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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1908)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. SUNDAY HORsviNG. JULY 'l 9, 1903 MM ff ' TV ; i P 2f 1J r mim II mm : hit mm rtnmlni fitte. "Mil1 I7T r 1 V , .. , (7N mm 111 A X ' fkftJ It v -1 TO i it V i I-- AWt 1 wTssJTx ,j ; . ts : - r. , i' , '5 THERE an ideal kiss? If so, what is it? Do the wild waves whisper its de scription at the seashore resorts? Does its 'inspiring spirit linger amid mountain fast ness est "Every kiss is ideal," you may declare, "if the kisser or kissee is the ideal one. There can be nothing new nor more ideal 'about osculatofy manifestations of love than Mother Eve doubtless discovered and her descendants have welcomed with increasing 1 favor through all the ages." Then why have new kisses come into vogue of late? Why have recent amatory demonstrations on the concert and theat rical stage caused such widespread sensa tions and been so generally discussed? , Are the new kisses better than the old? Is that bestowed by Mary Garden upon Dalmores in one of the tense moments of "Louise" different in form and structure, bliss and blessing, from those yielded by 'the Puritan mnideH-PriseUla to th-eager lips of longing John Alden? 8 A lonr, long kiss kiss of youth and love. Byron. MART GARDEN'S kisses differ in one way they are doubtless longer in their ecstatic duration. But can there be a new kiss? you ask. You thought there was only one kind I There have been many forms of kissing since kissing was invented, devised or origi nated. For instance, there is the platonic kiss. It was known in the days of the old Greek philosophers, and has been overworked, lately, by "affini ties." There are the kiss of friendship, the religious kiss, the parental kiss, the stolen kiss, the passionate kiss, the sincere kiss, the flirtatious kiss. Not to speak of the 60ul kiss! One could go on some time with a category of kisses. It is a pity .perhaps, that for the sake of the future historian of osculation the Mary Garden kiss has never been caught by the coldly calculating eye of the camera v? f 1 1W i vww (Si' ' - I r :,!Kl t Vlii!.,!. .! . A - . W 1 . ' .7- it if rc -ql K ll'xVJ I - ,? f Ir- - ltr II U"L1L " ' 1 " " " "' ' - If ).-.,,,,': I , ' V.fyv.' flt V- .: III If , ; . J I'PJ ' . all fvXn. 'V lit An - !H ' ' A 1 III ' Vi- M l ' ' 51 ; -'.'. 1 1 'if, ' 1 " v ' v a ! 1 1 i 1 - " t y3 ''II 1 - ,A Kjl II f 4 , i? ' ' v, - - il "'if II v; ''J a J . ! v r - . .. , I jf ; y : jJ) , r I kf - (fi li J -lfc"l",""( - ' III ' mil- ll ' i ' ' ' - v v in -t Wit. not for. general circuUtion and con msption. Thii new kiu is the legitimate iucceor of etter ft moos luaaea. auch at th "Emma Abbott Lis,' th "Carmen kin," th "Stpho kiss" otly tb xw exposition of Lp-to-ljp blin y curb fcrgrr. . 3kfary Gar Jen adopted it lait e ca ia .Loui.T It Uited twmty-eitht aecond. ing sylph, anyway. Softly, cautiously, her face beaming with anticipation, she steals upon him she is back of him and her arms envelop him, tighten and close about him. Book falls to the floor. The lover gives himself up to bliss. And The Kis3 goes on. Several bars of melody of soft, languishing, expiring melody pulse from the orchestra. The Kjss doesn't stop. From the street comes a faint rumble of cabs' and the toot of automobile horns. Inside, excepting the music, breathless silence. IVople lean forward, gasping. The Kiss continues. Slips of girl.-s look at one another wonderingly. Older iniawes regard their escorts with undisguised re proof, and still older matrons seem in clined to sniff. Stil the music creeps through the darkeneu auditorium. There are visible signs of nervousness. The kiss is like that which Tennyson de scribes : O love! O flrp! one he drew With lone long kiss mv whole soul through My Hps as sunlight drlnketh dew. Sophie Brandt seized on to it in the "Valtz Dretm" for forty-five seconds. The kiss of Netiersole, which used to make a aensation, lasted only twenty seconds. Som one has saiu that the new kiss will not-rrmain popuJar t-ecaue of iu length; wom en might like it, but men wouldn't, being too busy. This remark is on a par with Lady Montagu's address to her husband, "Be plain in dress and oLr in your diet; in ahort, my dearie, kiss me, and be quiet." When it cornea to kissing, there are mighty few men who cara to limit it by the watch In Act III of "Louise," Dalmore, the tenor, is seated on the stage