AA in t t" r -- a-. ; ' .-V. I.; fr :(..; t: -is: - .f '!;': r. rTHE OUEGOK -tv TrtTTTxT T1 - TA"DTT . A XTTI . KTTVTI AT" M AT? rTNY3- 'XT A"V 21, 1922.: lit" J3U x v v tv- Wf '' Beauties-, s 1 t p l-vUA- n s' ! n ! Who Are And the Untiriiely "All-Fired" Climax to Mr. Ziegfeld s Clashes with the Or: Bessie Poole, the English Beauty Who Refused to Sign Anything but a Union Contract with the Follies. The "49" Tag IndicatesHow the Beauties, Like Other "Laborers" Have Numbers for Payroll and Registration Purposes. rut x P .AGE the cartoonist, boy! Tell him this old sketch o Capital vs. Labor won't do .at all for to-day's edition. Scratch out the veralled husfcy with the fcickaxe and dinner pail; the plump pluto crat In the frock coat and the high hau Here are the proper figures for an up-to-the minute portrait of the latest -wrangle between Capital and Labor A slender little beauty, all silk and chif fon, kicking her pretty pins over the foot lights, winking at the bald heads anff waft ing kisses to the lads in the gallery that's Labor! And a languid gentleman who dresses more like a matinee idol than a magnate and answers to the nick-name of "Ziggie" that's Capital! Put a few powder puffs in place of the picks; substitute lobster and smug gled champagne for the din ner pail, 'and the picture be gins to talje form. For Broad"way, Instead of the coal fields of "West Vir ginia, is the newest union battleground; the chorines in "Ziegfeld's -Follies" ; are, the warring wage earners in the beauty union; Florenz Zieg feld, Jr.. is the head of the beauty trust they are fight ing; and the scrap has reached the stage where the toiler-broilers threatened to strike, and Zlegfeld "fired" all sixty of them. The world's most famous beauties sporting union cards Just like miners or brick masons; walking delegates superseding Johnnies at the itage door; daljaty dan cers crying for "time and a half for "over time"; bosses charging cuties with, mak ing anarchistic speeches; .even the pos sibility of the public facing & famine in girly-girly shows these .are all part of the "props" in theaterdom's labor drama now being enacted with all the Intensity of a nation-wide railroad" strikje. Fla Zlegfeld and the Chorus Equity As fcociation, which is the company name" of the chorus girls union, have never been chummy. Any chorus girl can bel6ng to the Equity who keeps the rules and pays $1 . a month dues. She becomes a regu lar "union girl, for the Chorus Equity is affiliated with the American Federation of Labor Just like the Bricklayers' Union, the Gasfitters Local or any other. Flo Zlegfeld has fought the Equity from the first. He wants to make his own laws for his own shows. The former husband of Anna Held and the present spouse of Billie Burke is primarily a beauty-picker. - Si, Wilt .YS n V 4v X ft" A Chorus Girl's Union Card Issued to Betty Lee by the Chorus Equity Association, to Indicate That She Was in Good Standing, Entitled to Union Wages and Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. and he says he won't have- any walking delegates walking back of Ms stage and s "ref;rh tnortn iininn tlTr into tha shell-tink XQ7 sot tneir rights. first round. Mr. Ziegfeld, in addi tion to paying Bessie her $4 plus, put out an extra one-eighth of their weekly salary to the entire company, union girls or not. j The "Follies' flitted Into Detroit. Mr. Ziegfeld's business manager, Sam King ston, flitted in. at the same time. j He brought sixty new contracts which he feaid the Equity had aipproved. Everybody signed but Bessie. She said she'd hear from the Equity before she'd sign. While Bessie waited to hear, she got her hon orable discharge. ji "You can't fire me!" declared Bessie. You fired yourself when you refused to sign!" she was told. Bessie said she'd have justice or know why. Another rbel joined her. This was Ruth Andrews, iwho Hosenbaum could hear had been discharged when she failed to , restless i cheering and show up at the theater one night, i Her "whistling. F; i g u r e s doctor, she declared, had telephoned!! she" daaoed before Mr. was sick, uessie ana Kutn announced ikuaoilUttUi" they would stick with the company? till t If ft; W ''X M' Who -Me tit wJ A r Hbwl WfyBk Vm --- "Union ' ';V:V- Men" tif r :-'- ..s-i- -a a i - -. ? 4 i Ly?