fbpx
Wikipedia

Tony Pastor

Antonio Pastor (May 28, 1837 – August 26, 1908) was an American impresario, variety performer and theatre owner who became one of the founding forces behind American vaudeville in the mid- to late-nineteenth century. He was sometimes referred to as the "Dean of Vaudeville." The strongest elements of his entertainments were an almost jingoistic brand of United States patriotism and a strong commitment to attracting a "mixed-gender" audience, the latter being something revolutionary in the male-oriented variety halls of the mid-century.[1] Although he was a performer and producer, Pastor is best known for "cleaning up" bawdy variety acts and presenting a clean and family friendly genre called vaudeville.

Tony Pastor
BornAntonio Pastor
(1837-05-28)May 28, 1837
Manhattan, New York, United States
DiedAugust 26, 1908(1908-08-26) (aged 71)
Elmhurst, New York, United States
OccupationVaudeville Entertainer, Showman and Theater Manager
Years active1867–1905

A collection of his papers is maintained at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas in Austin,[2] and in the archives of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.[3]

Life and career

Family

Antonio Pastor, father of Tony, was a fruit seller, barber, and violinist from Spain.[4] [5] He met his future wife, Cornelia Buckley, from New Haven, Connecticut after he came to New York. They then lived in Manhattan. Their third child, and first son, also named Antonio Pastor, was born in Manhattan in 1837 at his parents' residence at 400 Greenwich Street, in what is now the financial district of lower Manhattan.[6][7][8] He had a taste for entertaining when he was young, producing his own plays in the basement of his family's home.[9]

Early career

In 1846, at the young age of fourteen, Pastor embarked on a career in show business. He obtained a job singing at P.T. Barnum's Scudder's American Museum where he brought his riding, tumbling, and mimicry skills to performances.[10] During the next few years he worked in minstrel shows, where he often performed scenes in blackface. Pastor became a celebrated singing clown at a time when circus performances typically concluded with a variety revue. He established himself as a popular singer and songwriter during a four-year run at Robert Butler's American Music Hall, a variety theater located at 444 Broadway in what is now called Soho, but was then the heart of the lower Manhattan theater district. Pastor published "songsters," books of his lyrics which were sung to popular tunes. The music had no notation, as it was assumed that the audience had a collective knowledge of popular song. The subject matter of his music was intended to be bawdy and humorous.[11]

 
Tony Pastor and Bonnie Thornton (circa 1897)

Pastor sang for the Union cause throughout the Civil War, then started his own variety show which went on tour for around five months before settling in New York City.[9] In 1865, Pastor opened his own theatre, Tony Pastor's Opera House. The theater was located on the Bowery in partnership with minstrel show performer, Sam Sharpley, whom he later bought out. The same year he organized traveling minstrel troupes who toured the country annually between April and October. Although Pastor was referred to as the "Dean of Vaudeville," as mentioned before, he is best known for cleaning up variety acts. Pastor was popular with the nearly all-male variety theater audiences; however, he knew that his ticket sales would double if he attracted a female audience. Soon he began to produce variety shows, presenting an evening of clean fun that was a distinct alternative to the bawdy shows of the time and more appropriate for middle-class families. With shows that appealed to women and children as well as the traditional male audience, his theater and touring companies quickly became popular with the middle classes and were soon being imitated.

Later career

 
Tammany Hall in 1914

In 1874, Pastor moved his company a few blocks to take over Michael Bennett Leavitt's former theater at 585 Broadway. The theater district was moving uptown to Union Square, however, and in 1881 Pastor took a lease on the former Germania Theatre on 14th Street in the same building that housed Tammany Hall. He alternated his theater's presentations between operettas and family-oriented variety shows, creating what became known as vaudeville. Vaudeville was popular with the masses from the 1880s to the 1910s. Pastor wanted to capture a mass audience by bringing family entertainment to the middle class.[12] In order to do this, Pastor sought out to make vaudeville "respectable." He did not sell liquor in his theatre and required a level of decency to his performances which encouraged women and families to attend.[12]

His theater featured performers such as Ben Harney presenting a new style called "ragtime" as well as other up-and-coming talents such as Weber and Fields, George M. Cohan, Sophie Tucker, Lillian Russell, Buster Keaton, Gus Edwards, Eva Tanguay, Blossom Seeley, Benny Fields, May Irwin and Eddie Leonard. Harry S. Sanderson was his business manager from 1878 until 1908. The business records from this period are available to researchers.[13] In the musical Hello, Dolly!, the song "Put On Your Sunday Clothes" includes the line, "We'll join the Astors at Tony Pastor's". It also references seeing "the shows at Delmonico's", which suggests that the character does not really know about upper-class social life in New York.

