TTTK OMAHA SUNDAY HKK: SEPTKMRER 2fi. lf00. Vi i i True Story of How "Paprika Schnitzel" Came to Be a Show 1 11 RFD P A F F K N R A T II started It, and in a large measure la more to blame than anyone else con nected with the whole af fair. Of course, this may seem like cowardly eva sion of personal responsi bility, yet the position is assumed with due respect for most llluBtrloua prece dent. If you will go back as far as the Garden of NIB'S NECK. Eden you will find that the paternal parent of the human family evaded his own share in the disaster In much the same way. Adam laid It onto Eve be cause she couldn't kick, and Paffenrath Is so deep in the hole that we might as will stick him for the whole Bhootlng match and have it over with. It all began in a little private dining room one afternoon, when the snow lay deep on the ground, and seven men more or less interested in Ak-Sar-lien met around a table on which there was something to eat, and something to smoke, and where a waiter could easily get'in with something to drink. The debate that followed around that board would have been of immense value if It only cni'Ul have been preserved to his tory. Seven wen sat together at that luncheon, and when it broke up it had developed thi't there were seven irre vocably fixed ideas as to what the next show would do, and an outsider might have thought that seven long friend ships had been hopelessly sundered. At least, some of the language used and some of the threats made would have warranted such a conclusion. Paffenrath called the meeting because he was full of the notion. Gould Dietz was called in because it was desirable to stick the boa.d of governors for the price of the lunch. Gus Renze was brought along for the reason that some time during the game everybody has to see Gus. "Dad" Weaver wad there, because no one knew at that time he was going to jump the game and go to Kan sas City. McCullough was there because Paffenrath and Weaver thought they might hurt his feelings if they didn't ask him to come in, and George West was there be cause his long ex perience has made him sort of dean of the guild. Each of this sextette Is per fectly gentle and tractable, when he has his own way, but neither of them was ever known to agree with anyone else as to anything. Prof. Kratz was also present, but he was so thoroughly abashed by the lan guage he heard and the demeanor as sumed at one time around the board that his presence 'hardly counted. But the seed was sown and the Paffenrath Idea took root that day and flourished even beyond the hopes of any of those present. This was some time later, because n( further consultation was held, and no general session of this august body has , ever been convened since. The next debate occurred in most pretentious comic operas of today have anything to excel the measures written for "Paprika Schnitzel," while not a few fall far below the standard set by Prof. Kratz. After the score had been fitted to the words, or the words fitted to the score, came the real task, that of fit ting players and singers. To give a grand opera at the Den was the most ambitious project ever undertaken. The Initiation had for several years been growing more and more in the direction of a dia matlc performance, but this was a leap far In advance. It required much Infusion of new blood Into the woAing force. Ak-Sar-B?n already had a splendid organization of willing workers, many of whom had developed decided dramatic ability, but none, so far as known, possessed any ca pacity as singers. But the Job had been undertaken and there waa only one thing to do, and that waa to go through with It, and here is where Paffen rath comes in again. One attempt after another wa9 made to suit the singers to the part Intended, and many re- . hearsals with JENNIE. THE PBOORAM GIRL, AND , HER PIRATE LOVER-NOTE THE miscast prlncl- YKLLOW RIBBON AROUNU J.in- and unquali fied chorus men were had until it looked as though the affair waa to be dne monumental failure. Then Paffenrath, full of the zeal and confidence of a beginner, assumed the onerous task of director and stage manager, and what he did to ' i " ,imtwf IPJ ,4 rAPRIKA AND CUPID. the laugh. from the very Jump-oft. Jack Alvord couldn't have put his resonant baritone to better uses than be did this slim mer, and as the agent for Captain Ktdd he has scored a lasting hit. Several enthusiastic young persons were given an opportunity to try out as the burgomaster, the oldest inhabitant and the night watchman, but it was not until practically time to raise the curtain thr.t Vance was discovered to be the man wanted for the burgomas ter and Hamilton disclosed that wonderful adaptability that has made him the prefect proto type of the oldest Inhabitant. This pnlr so nearly realized the idea that the parts might be said to have been written for them. August Miller took hold of tn night watchman job so readily that one might easily imagine him to be t tie reincarna tion of some mediaeval con stable who went abo'U the streets after nightfall, disturbing the slumbers of the peaceful burgh ers and assuring them that The night was dark and stormy, but all was well within the city. Miller added the little