Vaudeville shows were a major form of entertainment in the early years of Fargo. Records of these theaters are numerous, but but due to the culturally tabooed art forms played in vaudeville theaters and their association with sinfulness, alcohol consumption, and sex these theaters were minimally mentioned in the press of early Fargo and are mostly noted on accounts of deaths, crime, disturbances, or imposed fees.[1] The Argus refers to vaudevillian theaters as “dens of vice”[2] and the Coliseum itself was tied to a billiard hall and saloon, which did not improve its reputation.
The audience for vaudeville was predominantly adult males. Any visitation of these theaters by women would be considered scandalous.[3] Many reports of loud and rude audience behavior were reported in the Argus. It mostly was said to come from the galley of the theater, the center seats closest to the stage.[4]
The performances in vaudeville theaters were varied and often spectacular. They included acts such as boxing, contortionists, gymnasts, acrobats, club swinging, and knife juggling, instrumental soloists, orchestras, trapeze, tight ropes, loose ropes, right wire, character artists comedians, Scandinavian dialectician, fire eating, magicians, rifle marksmanship, female impersonation, and knife throwing.[5]
There was also a particularly interesting report in the Argus concerning a woman named Rosa Thu-Zett. The description of this act was as follows:
“Miss Rosa Thu-Zett holds cannon said to weigh 239 pounds, in her teeth, while she hangs suspended from a trapeze. The cannon is discharged while she is in that position. She is said to be the only woman in the world who has accomplished this feat.”[6]
One of these vaudevillian theaters was the Coliseum which opened in March of 1880. On its opening night it featured acts such as operatic selections, Irish sketches (with the “burnt cork” blackface of the era), jigs, clogs, comic, sentimental songs, and ballads. It was not certain when the theater itself closed down but it remained active for at least eight years. Ballets, acrobatics, full-length dramas, plays, musicals, and burlesque were also featured in this theater.[7]
The vaudevillian theaters were monitored closely in early Fargo. Each theater needed specific licenses for operation and liquor sales. If not in compliance owners were arrested, such as W.M. Talbot of the Odeon Theater (located on Front Street) and B.P. Reynolds were arrested for failing to obtain licenses for their shows.[8] The arrests occurred on the same day and showed a crackdown on the vaudevillian culture of Fargo.
Much of the pressure being exerted upon vaudevillian theaters in the mid-1880s was due to a community dilemma which occurred after vaudevillian actors employed at the Star Theater passed out tickets to school children. The community was enraged, writing scathing complaints to the Argus, most of which demanded all vaudevillian theaters be closed. There was a fine given to the Star Theater, license prices for all theaters were raised, and an additional fee given to the mayor was also tacked onto monthly expense. Later, all were ordered to close at midnight rather than 2 a.m. Many of the theaters folded in the following years as a result of this as well as the economic effects of prohibition.
The actors of the vaudevillian theaters were usually given short contracts before moving onto the next job. It was a rough life with early rehearsals and late nights six days per week. However, the early economy of Fargo had a significant tie to vaudeville theaters. Aside from alcohol sales. the theaters employed 458 people alone between 1880 and 188.
Valerie Tescher, Digital History 2012
[1] Browning, Richard James. Early Fargo Theaters: Record of the professional theatre activity in Fargo, Dakota
[2] Fargo Daily Argus 6 December 1884: Print.
[3] Browning, Richard James. Early Fargo Theaters: Record of the professional theatre activity in Fargo, Dakota
[4] Fargo Daily Argus June 14 1881.
[5] Browning, Richard James. Early Fargo Theaters: Record of the professional theatre activity in Fargo, Dakota
[6] Fargo Daily Argus 22 May 1884: Print
[7] Browning, Richard James. Early Fargo Theaters: Record of the professional theatre activity in Fargo, Dakota Territory from 1880-1888. Fargo, ND: North Dakota State University, 1979. Print.
[8] Fargo Daily Argus August 1884: Print