Death

Tony Pastor died in Elmhurst, New York on August 26, 1908, and was interred in the Cemetery of the Evergreens, in Brooklyn. He was 71, and though greatly mourned at his death as one of the last gentlemen of the early vaudeville halls, the medium had passed him by with the advent of the vaudeville circuit in the 1880s. Pastor had remained a local showman in an epoch that increasingly came to be dominated by regional and national chains. Fighting against the monopolies for the rights of individual local showmen was an undertaking that marked the last years of his life, earning him the nickname of "Little Man Tony".

Afterpieces

Throughout the 1880s, Pastor's performances often had an afterpiece following it. They played a major role in his shows, often written in the final act of the program. The afterpieces were written by a group of regular writers, and sometimes Pastor himself. They lasted anywhere from fifteen minutes to an hour.[9] There were three categories; pantomime, melodrama, and parodies. Pastor's afterpieces became popular from 1865 to 1875, and because of its popularity, the afterpieces became a staple in Pastor's shows.[9] Although the afterpieces were all different, they all dealt with what is meant to be a working-class citizen in New York. Not only did the afterpieces discuss issues such as crime and poverty, but they also discussed leisure activities the working class couldn't afford. This made Pastor's audiences respond well to the afterpieces, since the working class was his target audience.[9]

List of Known Afterpeices[9]
Title Type of Pantomime Where Date Author
Masaniello; or, Fish Catcher of Naples Parody Tony Pastor's Opera House March 11, 1867 Unknown
The White Crook Parody Tony Pastor's Opera House June 3, 1867 John F. Poole
Romeo and Juliet; or, the Beautiful Blonde who Dyed for Love Parody Unknown March 15, 1869 John F. Poole
Macbeth Parody Tony Pastor's Opera House April 18, 1870 Unknown
Yeast Lynne; or, The Humors of Lady Isabel Parody Tony Pastor's Opera House

(and other theaters around town)

March 26, 1877 T.R. Hann
Go West!; or, the Emigrant Palace Car in an Uproar Parody Tony Pastor's Opera House Around 1879 William Carleton or William A. Mestayer
The Pie-Rats of Penn Yann Parody Tony Pastor's Opera House February 14, 1881 John F. Poole
Mysteries of Gotham Melodrama Tony Pastor's Opera House September 10, 1866 John F. Poole
New York Mechanics Melodrama Unknown June 15, 1868 Unknown (Possibly John F. Poole)
Joe Kidd in Fistiana Melodrama Tony Pastor's Opera House January, 1868 Unknown
High Life and Low Life; or, Scenes in New York Melodrama Tony Pastor's Opera House March 8, 1869 Unknown (Possibly Charles F. Seabert)
The Tenth Ward by Day and Night Melodrama Tony Pastor's Opera House February 24, 1873 Charles F. Seabert


Music

According to the humor of the time, Pastor wrote several songs that negatively portrayed ethnic stereotypes, such as "The Contraband's Adventures", the story of a freed slave. After the slave is set free by Union soldiers, he attends an anti-slavery meeting where the abolitionists try to scrub off his dark pigment. The slave concludes by singing...

...De nigger will be nigger till de day of jubilee

For he never was intended for a white man.
Den just skedaddle home-leave de colored man alone;
For you're only making trouble for de nation;
You may fight and you may fuss
But you never will make tings right
Until you all agree for to let de nigger be

For you'll neber, neber, neber wash him white!

