Y ' ; . . . . THE OMAHA SUNDAY HICK: AI'IW, 5. 1008 4V WATCH IFOR. DAIHY9 ten? P rt ) 'i y "iiVirrwuuijiitnAAAAri i M UWL SMALLEST STAR OF ALL But What is Mere Size? Ask. Mabel Taliaferro. TALK WITH POLLY OF THE CIECUS Plays Don't Haw to lie Wrlltrn to Fit Her, Evtii If fhe Wrltki Only Mnety-SIx rounds. NEW YORK, April 4.-Malxl Tallfcrro, who Is playing in "Polly of the Circus" at the Liberty theater, Is the smallest star on the stage. She looks especially petite asl she greets The Bun reporter at the door of her apartment, for she la holding an The Is Only "Skin Deep" ,riepnani in ner arms, u is noi a rem era B pliant, perhaps It may be well to state, w but one of china, a recently acquired mas 1 cot of her husband, of I, una Park fame, fr who has adopted the elephant as his crest. The panels of the library are of elcphunt hide, the piano seat Is et on the same pachyderm's four feet, there Is nn enor mous elephant head on the wall and va rious bits of brle-a-brac are done In that special model. Mrs. Fred Thompson, as she Is known In private life, looks espe cially well against the background elephan tine, and If It had been selected as con trait It could not fulfill It mission more successfully. Polly Is only a bit over flvs feet In height and weighs at present ninety-six pounds, which, she says. Is very normal. Only once in her life has she gone over the 100-pound mark, and then she tarried but a moment Just to show what she could do. As soon as people get well enough ac quainted with her, so she says, they hum and haw and then out with soma question as to Just what the secret of her tiny waist and hips really Is. One Inquirer insisted upon knowing, as girl to girl, if the story that she wort lung Iron braces was a I fact and If so, how they were fastened. r Meantime Mrs. Thompson goes on feed ing, eating all aorta of sweets and starchy things, fairly reveling In malted milk and Imbibing stout when she Is troubled with Insomnia. "I don't want to get fat," she avers, "but certainly a few mora pounds would nut hurt ma." The tlnv bones of hands, arms J and ankles seem absolutely to preclude the possibility of her ever succeeding In ousting the fat lady of Mr. Huber's t'.on. "It does seem hard, doesn't It," she asks, "when so many people really want to get thin that others are Jubt as anxious to add a few Inches to their stature and a few pounds to their weight?" The difficulties of being the smallest star ara not so many. It la learned, as might be fancied. The fact that one has to take her tiny frame into account in writing plays is only a legend of the press agent, for even the popular "Polly" was not written primarily with her in view. During the ten yeara that Mies Taliaferro was under contract with Liubler Bros. It frequently happened that there was no play suitable for her, and at such times she sim- - i ... .a .. k, aalu-u l ... . ) Uadtattnctlon to this, many time a play t has been written In which it was unques tLanahlv itMiurv that the leading, aesund or other important role should ba played by a small woman. This happened, for Instance, when "The Land of Hearts' Desire" was used as a curtain raiser in the tour of Mrs. Le Mt OtU Bklnnsr and Misa fclUalon, who TTirvr mncip u Omaha. Iwt Try A Pail of Diamond "C" Kettle Rendered Leaf Lard. Guaranteed Absolutely Pure and A'lL. IL, H, E A IF "" 1 1 1 ' " TTT ', - -ssa . . i i i ! - played "On a Balcony" In the principal cities a few years ana... Tho. elf pact In that, fantasy nautrally suggested the little Talia ferro girl, as she was popularly known, and she played In It successfully. Lately when she was visiting nt Mr. Yeats' home with her friend Lady Gregory of National Irish theater fame he expressed his pleasure at her performance and her physical suita bility. When "Plppa Passes" waa put on for some Eeclal matinees Henry Miller selected her for the part of tho little peasant girl, and the same thing occurred when "Lorna Doone" enjoyed a brief popularity. Her part of Esther In "The Children of the Ghetto" seemed to have been written with some idea of her limited size and in various other plays In which she has taken part, "The Price of Peace," "You Never Can Tell," etc., the same condition of having a part written with a petite woman In mind and then finding the woman has been the experience. Once Miss Taliaferro admits that she came a cropper. It was when she was billed to play Nance Olden In "The Bish op's Carriage." Nance was a tough girl out and out, bred In the bone and out In the flesh, and to save her life the smallest star admitted that she could not look tough enough, lier small, delicate features