reading. . Enter Mha Garden, the dainty Louie, auch a kiasahla look- "The kiss looks natural of course; to le successful, even a stage kiss must be natural," declared Dalmores. "The recep tion of the kiss by the audience is most satisfactory. They sit in perfect silence. Otherwise it would appear ludicrous. The kiss comes, and, as it is prolonged, the au dience feels the same sensafions felt by the characters portrayed on the stage." A long kissf Miss Garden thinks it isn't so very long. "It's as long as we can make it, however," she said, "and we kiss as long as we can and keep our cues with the music But if the New York audience thinks thia is a long kiss well, maybe next year IU show them the Aphrodite kiss." And the laughed. There waa a threat in her words. Tis whispered that the "Aphrodite kiss" is tremendouf-r longer! Is this stage kis but a reflection of the sen timent of the beholden; is it what they would like to do themselves I Is the most popular kisi to become longer and still longer of duration I Now, in the "WaVi Drejm" tbey-trtehed it rut for fnrtv-fiV MKvnd. and Knnhio Ftrnndt anil Edward Johnson, tb participant, are ra- lire. quired to prolong the kiss as long as the kissing music continues. That takes forty-five seconds. What made the "Merry Widow" such a suc cess, the owaltz or the kiss? In such questions of psychology it is difficult to tell. But after the delicious waltz the audience just hung on the seemingly interminable kiss of Ethel Jackson and Donald Brian. People gasped again when they saw the 'Ho tel Clerk," for Eugeno MacGrcgor and Jeanette Bagoard kissed so passionately, so intensely, so furiously, forsooth, that it seemed like a real "cat-'em-alive caressT Then came tho "Gay Musician," and Broad way thrilled when Amelia Stone sank back in the arms of debonair Walter Percival, and, as their lips met, even tho most blase railbird3 sat up, electrified, staring. Next season, stage managers whisper, there will be more kisses. The public has found, and wants to see, its ideal kiss, they aver. The conventional kiss, you know, is fleet ing, brief, a mere touch of the lips, and a timid flying apart for fear some one might see. Young lovers usually kiss like Taolo and Francesca seizing one drop of nectar in the stolen seconds and then trembling for fear lest it be discovered. Many still maintain it is the ideal kiss. It does not scar the heart nor wound the soul. It is not tho kiss of Carmen, which sends men's blood rioting in their veins ready to do murder. When Olga Nethersole delineated this kiss on the stage some ten years ago its fame spread broadcast. Years before Emma Abbott pio neered the enduring kiss in "Faust" and made a million. Whenever a kiss was prolonged in definitely on tho stage, strangely, the play was usually a success. Ihere are some kisses about which there is no question of public disapproval. There is the diseased, unhealthy kiss which shocked even New Yorkers in "Salome." There was the scene of i Salome demanding the deatli of John in reward for her dance before the dissolute Herod; of Herod's reluctant assent, and of Salome finally seizing the charger handed from the cistern, in which the imprisoned John was beheaded, and raising the severed head to her lips, exclaiming: "Ah, thou wouldst not suffer me to kiss thy mouth, Jokanaan! Well,' I will kiss it now!" This was the kiss of death'. It caused "Sa lome" Ao be withdrawn from the opera house. It certainly was not considered ideal. To the contrary, the new kiss of Miss Gar den was hailed with enthusiasm. Dalmores and Mary Garden received pay for their kiss at about $6.87 per; a rate of $989.28 an hour. When it comes to the price of kisses, possi bly the cheapest record price was that set by a jury in Newark, N. J, in 1902. A young woman asked for $300 damages for a stolen kiss. The defendant proved by witnesses that, after it waa over, the fair lady forgave him. Then the jury awarded the lady six cents. Sometimes the price is very high. A stolen kiss was appraised at $200 by Recorder Walcott, of Little Falls. N. Y. A court in Wisconsin, some years ago, assessed five kisses at $15,000, or $3000 apiece. There are few men. indeed, who s re not grateful for any kind of kiss. In 1794 tho charming duchess of Gordon secured 1000 re cruits for the Gordon Highlanders by offering a guinea and a kiss to every recrait. Men sprang tr the .front, and. after securing this re wsrd, in the straggle with France 250 lost thei