American Language Supplement 2 (140 page)

BOOK: American Language Supplement 2
3.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The various specialists have their own names. One who sells fruit- or vegetable-squeezers is a
juice-worker
, one who takes subscriptions (usually for farm papers) is a
paper man, leaf worker, name-gatherer
or
sheet worker
, one who sells medicines (now usually vitamins) is a
med worker
, and one who deals in horoscopes is a
scape worker
. Plated ware is
floozum
, metal polish is
flookum
, knives are
shivs
, cement is
gummy
, spot-removers or other cleaners are
rads
(from
eradicator
), watches are
blocks
, billfolds are
pokes
, fountain-pens are
ink-sticks
, spectacles are
googs
, a ring is a
hook
, corn cures are
corn punk
, handkerchiefs are
wipes
, and flower bulbs are
horn nuts
. Household articles in general are
gadgets
, and any sort of electrical device is a
coil
. To disperse an audience is
to slough the tip
. To break sales resistance is
to turn the tip
.
1
One of the gifts of pitchmen to the general vocabulary seems to be
phony
or
phoney
, the origin of which still engages lexicographers.
2

The fakers who hire stores and stage auction sales of phoney jewelry, silverware and other such gimcrackery constitute a variety of pitchmen, somewhat below the salt. Their sales are known in the trade as
grind
auctions. Their business, of course, calls for much more capital than the ordinary pitchman can command, but otherwise they follow his methods pretty closely, especially those he uses in a
jam-pitch
. A study of their argot, by Fred Witman, was published in
American Speech
in 1928.
1
It includes many of the usual pitchmen’s terms, and also the following:

Cold turkey. A price at which merchandise will be sold to the first bidder who names it, without any effort to induce a higher bid.

Drop,
v
. To sell.

Freeze,
v
. To alarm the customers by some transparent fraud or other blunder.

Line. Double the cost.

Lift,
v
. To recognize imaginary bids, and so stimulate further bidding.

Mahula,
v
. To go broke.
2

Minch. An undesirable spectator.
3

Mischcowain,
v
. To monkey around.
4

Mitsia. A flashy but defective diamond.
5

O. G. (Old girl). A woman who frequents sales without buying.

Peter Funk. A decoy bidder on articles that fail to bring the prices hoped for.
6

Yinceth,
v
. To trim a sucker.
7

Zagger. A cheap watch movement in a showy case.

The stage in its various forms shares with the newspapers and the radio the burden of disseminating neologisms in the Republic,
and its chief organ,
Variety
, has probably set afloat more of them than any other single agency.
1
But in addition to their services in this cultural field stagefolks also use many peculiar terms of their own. Some of them go back to the days of Shakespeare, but most, of course, are more recent, and there is a constant birth of new ones. The first effort that I am aware of to compile an American glossary was made by the highly respectable but stage-struck Dr. Brander Matthews in 1917.
2
In the following list
3
I have omitted terms whose meaning is known to everyone,
e.g., star, box-office, ingénue, one-night stand, angel, hand, S. R. O., properties, understudy, tryout
and
free-list
.
4

Ad lib,
v
. To insert lines not in the script.

Apron. That part of the stage between the curtain and the footlights.

Backing. Scenery hung behind doors, windows and other openings in the set.

Back-stage. Behind the scenes.
5

Bit. A small part.

Blow up, or dry up, or balloon,
v
. To forget one’s lines.

Borders. Short curtains or strips of scenery (foliage, etc.) behind the top of the proscenium arch and across the top of the stage; also lights along the sides thereof.

Box set. A setting enclosed on all sides save the one opening to the audience.

Break. The end of a performance.

Business. Any action save spoken dialogue.

Dog. An audience outside New York. To try out a play on the road is
to try it on the dog
.

Doubling. Playing more than one part in the same play.

Dressing. Filling a house with pass-holders likely to applaud.
1

Drop. A flat, hanging piece of scenery.

Entrance. Any avenue of ingress to the stage, as a door in scenery; also, the actor’s use of it.

Fat. Said of a part that gives the performer a good chance to show off his talents.

Featured. Said of an actor whose name appears in the advertising of a play directly below that of the play itself, usually preceded by
with
.

Flies. The region above the stage opening.

Foots. Footlights.
2

Frohman. The manager of a theatre on the road.
3

Front of the house. The lobby, box-office and manager’s office.
4

George Spelvin. A name used on play-bills for a minor actor in a walk-on rôle, or to conceal the fact that an actor whose real name is given in one rôle is doubling in another.
5

Ghost. The company treasurer. The
ghost
is said to
walk
on payday.

Good theatre. Effective on the stage, though maybe deficient in artistic plausibility.

Grip. A stagehand.

Ground-cloth. The stage carpet.
6

Ham. A bad actor.
7

Heavy. An actor playing serious rôles; the villain of the old-time melodramas.

House. The audience.

House stuff. Equipment which is the property of the theatre rather than of the company.

Legitimate. Any theatrical enterprise devoted to the production of actual plays by living actors, and excluding musical comedy, vaudeville, burlesque, melodrama and the like.

Melodrama. Originally a play with music; now a play marked by scenes of extravagant theatricality.

Mugging. Overdoing facial pantomime.

O. P. (opposite prompt). The side of the stage to the actor’s left. Now obsolete.

Open cold,
v
. To present a play in New York without a tryout elsewhere.

Opry-house. An old, dirty and poorly equipped theatre.

Palmy days. The legendary great days of the stage, often recalled by old actors.