get all puckered up when she .tries to ahow how she worked to look tough and simply couldn't. "You can see for yourself," she says, put ting It up to the Interviewer, who Is forced to admit that certainly there never was a less tough-looking specimen billed for such a part. "I used to beg my friends when they came tor see It to wait until after the first act, for I was tougher there than aft erward, or was supposed to be. If they didn't see me then I - thought they might be able to stand It. Oh, but I was bad! But not bad in the way I should have been to make a success; Just dramatic school of acting bad, or something like that." MIbs Taliaferro has a gentle little voeabu lark which Just suits her. When she talks along and gets Interested in her subject such words as sweet, nice, dear, love and amiable come as naturally to her. phrasing as strenuous, suffragette or solar plexus to those of more heroic mould. But do not be deceived by this for under the placid exterior of an unruffled counte nance and the harmony of a kindly vo cabulary she has mighty thoughts and stern purposes "It is perfectly absurd," Isn't it, she M Ififl Til UhL'l'Ufl llld11'udL'a 1 fl'TI L. inrr IN THE WINDOWS Midi! u And when you order Ham and Bacon, specify CUDAHY'S D I ALTON D "O." coos, "that any one -should think that all the suffering and tho tragedies and heart rending experiences come to the large women, the tall, statuesque kind. "I believe wo all get our share of the de velopment .which comes with suffering, no matter what our physical stature may be. Oftentimes men and women aro kinder and more gentlo and thoughtful for the little woman, but fate Isn't. Fate makes no such distinction, and so on the stage, which, after all, deplclts tho workings of circumstance, deHtlny, what you will, It may happen that a very small woman may carry a tragic part through successfully If she Is only sure of hereslf Hnd has the simple, sincere way of looking at her work. "Tlw moment that she become self-conscious, believes that she is In any way handicapped by her lack of Inches or walBt measure, that moment she fails to be con vincing and to get, to use the stock ex pression, over the footlights. Maude Adams to my mind was Just aa successful In 'L'Aiglon' as Bernhardt was, but con sider the difference In their appearance. "You naturally think of Bernhardt as you do of Olga Nethersole, for example, aa com ing on the stage with great sweeping ges tures, throwing her arms out from the shoulders in long expansive curves, big, tremendous in tho expression of herself. If Maude Adams did that uho would be absurd; the limited range of her gestures, the quiet stage manner, the delicate re straint, are fully as effective, and her per sonal following is proof of that." Maude Adams is only pne of the contem porary actresses whoso work the smallest star speaks of admiringly. Although' she haa no Intimate frienda In the profession, keeping her stage and domestic life now, as she has always done, far apart, she is a mine of Information In regard to methods and manners. To her all theatrical women are brave, and men fair. Not all, either, for she says frankly that she can t endure big men. "They're so babyish, you know," she savs from the superior height of her five feet some and her ninety-six pounds. "Abso lutely babyish. They've got to be flattered and they throw away their money like geese, and they have all sorts of kittenish ideas. I can't endure small men, either," she confesses, "men with little bones in their wrists and queer little strutty ways cf walking, and high silk hats to make people think they're taller than they really are." For no apparent reason at this point of the Interview Mrs. Thompson begins to speak of her husband and tells how. In stead of having "Polly of the Circus ' especially written so that he could furnish a medium for his wife and his Inventive genius at the same time It was really Polly that brought them together and after a ten days' courtship for Mr. Thompson was awfully busy at that time-made It seem the only thing possible for them to do to get married right away, so when the subject of Polly came up again they would be conveniently placed to talk It over. Misa Magaret Mayo having written "Polly" and, thinking of Mabel Taliaferro as a possible heroine, read the play to her, and afterward she and Mr. Thompson dis cussed its possibilities and probabilities. Later on. after the material fixings were out of the road, they settled down to the Idea of the circus lady In good earnest, and from their united efforta the play was evolved. ' When the play waa first put on a double represented