Though he separated some ethnic groups in his music, he also intended to unite the lower and middle classes. In songs like "The Upper and Lower Ten Thousand", he defended the common man of the Bowery:

If an Upper-Ten fellow a swindler should be

And with thousands of dollars of others make free
Should he get into court, why, without any doubt,
The matter's hushed up and they'll let him step out.
If a Lower-Ten Thousand chap happens to steal,
For to keep him from starving, the price of a meal,
Why the law will declare it's a different thing-

For they call him a thief, and he's sent to Sing-Sing!


References

  1. ^ Snyder, Robert W. (1989). The Voice of the City: Vaudeville and Popular Culture in New York. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-505285-4.
  2. ^ "Tony Pastor: An Inventory of His Collection". Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center. Retrieved 2014-12-23.
  3. ^ "Tony Pastor collection". Archives & Manuscripts. New York Public Library. Retrieved 2014-12-23.
  4. ^ Monod, David. “Art with the Effervescence of Ginger Beer: The Creation of Vaudeville.” The Soul of Pleasure: Sentiment and Sensation in Nineteenth-Century American Mass Entertainment, Cornell UP, 2016, pp. 171-205.
  5. ^ https://a860-historicalvitalrecords.nyc.gov/view/4171945
  6. ^ Fields, Armond (2007). Tony Pastor, Father of Vaudeville. McFarland. pp. 4–6. ISBN 978-0-7864-3054-3.
  7. ^ Zellers, Parker (1971). Tony Pastor: Dean of the Vaudeville Stage. Eastern Michigan University Press.
  8. ^ Horton, William Ellis (1902). About Stage Folks. Free Press Printing. p. 9.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Kattwinkle, Susan. Tony Pastor Presents: Afterpieces from the Vaudeville Stage. Greenwood P, 1998.
  10. ^ Lewis, Robert M. From Traveling Show to Vaudville: Theatrical Spectacle in America, 1830 - 1910, Johns Hopkins UP, 2007.
  11. ^ "Tony Pastor and His 60 Years on the Stage". New York Times. August 16, 1908.
  12. ^ a b McLean, Albert F. American Vaudeville as Ritual. University of Kentucky Press, 1965
  13. ^ "Tony Pastor: An Inventory of His Collection". Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center. Retrieved 2014-12-23.

External links

  • Tony Pastor at Find a Grave
  • Olympic Theatre
  • Tony Pastor Collection at NYPL


