An extraordinary original program clip circa early 1902 for Lotta Faust, soon to be one of the stars of of the famous Montgomery-Stone Broadway and touring production of L. Frank Baum's classic The Wizard of Oz, which differed significantly from the Judy Garland-Billie Burke-Ray Bolger-Jack Haley-Bert Lahr film. Also featured in the cast is future Peter Pan actress Pauline Chase, along with Harry Davenport, who enjoyed a long career and played the doctor in Gone With the Wind. Dimensions nine and a half by five and a quarter inches, trimmed from a larger program and pasted to an Edwardian periodical page. Light corner wear otherwise good. See the story of the Lotta Faust below.  

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From Wikipedia:


Lotta Faust (February 8, 1880[1]  January 25, 1910)[2] was an American actress, dancer, and singer from Brooklyn, New York.[1] She performed an interpretation of the Salome dance based on the play Salome (1893) by Oscar Wilde.[2]

Faust attended public schools in Brooklyn. Her first employment was working as a cash girl in a Brooklyn department store. She worked there until she went on stage at the age of 16.

Her first appearance in theater came in The Sunshine of Paradise Alley (1896), produced by Denman Thompson. In September 1901 she acted the role of Geraldine Fair in The Liberty Belles. The play had nine writers and composers, including Harry B. Smith, the primary librettist. Aine Lauchaume wrote most of the music. It was produced at the Madison Square Theatre,[3] 24th Street, 5th Avenue and Madison Avenue.[4]

She became popular in The Wizard of Oz (1904–1905), in which she sang the Sammy song. After this she joined the company of Joe Weber and appeared in Wonderland (1905). Later she was among the cast of The White Hen (1907), staged by Louis Mann at the Casino Theatre,[1] Broadway at 39th Street.[5]

In 1907 she was in the troupe of Lew Fields in The Girl Behind The Counter (1907–1908), The Mimic World in 1908 and The Midnight Sons in 1909.[6] For the rest of her life she worked with Fields and in productions of the Shubert Theatre.[1]

Vaudeville

Faust's vaudeville career began at the Casino Theatre with the introduction of a unique cake walk. She teamed with Frank Bernard for this dance in April 1900.[7] In August 1908 she appeared at the Casino Theatre.[8] During an interview she admitted to being unaware of the Biblical story of Salome. Her rendition of the Salome dance came from what she was told regarding the Wilde play. She said she felt as if she really were the 14-year-old Salome while she was dancing on stage. She experienced both the horror and fascination during her performances. For each appearance Faust danced as if she would never be able to repeat what she was doing. There were a number of other women who presented their versions of the Salome dance in the same era as Faust. Among these were Eva TanguayVera Olcott, and Gertrude H. Hoffman.[8] Faust eventually was in a vaudeville show which featured her as a singer.[1]

Marriages

She was married twice. Her first husband was Paul Schindler, a musical director, whom she divorced in 1902. Her second husband was singer and comedian Richard Ling.[1] However, in between marriages the beautiful Faust was popular with men. John Barrymore in recalling her is quoted as saying that "he used to grab a lotta back", this when dancing with the actress and because Faust had a penchant for wearing dresses with large open backs.

Death

Faust died in January 1910 at a sanitarium on 33 East 33rd Street in New York City. The cause of death was pneumonia which resulted from an operation she had several weeks earlier. Just before she became ill, she played a primary role in The Midnight Sons. She sued Ling for divorce a short while before her death.[1]

Faust was engaged to Malcolm A. Strauss, an illustrator, at the time of her death. He resided at 30 West 40th Street, Manhattan. Strauss painted a posthumous portrait of Faust. It was sold and the proceeds given to Faust's parents at a benefit.

Pauline Chase (May 20, 1885 – March 15, 1962) was an American actress who performed on the stage in both the United States and the United Kingdom. She is known for her extended run in the title role of British productions of Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up.

Biography

She was born Ellen Pauline Matthew Bliss in Washington, D.C. on May 20, 1885. She was schooled at the Convent of the Sisters of the Holy Cross in New York.[1][2]

She began acting at the age of 15. She played one of the Lost Boys in the debut of Peter Pan in London in 1904. She was later selected by producer Charles Frohman and playwright J. M. Barrie for the title role, which she played from 1906–1913.[2][3]

She retired from the stage after the Christmas run of Peter Pan ended in 1913 to marry banker Captain Alexander Victor Drummond. They had three children.[2]

She came out of retirement in 1916 for her only screen appearance in The Real Thing at Last, a satirical film scripted by Barrie and shown at a benefit for the YMCA, attended by members of the British royal family.[2]

She was said to have had an affair with explorer Robert Falcon Scott before he was married.[1]

She died in Royal Tunbridge Wells, England in 1962.


THE LIBERTY BELLES

The Liberty Belles

THE Liberty Belles

Opening Date
Sep 30, 1901
Closing Date
Jan 1902
Performances
112
Ethel Love
Dora Van Ness
Margery Lee
Mrs. Dr. Sprowl
Kathleen Gay
Jack Everleigh
Geraldine Fair
 
Teresa Corsini
Maria Morris
Uncle Jasper Pennyfeather
Virginia Dean
Daisy Field
Laura Carroll
Edith May
Ruth Leslie
Juana Gomez
Celia Brown
Captain Hiram Ketcham
Elaine Tennyson
Dorothy Grey
Omyama San
Priscilla Penn
Phil Fullerton
Ada Randolph
Gladys Somers
Mildred Ross