the star In the bareback riding scene and consequent fall. Here is where one of the difficulties of being so small that one cannot easily find a counterpart came In. After a few nights the commenta made In the orchestra and gallery were so audible that the scene was cl.angtd to a :0) A frfrn rvn i 119 MABEL TALIAFERRO A3 From Photo by Davit) & Eickemeyer. more artistic finish. "Think of it," whispers Miss Taliaferro, "I actually head one horrid man hay right out when the double came on: 'Why, those ain't her legs.' Isn't that ghastly? And I thought until then that they matched perfectly! That's when I commenced to take malted milk, but there was no appre ciable effect, and not being able to change er them well, we simply change the finale of the piece instead. It was a good dual easier." To return to the fact of MIbs Taliaferro's strength of character and purpose, she laughingly confesses that she hus abso lutely no ambitions to play Lady Macbeth. MUs Tullferro is about 30, and says that her wide txperlence lias taught her many lessons which she Mpea to put Into work ing use. Bhe refers to her dramatic aims, dUcuases playa and says among other things: "I do not object to the immoral play if It Is written by a master hand Shake speare, for example, for I think he wrote one or two, although many do not. Ber nard Shaw is all right for the library table, but not fur tho stage. He teaches you no great lesson, which ia the only excuse for a risque play, I think." Speaking of risque situations, she ad mits that her first engagement waa made under circumstances which, unless a full explanation were given, might caue un pleasant comment. She was sitting on the kneeof the author ut (lie picve la which. I lMmt$ mi Iroeeiry. 1 JV POLLY OF THE CIRCUS. she made her debut when the offer was presented to her. Joseph Arthur was the playwright and she war at that -time 214 years old. In a photograph of that time she Is shown as a smiling young person holding her foot In her hand. She had been playing with a niece of Mr. Arthur's that special day and Mr. Arthur had been listening to their baby talk. It suddenly occurred to him that her special brand of conversation was rather remarkably enunciated and he lifted her up and' told her to say several things, among the rest, "There goes Santa Claus," and odher lines of his pioce, "Blue Jeans," in which she afterward took the part of Baby Banscouibs, with a long page to be memorised. At L'H years most youngsters are still in the high chair stage, as likely as not strapped in, and their vocabulary Is lim ited to a "Zing of valer" or something equally bromldlan. Her training for her part was conducted on the plan, that hah succeeded well wltb horses, seals and fluffy kittens. If she did well she got a present, any thing on which she had set her childish heart, and the plan worked admirably. Her memory of the time is very clear, showing her precocious In that respect also. "I remember it as if It were yesterday," she says, sitting forward on the edge of her chair and holding her knee with her enclosed aicua. "Ail tha rehearsals at OF u home had gone along beautifully, I wasn't a bit afraid and remembered my lines all right. "Tho one rehearsul I attended In the theater was the one before the final dress rehearsal. The curtain was down and the place was to fnc Just like my room. "1 was successful there, too, and every body was craxy over me. You know chil dren were not very common on the stage at that time, which, of course, accounted for my popularity. "At the dress rehearsal something terri ble happened, something perfectly awful. For years I used to wake up with a night mare in my baby mind at the recollection or It. "I was supposed to be sitting In my chair, when the curtain went up with my eyes closed. Then I was to open them and begin my lines. "On this occasion the curtain waa up and when I opened my eyes instead - of the familiar side of the room which I had ex pected there was a horrible black hole, for the lights In the auditorium were not on. It was the most awful thing I had ever seen. It seemed to be something that was going to swallow me up or I was going to fall Into, and with all the might of my young lungs I screamed and kicked and choked and did all sorts of original things not done in the business of the play. "The cast were completely demoralized. If I was going to act that way the whole piece would be a failure. Naturally they didn't know what to do. but they coaxed and pleaded with rao and gave me presents and tried to make themselves believe that it wouldn't be quite so bad the night of the opening. "When that came and