tony, pastor, saxophonist, bandleader, bandleader, antonio, pastor, 1837, august, 1908, american, impresario, variety, performer, theatre, owner, became, founding, forces, behind, american, vaudeville, late, nineteenth, century, sometimes, referred, dean, vaud. For the saxophonist and bandleader see Tony Pastor bandleader Antonio Pastor May 28 1837 August 26 1908 was an American impresario variety performer and theatre owner who became one of the founding forces behind American vaudeville in the mid to late nineteenth century He was sometimes referred to as the Dean of Vaudeville The strongest elements of his entertainments were an almost jingoistic brand of United States patriotism and a strong commitment to attracting a mixed gender audience the latter being something revolutionary in the male oriented variety halls of the mid century 1 Although he was a performer and producer Pastor is best known for cleaning up bawdy variety acts and presenting a clean and family friendly genre called vaudeville Tony PastorBornAntonio Pastor 1837 05 28 May 28 1837Manhattan New York United StatesDiedAugust 26 1908 1908 08 26 aged 71 Elmhurst New York United StatesOccupationVaudeville Entertainer Showman and Theater ManagerYears active1867 1905A collection of his papers is maintained at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas in Austin 2 and in the archives of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts 3 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Family 1 2 Early career 1 3 Later career 1 4 Death 2 Afterpieces 3 Music 4 References 5 External linksLife and career EditFamily Edit Antonio Pastor father of Tony was a fruit seller barber and violinist from Spain 4 5 He met his future wife Cornelia Buckley from New Haven Connecticut after he came to New York They then lived in Manhattan Their third child and first son also named Antonio Pastor was born in Manhattan in 1837 at his parents residence at 400 Greenwich Street in what is now the financial district of lower Manhattan 6 7 8 He had a taste for entertaining when he was young producing his own plays in the basement of his family s home 9 Early career Edit In 1846 at the young age of fourteen Pastor embarked on a career in show business He obtained a job singing at P T Barnum s Scudder s American Museum where he brought his riding tumbling and mimicry skills to performances 10 During the next few years he worked in minstrel shows where he often performed scenes in blackface Pastor became a celebrated singing clown at a time when circus performances typically concluded with a variety revue He established himself as a popular singer and songwriter during a four year run at Robert Butler s American Music Hall a variety theater located at 444 Broadway in what is now called Soho but was then the heart of the lower Manhattan theater district Pastor published songsters books of his lyrics which were sung to popular tunes The music had no notation as it was assumed that the audience had a collective knowledge of popular song The subject matter of his music was intended to be bawdy and humorous 11 Tony Pastor and Bonnie Thornton circa 1897 Pastor sang for the Union cause throughout the Civil War then started his own variety show which went on tour for around five months before settling in New York City 9 In 1865 Pastor opened his own theatre Tony Pastor s Opera House The theater was located on the Bowery in partnership with minstrel show performer Sam Sharpley whom he later bought out The same year he organized traveling minstrel troupes who toured the country annually between April and October Although Pastor was referred to as the Dean of Vaudeville as mentioned before he is best known for cleaning up variety acts Pastor was popular with the nearly all male variety theater audiences however he knew that his ticket sales would double if he attracted a female audience Soon he began to produce variety shows presenting an evening of clean fun that was a distinct alternative to the bawdy shows of the time and more appropriate for middle class families With shows that appealed to women and children as well as the traditional male audience his theater and touring companies quickly became popular with the middle classes and were soon being imitated Later career Edit Tammany Hall in 1914 In 1874 Pastor moved his company a few blocks to take over Michael Bennett Leavitt s former theater at 585 Broadway The theater district was moving uptown to Union Square however and in 1881 Pastor took a lease on the former Germania Theatre on 14th Street in the same building that housed Tammany Hall He alternated his theater s presentations between operettas and family oriented variety shows creating what became known as vaudeville Vaudeville was popular with the masses from the 1880s to the 1910s Pastor wanted to capture a mass audience by bringing family entertainment to the middle class 12 In order to do this Pastor sought out to make vaudeville respectable He did not sell liquor in his theatre and required a level of decency to his performances which encouraged women and families to attend 12 His theater featured performers such as Ben Harney presenting a new style called ragtime as well as other up and coming talents such as Weber and Fields George M Cohan Sophie Tucker Lillian Russell Buster Keaton Gus Edwards Eva Tanguay Blossom Seeley Benny Fields May Irwin and Eddie Leonard Harry S Sanderson was his business manager from 1878 until 1908 The business records from this period are available to researchers 13 In the musical Hello Dolly the song Put On Your Sunday Clothes includes the line We ll join the Astors at Tony Pastor s It also references seeing the shows at Delmonico s which suggests