieces of Vaudeville's unique kind of fun as well as artistry. Vaudeville seems imbedded in our DNa and subconscious, occasionally rearing up to remind us of the essentials of our artistry. Thank you Lincoln Center for the Performing arts for being there for sharing entertainment history and providing a safe haven for research for people worldwide. I watched the Lincoln Center complex/campus being built brick by brick on my way to Luigi's jazz dance class when he had his studio around the corner. I look forward to my next visit to LCPA on my next NY trip.

Vaudeville documentaries

Kamala, thank you for your comment! There are two videos you may be interested in viewing: Vaudeville Nation, a circulating DVD (https://legacycatalog.nypl.org/record=b18054625) and Vaudeville, a PBS program, available only on-site in our Theatre on Film and Tape Archives (https://legacycatalog.nypl.org/record=b14757675). Please feel free to email theatre@nypl.org with any questions about accessing these recordings.