- lyx- fir tc V V 5 brothers'! In unionism. Out in mi front Mr. whispering union talk Into the shell-pink ears ui uio ueauucs o jivau. That was the first Issue on which Zleg "feld and the Equity split. It reached a deadlock when Zlegfeld declared he'd close bis theatre before he'd let a delegate pass the stage door. Another clash came last Fall, when the "Follies' began the annual tour. . Eleven of the sixty members who packed their trunks for departure packed uniou cards along with their pretties. But first they had a pow-wow with "Ziggie." He told, them he'd pay them the minimum wage prescribed by the Equity. $35 a week, and an additional $10 a -week because they were going on the road. He says they accepted. They admit they accepted but with reservations. : , Pittsburgh welcomed the "FolUes so Joyfully that art, extra matinee was given. By Equity rules, as -extra matinee calls for an additional one-eighth of aer sal ary for every little union coryphee. One of the eleven union girls In the Follies' was Bessie Poole, also known as Eliiabeth Chattertoiu When she got her pay envelope at the end of the Pitts burgh week, she pulled out $35, her sal ary, and $10, the extra bonus promised tor the road tour. Butthat was all Bessie cheeped loudly. She wanted aer toe-eighth, her $4 plus, for the' extra matinee. 'Where do you get that stuff?" , asked Ziegfeld's manager. ; Wasnt Mr. Ziegfeld paying her a ten-plunk .UonnsT $4,500 in that night; They stuck. By the time the "Follies' hit Chicago for a dizzy Christmas week, everything and everybody was red hot. In cluding the telegraph wires to Ziegfeld In New York. Ziegfeld was branding Bessie Poole as a trouble-maker. She was getting up a petition declaring she Wasn't any such thing, and demanding reinstate ment. Among those who signed it were Raymond Hitchcock, Florence 0"Denl ehawn, Fannie Brice, Ray Dooley.f" Van and Schenck and other notables. ' The "Follies" arrived in Chicago Sunday morning. They were to open Sunday tight. At five minutes after 8 o'clock, just ten minutes before the curtain was to rise, Edward Rosenbaum, company manager, .rubbing his hands gleefully over the S. R. O. house, looked up and beheld a formid able delegation approaching him la the wings. . -j " A group of chorus' girls headed the party. They were accompanied by a lawyer, the traveling representative lof tho Equity, andxepresentatlves of the Stage Hands and Musicians' Unions. The lawyer poked into Mr. Rosenbaum's paralyzed fin gers a contract which he was to sign It called for Immediate reinstatement of Miss Poole and Miss Andrews. It il called for permission for J walking delegates of the Equity to come behind the scenes. It called for other things all of them pet abominations of Flo Ziegfeld. f -i: -sign or tnere u do no snow to-nignii; N3 A I on jthe y.lPlgTetQ r yAJ lla tiw b iWyliuuL uvuua 4 wa. uia u ar uv ouv v - wii0uti, Wasn't the extra oa-eIgh.ta Included In was the ultimatum served on Mr. Rosen- thatt "Ton betl said the manager. -"You bet not! " cheeped Bessie. The cheeping led to . an arbitration conference in New York - between tho Equity and the Producing Managers Asso ciation, Bessie icon tho decision in the banm. The manager protested. The man ager pleaded. The striking chorines were just as hard-boiled as bo many pick-beavers. They were backed up, they informed Mr. Rosenbaum, by the Musicians'! Union and tho Stage Hands! .Union, I their the ! house $60,000 ad vance sal e already. And It would all take wings i if j he i didn't sign dotted line!, Mr. Rosenbaum signed. ; When the I news reached New York,' it bad the effect of dynamite on the temperamental Mr. Zieg feld. ;. Reinstate; a girl who had fired herself 1 Allow walking dele gates to have the run! of bis stage! Why. that; was; a privilege he? had accorded I mobody ever! Mr, i- 5 Ziegfeld jabbed one linger on a button, and yelled for his stenographer. ; IT . j : ; i The Chicago strike .was, ln his own language; the last straw. 4 ; I i "This Is the blow-off! he cried. , I ; He wrote a letter, demanding a meeting ' of. the Equity land the Producing Mana gers' Association. He Issued orders clos ing the !Fpllies four weeks: ahead of schedule because, he declared. It would cost ; the actors $54,000 in salaries and teacn tnem a iesson. ana, uy reiusin tu make a nerw contract with any of the sixty chorus girls, in effect: he fired them all "Mr. Ziegfeld is in the wrong and knows it," declared Paul DullzeU, for the Equity. 1 "The whole trouble was ' caused because this man. who; boasts of .bis minion-dollar productions, begrudged a little chorus girl ai few1 cents extra to which, she was en titled by extra ;"work ;-f i :i ! ; j"I . have 1 3 been ; very 4 unjustly trfeated," asserts Ziegfeld. "Conditions; in tho thea tre to-day are! deplorable. No self-respecting manager would tolerate them. Therell " bo brand-new faces in my next show. The girls will; be young and they; will be ama- , teurs.' And. i if the1 Equity makes the chorus a dosed shop , by 1924, as It threat-' ens to do;ithat's when 111 quit the show business In America!" . , . 4 2 r; Ml T x-:-i.-v-.-xs-.5:-a 1 1 v- . m ;.'. !. ;. l 'I I in " ' -i,,A ') Florence O'Deni- shawn, the Dancer, Ono r of - the . Signers of Miss Poole's 'etition for Reinstate j ment, l; ill A ,y. ttai All "This 'U the Wow-offl' cried Mr. Ziegfeld, - j and off it: blew!; C2At SrUsta Slhto Besq-rea. Ave 1 Tt '; I. Kf I: mum tTf ' , .... .- ' 3 1 ' 3&Xa ASS r -A- .A Cepyriett. 1922. by XnUnaUanali restore Serrice, loo, 1 - 11. -V- ''-U1' ft ts-