that the character does not really know about upper class social life in New York Death Edit Tony Pastor died in Elmhurst New York on August 26 1908 and was interred in the Cemetery of the Evergreens in Brooklyn He was 71 and though greatly mourned at his death as one of the last gentlemen of the early vaudeville halls the medium had passed him by with the advent of the vaudeville circuit in the 1880s Pastor had remained a local showman in an epoch that increasingly came to be dominated by regional and national chains Fighting against the monopolies for the rights of individual local showmen was an undertaking that marked the last years of his life earning him the nickname of Little Man Tony Afterpieces EditThroughout the 1880s Pastor s performances often had an afterpiece following it They played a major role in his shows often written in the final act of the program The afterpieces were written by a group of regular writers and sometimes Pastor himself They lasted anywhere from fifteen minutes to an hour 9 There were three categories pantomime melodrama and parodies Pastor s afterpieces became popular from 1865 to 1875 and because of its popularity the afterpieces became a staple in Pastor s shows 9 Although the afterpieces were all different they all dealt with what is meant to be a working class citizen in New York Not only did the afterpieces discuss issues such as crime and poverty but they also discussed leisure activities the working class couldn t afford This made Pastor s audiences respond well to the afterpieces since the working class was his target audience 9 List of Known Afterpeices 9 Title Type of Pantomime Where Date AuthorMasaniello or Fish Catcher of Naples Parody Tony Pastor s Opera House March 11 1867 UnknownThe White Crook Parody Tony Pastor s Opera House June 3 1867 John F PooleRomeo and Juliet or the Beautiful Blonde who Dyed for Love Parody Unknown March 15 1869 John F PooleMacbeth Parody Tony Pastor s Opera House April 18 1870 UnknownYeast Lynne or The Humors of Lady Isabel Parody Tony Pastor s Opera House and other theaters around town March 26 1877 T R HannGo West or the Emigrant Palace Car in an Uproar Parody Tony Pastor s Opera House Around 1879 William Carleton or William A MestayerThe Pie Rats of Penn Yann Parody Tony Pastor s Opera House February 14 1881 John F PooleMysteries of Gotham Melodrama Tony Pastor s Opera House September 10 1866 John F PooleNew York Mechanics Melodrama Unknown June 15 1868 Unknown Possibly John F Poole Joe Kidd in Fistiana Melodrama Tony Pastor s Opera House January 1868 UnknownHigh Life and Low Life or Scenes in New York Melodrama Tony Pastor s Opera House March 8 1869 Unknown Possibly Charles F Seabert The Tenth Ward by Day and Night Melodrama Tony Pastor s Opera House February 24 1873 Charles F SeabertMusic EditAccording to the humor of the time Pastor wrote several songs that negatively portrayed ethnic stereotypes such as The Contraband s Adventures the story of a freed slave After the slave is set free by Union soldiers he attends an anti slavery meeting where the abolitionists try to scrub off his dark pigment The slave concludes by singing De nigger will be nigger till de day of jubileeFor he never was intended for a white man Den just skedaddle home leave de colored man alone For you re only making trouble for de nation You may fight and you may fuss But you never will make tings right Until you all agree for to let de nigger beFor you ll neber neber neber wash him white Though he separated some ethnic groups in his music he also intended to unite the lower and middle classes In songs like The Upper and Lower Ten Thousand he defended the common man of the Bowery If an Upper Ten fellow a swindler should beAnd with thousands of dollars of others make free Should he get into court why without any doubt The matter s hushed up and they ll let him step out If a Lower Ten Thousand chap happens to steal For to keep him from starving the price of a meal Why the law will declare it s a different thing For they call him a thief and he s sent to Sing Sing References Edit Snyder Robert W 1989 The Voice of the City Vaudeville and Popular Culture in New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 505285 4 Tony Pastor An Inventory of His Collection Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center Retrieved 2014 12 23 Tony Pastor collection Archives amp Manuscripts New York Public Library Retrieved 2014 12 23 Monod David Art with the Effervescence of Ginger Beer The Creation of Vaudeville The Soul of Pleasure Sentiment and Sensation in Nineteenth Century American Mass Entertainment Cornell UP 2016 pp 171 205 https a860 historicalvitalrecords nyc gov view 4171945 Fields Armond 2007 Tony Pastor Father of Vaudeville McFarland pp 4 6 ISBN 978 0 7864 3054 3 Zellers Parker 1971 Tony Pastor Dean of the Vaudeville Stage Eastern Michigan University Press Horton William Ellis 1902 About Stage Folks Free Press Printing p 9 a b c d e f Kattwinkle Susan Tony Pastor Presents Afterpieces from the Vaudeville Stage Greenwood P 1998 Lewis Robert M From Traveling Show to Vaudville Theatrical Spectacle in America 1830 1910 Johns Hopkins UP 2007 Tony Pastor and His 60 Years on the Stage New York Times August 16 1908 a b McLean Albert F American Vaudeville as Ritual University of Kentucky Press 1965 Tony Pastor An Inventory of His Collection Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center Retrieved 2014 12 23 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tony Pastor Tony Pastor at Find a Grave Olympic Theatre Tony Pastor Collection at NYPL Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tony Pastor amp oldid 1131384522, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.