touches so essential to fit the 8 o'clock condition to the mediaeval situa tion that his per formance never failed to bring Bob Manley, Ben Cotton, Oscar Lleben, Frank McShane, Alec Reed, John Lund and Charlie Kar bach came along as after-thoughts, but each made good - '-1 TWO OF THE IIUSTLINQ KIDS. in the part assigned him, and " ' ;'' 4:' r MAN EATERS. the whole affair ia history now. He turned the cast upside down and the company inside out. He took over the In complete libretto and, with able strokes of his typ ewrlter, knocked off the rough corners, smoothed out the ragged gaps and filled in with well chosen words, carefully selected Jokes and witti cisms of the rar est sort, until he produced a book that was well worth the money. When he got through he had m a nuscrlpt enough for two, or perhaps three, comic operas. Ap parently he did not know how easy t was until he got under headway. Then he had to work overtime to get the thing back to something like decent time limits. After W FRED PAFl'ENRATH jS5rH V V 'h? Ssr-r-tn LEE aVtRATZ 1 CO MPOSER Gus' private of If you have never to get Into execu Gus on the show bly Imagine what Gus is us full of of fleas, and the catch as the oth times they are as elusive. But th all worked, toget example, during forenoon session, the writer were same time, the rika Schnitzel," the torrent of gant and expres from Gus, and It would not lnte count the various steps, but finally zel" had beeu and music. And to stop right here served tribute to ago demonstrated ttOUgS, , UjjJ THE GUIDE. the composer, his ability as but no one else knew that could write music for an opera. The primal object of the opera in this case whs to de lude trie unsus liecting listener find make hlra think he was about to hear or fee something that did not transpire, and the music pro X ided by Prof. Kratz was of such quality as Elost perfectly accomplished the object. His score, from first to last, is thoroughly worthy of the THE F1R.ST LigUeSt Pral8e' MATE. Xery few of the fice at the Den. been privileged tive session with jou can't possl you have missed, ideas as a dog Is one Is as hard to , er, and some futile as they are ese consultations her for good. For the course of a when Gus and talking at the expression, "Pap was used amid more or less ele elve language was seized upon, rest anyone to re prellmlnar y "Paprika Schnit evolved, words it might be well and pay a de Prof. Kratz had long writer of music for he he had done all the real work of era and players him. But Patten persuasive way to cajole a prima cessfully as ever or Oscar Ham how he does It cret, but he sue vlnclng each and great aggregatl stars that his or one on which the rested, and by Interest organ! crops that could effect. He rehe season and out the play and aft any triumph come from the Paffenrath. It to figure out the stunts that would the question was r "t3 K. - i BA'S'U BILL. of this he began getting the sing to agree with rath has a most and knows how donna as success did Maurice Grau mersteln. Just he keeps a se ceeded In con every one of this on of operatic her part was the whole fabric exciting personal ed an esprit de only have one arsed them In of season, before er the play, and that may have opera Is due to was easy enough situations and look funny, but to get somebody - VILLAGERS. who could carry out the idea, and right here Is where good luck came to the assistance of good management. It was a matter predestina that Wap should be pirate king, after that selection of cast was largely guess work. Clint Mil ler's sweet tenor voice foreor dained him for the position of Cupid, and John lirennan's unde niable pliysical charms, as well as his ability to reach high C, made him an Ideal Paprika Paprika Schnitzel" was niade a go. The chorus was a much easier proposition, for it turned out that volunteers with singing voices were plentiful enough. It Is quite likely that a large majority of these did not quite understand wnat tney were going against or they probably would have not been so eager. It was no snap to go out there , night after night, giving up all other pleasures for the purpose of rehearsing, and yet these young men did It all summer long. They had to re hearse as faith fully as any com pany that ever appeared before the public, for It waa Just aa essential that they know their lines, business and music cues as well as any throng of "merry-merri stood In line bef er's office on pay this the only endured. A hott stage at the Den imagined, unless dressing room, young men rehe long with a fidel scarcely be appr tainly cannot be fenrath's arobitl less and took the ing some new fe successive perfor were interpolat vised and every c h a n g e was great thing for was something performers. If salary it Is certa rath would have of one strike a but as the work "for the joy of M Yj- '"4 r.: " J of f f' the V' , the V ' ' ' ' . ' the -S'Kv,. - BEDELIA. MAESTRO hi:rr HAM-MEUSTE1N-IS'ITMI 'N I. es who ever ore the manag day. Nor was .hardship they er place than the could scracely be It should be the And yet these arsed all summer It.v that can eclated, and cer overpralsed. Paf on was bound form of intradur al re at each' mance. Songs ed, dances de concelvabl e made. It was a the show, but it awful for the they had been on In that Paftcn had an average week to settle, was being done the working" the stage director's pleasant way. of getting around people waa sufficiently potent to keep up the team work from, the beginning to the end. After the opera was under headway came the further task of fitting In, what it known In the technique of the Den as the stunts. This phase of the per form; nee re quired that the chords m e n should do double duty, which they performed Willi com men dabln ileal and a rtl naciiy that mu.