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Hope, Laura Lee

"The Moving Picture Girls Under the Palms Or Lost in the Wilds of Florida"

Towne. "They are--they're
muddy!"
"There is a little mud on them, to be sure," agreed Mr. Pertell. "But
don't worry. It will wash off."
"A _little_ mud!" spluttered the actor. "I--I--"
"Keep on!" cried the manager. "You are delaying the play!"
The young actor groaned, but there was nothing for it but to obey. He
climbed out of the ditch, his once immaculate suit dripping mud from
every point, and then he began the pretended chase again, seeking to
find the escaping lovers.
Of course this was the farcical element, but managers have found that
this is much needed in plays, and though many of them would prefer to
eliminate the "horse-play" the audiences seem to demand it, and managers
are prone to cater to the tastes of their audiences when they find it
pays.
"I'm glad I wasn't cast for that part," remarked the dignified Mr. Bunn,
as he saw what Mr. Towne had to go through.
"I'd never consent to it," declared Mr. Sneed. "This business is bad
enough as it is," he complained, "without deliberately making it worse. I
presume he'll want me to try and catch an alligator next, or drive a sea
cow to pasture."
"What's a sea cow?" asked Alice, who had overheard the talk, while Mr.
Towne was being filmed in his muddy state.
"The manatee," explained Mr. Sneed. "They are curious animals.


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Sonique Stanisław Soyka Keely Smith Sharam Rick Springfield