I repeated my per formance of opening my eyes, to my sur prise and delight the awful black hole that had so terrified was no longer there. In stead I looked out on a world filled with the nicest, kindest faceswho all smiled at me, and I cooed and waved my hands and was Just too pleased to see them for any thing, and they laughed back at me and the members of the cast laughed, too, and the terrible ordeal was over and it wasn't until I grew older that I could make them realize what it was that had so frightened me. "Before I was ( yVars old I had played before more than 1,000,000 people In all the towns end cities of America and had trav eled 1S.00C miles. I learned to play Irish character parts with Chauncey Olcott and with Andrew Mack and Katie Emmett. I put on long drosses for the first time when I played Lovey Mary in 'Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch' and had to obtain permis sion from the Children's society before I could appear. Just a little time before my marriage I toured through the cities of Itiris iffs Tho QUALITY Goes Clear THROUGH Australia playing leads wither. Willis Collier in 'Tho Dictator' and 'On the Quiet. "How did you know that Mr. Thompson was writing a play all by himself in which perhaps I mht appear?" asks the smallest star Ingenuously, as If she had not been telling that all through the Interview when she seemed to be talking of other things. HUMAN SIDE OF NOTED FEUDIST Newspaper Man Tarn a Dangerous Trick and Kara pes with Hide Whole. The late Jim Hargls, king of Kentucky feudists, was, first of all, a vain man. Ho knew the extent of h;s power In the region, where law did not count until Floyd Byrd became prosecuting attorney, and It satis fied him. But his vanity had it limits. Hargls detested photographs and photog raphers. His enemies say that the rea son waa not a lack of vanity, but that the Breathitt king did not want Ms features too well known tc the people and other sections of Kentucky. For years he had decreed at Intervals that no ono should ever take a photogiaph of him. During the feuds, several daring photographers who went to Jackson for the purpose of napping the king were glad to escape with their lives. They did not return until the eve of the first trial of Jim Hargls for tho Callahan murder. Th Judge knew of their presence and vowed that his rule would not be broken. Oi course all tho leading papers of Kentucky had photographers at Jackson, especially t get the picture of Jim Hargis. The Louis ville Courier-Journal had sent a young man named Robert Hooe. When the day came for the opening ot the trial, the photographers were lined ur, along the main street Trom the store of Hargls to the court house. The Accused waited In the rear of his store until the hour arrived for court lo open, then cov. ered his features with a quilt and made hi way In that manner to the trial. Several of the newspaper men thought that Hargls had won out and gave up the attempt for the time being. Hooe, how. ever, went around to the rear of the court house and concealed himself near the en trance. His Idea waa that while Hargls was bound to be covered with his quilt If he left by the front entrance, he might dis card It In leaving by the rear. This proved to be the case. When recess came Hargls, accompanied by some of his men, left by the rear 'way. The Courier-Journal man thereupon came out from his concealment and snapped the Judge before he could hld behind one of his friends. Hargls, In a rago, shook his fist and swore at the photographer. Several of his friends, knowing the rule of the Judge, seized the Courier-Journal man and were about to smash his camera, when the Jud Interposed. "Don't, boys. His paper ex pects it of him, and I suppose he's got to' make a living." The Ice was broken, liar gin posed for several pictures and wa never reluctant to be photographed after ward. -Harper's Weekly. To Fat .far Ills Cell. "Dan" Wadsworth, Hartford's heavy man, and said to be the fattest man in New Eng land, is In Jail, serving a sentence of sixty days. But Wadsworth is not In a cell, nailher does he wear the regular Jail uni form. The reasons are obvious. He weight 110 pounds, and there is not a uniform It tho Jailer's outfit which hu could get into, At present it is Just possible fur him U squeeze through a cell door, but the Jallei realizes that in the quiet of a cell, w it a wholesome food and little, exercise. Wads, worth's inclination to take nn flesh would meet with unusually favorable condition.. And though he might be squeezed In, at tha end of sixty days It U a question if he could be jot eal wlUiout guUlii tUwtft