Title page:
YULETIDE ENTERTAINMENTS(Back cover)
CHRISTMAS RECITATIONS, MONOLOGUES, DRILLS, TABLEAUX, MOTION SONGS, EXERCISES, DIALOGUES, AND PLAYS
SUITABLE FOR ALL AGES
BY ELLEN M. WILLARD
CHICAGO, T.S. DENISON & COMPANY, 1910
The front matter includes this assurance:
The songs in this book are to be sung to old airs that are presumably familiar to everyone. If any of them should prove unfamiliar, however, the music will be found in Denison's "Songs Worth While," one of the best arranged and most carefully edited collections of old favorites ever published. This book is beautifully printed, in non-glossy paper, measuring 10¾ by 7 inches, and is well bound in a stout paper cover done in colors. It may he obtained from the publisher for the price of $1.00, postpaid.(Ad page, at back of the book).
Then we have these words of guidance:
INTRODUCTORYRather exacting entertainment...
It becomes more and more a part of Christmas gayety to present the legends, or the spirit of it, to the eye as well as the mind.
For this purpose the following pages have been prepared in play and pantomime, songs and marches, drills and recitations. While the needs of adults have not been forgotten, those of the children have been most largely remembered, since Christmas is pre-eminently the children's festival.
A word to those who take charge of such affairs may not be amiss.
Precision of movement is the keynote of success for everythinng of this kind. This does not mean stiffness, but it does mean exactitude and certainty. Uncertain gestures in speaking; scattered attack and close in singing; hesitation in acting; and, more than all, careless motions and marching in the drills (corners not formed squarely, motions only half in unison, etc.)—all these are fatal to that success which makes such entertainments entertaining.
Here, as everywhere else, "What is worth doing at all, is worth doing well."
There are no real illustrations, just a few diagrams, in this paperbound book, "Price, 40 cents." Those figures include a frame and screen arrangement for use as a stage, and diagrams of the movements to be made for specific drills and dances.
The latter two look pretty complicated. "Dance of the Holly and the Mistletoe; For Eight Young Girls or the Number May Be Doubled," has six illustrative figures and seventeen steps in the directions.
The period skits include the usual moral tales about learning the true meaning of Christmas.
There are the usual ethnic stereotypes, such as, "The Pickanny's Christmas."
"Santa Claus in Many Lands" features actors who each dress as a "country," with countries including "Hindustan" and "Esquimaux." "China," has lines in excruciating pidgin to express how much "me likee Melican Santa." Though the dialogue sort of suggests that even countries that don't celebrate Christmas have their points, and at the end, Santa arrives to say he loves all the children.
If this all does not provide adequate entertainment, the publisher also offers:
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