|
Woman With Dancing Fingers
Learned the Art in England
from Grandfather
|
Madame Jewell. Orpheum Star with
Dancing Manikins, Eloped with Her
Father’s Assistant when in France ---
Now a Widow, Is Wrapped in Her Art and
Manikins.
Of course everyone has guessed that
Madame Jewell’s manikins are operated
with wires.
How it is done was believed to be a
secret, but the premiere artiste merely
takes the Wires in her fingers and,
keeping in perfect time with the
orchestra, makes the figures dance and
that’s all there is to it.
So the “Woman with the Dancing Fingers”
is no idle jest—it is a stern reality.
Madame Jewell’s lot is not as easy one.
Here more elaborate figures and their
difficult dances require the constant
and simultaneous handling of from
twenty-five to thirty wires on each of
the figures, although she has the help
of her son and two Other assistants in
the act the job is nerve-racking and
back-breaking, she told a Times-Union
representative yesterday, Another thing
to be taken into consideration about
this work, is One fact that the music
time is almost twice as fast as the
ordinary dancing time and as every point
of the manikin has its own work to do it
is controlled by a separate wire
operated from a balcony built just
within the miniature stage and carried
as a part of the props of the act. From
this balcony, immediately over the
dancing figures, Madame Jewell has to
stand is an uncomfortably bent
positions.
Asked if her manikins did not
occasionally make a mistake in their
dances or do something not on the
program, Madame Jewell said: “They
sometimes do, and then I just call them
awful names and they never do it again.” |
 |
“Once while
in Paris,” continued Madame Jewell, “I was playing at a
children’s benefit and one of my manikins fell to the
stage and was broken, causing a sympathetic little girl
in one of the boxes to begin to cry, for she believed
the figures to be human. We had to let her come back on
the stage and convince her that it was only a doll.
When she became convinced that the figure was but a
doll, she began to cry again for she wanted the doll,
and we had to take her out.”
Another instance
she related was of a week she played in Boston, where a
large crowd of boys and girls would wait outside the stage
door “for the little people to come out.”
All of the
manikins were made to order in England, being hand-carved
from wood, but were put together in the United States by
Madame and her son. The hinge-joints are all of a specially
made brass, and the painting and dressing of the figures,
are not only accurate representation of the characters in
life, but the artiste sews every stitch of the garments
herself to be sure there will be nothing to hamper the
movement of the manikin when it is in action.
The dress of the
little figure representing Gertrude Hoffman in the Salome
dance shown at the Orpheum theatre this week, cost Madam
Jewell $75, in her studio in New York City she keeps a stock
of tons of limbs and various parts for her manikins, in case
of accident. This she has done only recently, because about
a year ago while playing at a benefit in Jamaica Long
Island, near New York city, the theater burned out and she
lost her entire production, but, very fortunately she was
running two acts at the time, and had one left as a reserve.
“Apprentices in
the manikin work are very hard to train,” she said. “One has
to be born in the business. My grandfather and my father,
both of whom were named John Holden, showed the manikins
more years ago than I can remember, and I began to work with
them when I was a little girl. We are English, you know. I
fell in love with my father’s principal assistant, Mr.
Jewell, and we eloped to France and were married. My father
wouldn’t forgive us so we started our own show. The show I
am giving now is far superior to any of the old shows of
years ago as it is a much more elaborate in every way.
I carry several
thousand pounds of excess baggage, an awful lot for an act
of 29 minutes duration, don’t you think so.” She queried.
Mr. Jewell died
in New York City six years ago and now Madame Jewell and her
24-year-old son, Jack, and two assistants, give the show.
Madame Jewell
thinks so much of her fingers that she has them insured
against accident for $10,000 and says that she has to have
them continually in training to keep them nimble. She said
that when she takes a week or two off to rest she finds that
her fingers need retraining. |