-t have suited all who fell under their tender min istrations. It was here that Wap- .plch shone as he never had before, whih Cotton, Man ley, Liebcn, Lund, Reed and others formed a galaxy of scintillating stars whose radiance nightly Illumined tlu path of n siiuiul of befogged wanderers to the bri';hte;t realms of light. If tlit original notion of the stunts lacked anything the fertile inventiveness of these )4iii tlemen was sufficient to supply the things, and no one was heard to complain, after the curtain went down, that he ha in't gctten all that war coming to him. When the opera had taken torin Miles Greeiileaf got Into the game and contributed some special songs and speeches that added greatly to the general affect of the whole. Ills well known lenhant for humorous expres sion was never better exhibited ('.'an In his contribution to the book of the play. Here also conies In the nuislcaners. : ( " .1 Pimmick the faithful and Ms bunch of fiddlers Bnd drummers and horn blow ers become so well accustomed lo the doings at the Den that It is second na ture to them, but tills season they really had something to do. The old-time tune of "Turkey in the Straw" was abolished and In its stead was set down the sweet harmonies written by Prof. Kratz for the embellishment of the "opera." These were performed in masterly style and the careful watching of the leader ena bled the singers always to have' at least the right music cue, so that any possible hitch in the performance might not be chargeable to the orchestra. Oscar Lleben not only took part in the play, but attended to the costuming, and nightly gave Instructions to a large class in the gentle but necessary art of "mak ing up" for appearance before the foot lights. The wonderful crop of beards and scars and other things that Oscar produced on the faces of some of Omaha's most popular young men were real triumphs. If any added tribute were needed to attest the spirit of Ak-Sur-Ben it Is furnished by the fidelity of the men who give over their time during the summer to make the show a success. The "working crew," as it is known, has grown from season to season along with the aspira tions of the organization, and the Importance of the "show" at the Den, but each season haa seen a new addi tion of volunteers as eager and as willing as any of the veterans. Of these latter many have stood by the ship for so many yeara that it would be an occasion for wonder if they were to be missed. Some have been there from the very beginning, while the service of others dates . back ten or a dozen years. But the newest man in the lot enters into the game Just as earnestly and does his part Just as faithfully as does the oldest. It is not all for fun with, them, for the spirit of Ak-Sar-Ben is not all fun. It has a serious aspect, and the working crew grasps this fact, also, and does its part to make the happenings at the Ien impressive as well as pleasant Night after night these men rehearse and drill, early and late, that they may each become proficient In the part as signed, and that the whole may go with the snap and dash necessary to success. Sometimes the work Is really i-v - : WEDDING GUESTS. CAP. KTDD. arduous and It is before the doors Monday night to knights and their hers of the work busy. Costumes must be donned; night this last new part had to committed, some hearsed, new learned and old the changes made the play. All this work. But the went through by the greatest made the "opera" Ben one of the of all the king's the "Wo r k I n g a bunch of enthu credit to the lm an author, a com tor. never light. Long are opened on admit the guests the mem lng crew are and m a k e-u p almost every season some be conned and new stunt re cues and business ones adapted to In the process of means hard working crew with It all, and of team work season at Ak-Sar-most successful annals. Here's to Crew," as gallant siasts as ever did perfect work of poser or a d tree- clear back to - a- - -I ' A 4. :. ;1 H, . A - . " rifnaoMASTER, PIRATE CHEF. PIRATE CHIEF. rom Barney on the front door. Louie and Billy at the back end of the hall, the whole bunch is 8 fine lot of tireless hustlers They are courteous and careful, and work with the single-hearted purpose of mak ing the "show" one grand suc cess and giving to each knight or his guest such treatment thut no complaint will ever be heard. It is such men a these as give to Ak-Sar-Ben his vogue and who have during the long years of the reign of the king placed the name t the gracious ru!tr of Quivera at the very pinna cle of fame. McC. lit -ft .m . I' PLAIN PIRATE. 5 ffi0 km 4 as JL'KT FIKR''i;. 0 i