Paper. Free tickets. A
house
is said to be
papered
when it includes many persons admitted on passes.

Plot. The scheme or plan of a performance. The stage hands follow a
scene-plot
, the electricians a
lighting-plot
, and the property-men a
propplot
.

Pop. The traditional nickname for the stage doorkeeper.

Prompt side. The side of the stage to the actor’s right.
1

Rep company. A company presenting a répertoire of plays on the road.

Road, or sticks. Any place in the United States save New York.
2

Script. The typescript of a play.

Show business. The stage in all its branches.
1

Side. A page in the typescript of an actor’s speeches, given to him to memorize.

Speech. A unit of an actor’s spoken part; it may be one word or a thousand.

Split week. A week on the road divided between two or more towns.

Stand. The engagement of a company, as in
week-stand
.

Straw-hat, hayloft, cowshed or barn. A Summer theatre.
2

Tank-town. A small town.
3

Teaser. A short curtain or strip of scenery along the top of the proscenium arch.

Thinking part. A part including no spoken lines.

Tom company. A company presenting “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” in the back country, now obsolete.

Top. The price of the most expensive seat in the house, excluding those in the boxes.

Tormenters. Fixed wings or curtains at the sides of the stage, directly behind the proscenium arch.

Trouper. An experienced actor, especially on the road.

Turkey. A failure.

Up-stage. Away from the audience; said of an actor of haughty mien.

Walk on,
v
. To play a part with no lines and little business.

William Winter.
4
A dramatic critic.

Vaudeville, in its heyday, had a rich argot of its own, some of which survives in the general vocabulary of the stage:
5

Actors’ Bible. Originally, the New York
Clipper;
now
Variety
.

Ape. A performer who filches material from others.

Blue. Said of a line or piece of business with obscene overtones.

Brutal brothers. An act in which the performers beat each other up to draw laughs.

Dead-pan. A comedian who shows no facial expression.

Deuce spot. The second place on the bill.

Dumb act. One in which there are no spoken words.

Excess-baggage. A wife or other woman traveling with a male performer but not working in the show.

Feeder, or straight man. A performer who serves a comedian by drawing out his jocosities.

Harp. An Irish comedian.

Headliner. A performer whose name appears at the head of the list of acts in the theatre’s billing, usually in larger letters than the others.
1

Heat. A performance.

Hokum, or hoke, or gonk. A time-worn gag, speech, situation or piece of business that is known to wring applause or tears from any audience.

Hoofer, or heel-beater. A dancer.

In one. Said of an act that works before a
drop
hung in the first groove, the nearest to the footlights.
2

Leaptick. A mattress on which an acrobat lands; also, by metaphor, the pad used to make the belly of a comedian supposed to be fat.

Monologist. A performer offering a monologue, usually without songs or dances.

Neat. Said of a dancing act that avoids buffoonery or acrobatics.

Patter. The lines spoken by a hoofer, acrobat, magician, animal trainer, or other such performer.

Plant. A person in the audience – sometimes the leader of the orchestra – put there to feed a performer.

Pratfall. A fall on the backside.
3

Production. An act with elaborate scenery and requiring a company of some size.

Professor. The leader of the house orchestra.
4

Routine. The text or programme of an act.

S. and D. Song and dance.

Single. A performer working alone.

Sister act. Two women working together, usually billed as sisters.

Sitting on their hands. Said of an audience chary with applause.

Slap-stick. An implement used by comedians. It consists of two pieces of wood, in shape like barrel-staves, fastened together at one end, usually with a handle at that end. When it is brought down on the fundament of another performer it makes a loud noise.

Small time. Vaudeville circuits on which performers were required to perform more than three times a day.

Spot. The place of a turn on the bill.
5

Stop the show,
v
. To win so much applause that it causes a delay in the performance.

Subway circuit. All the theatres within reach of the New York subways.

Supper-turn. A turn forced to go on at 6
P.M
., when the audience in a continuous-performance house is smallest.

Tin-pan alley. The region in New York in which the publishers of popular songs have their offices.
1

Turn. Any sort of act.

Union. The musicians of the house orchestra; used facetiously.

Vamp. The music played by the orchestra before a performer launches into his song or dance.
2

Many of these terms, like those given in the preceding vocabulary, are now more or less obsolete, for vaudeville has decayed sadly. At the same time the minstrel show has almost disappeared.
3
Meanwhile, the argot of burlesque, which was once virtually identical with that of vaudeville, has had to be enlarged to take in the vocabulary of strip-tease. The latter was listed by H. M. Alexander in his “Strip Tease” in 1938.
4
From his list, and the help of other authorities,
5
I have put together the following:

Boston version. A show purged of its worst indecencies.
6

Bump,
v
. To thrust the hips forward.
7

Burleycue. Burlesque.

Bust-developer. A performer who croons off-stage while the strip-teaser is at work.

Cacky. Obscene.

Catching the bumps. One of the jobs of the drummer in the orchestra.

Flannel-mouth, or stooge. A
straight man
who acts as
feeder
to the comedian.
8

Flash. The sudden exposure at the end of an act, presumably of the entire carcass.

Gadget. A G-string.

Grind,
v
. To revolve the backside.

Meat-show. A burlesque show offering strip-teasers.

Milk,
v
. To wring applause and recalls.

Painted on the drop. Said of a performer who has no lines to speak.

Panel. A strip-teaser’s diaphanous draperies.

Parade. The preliminary march across the stage in full costume.

Quiver,
v
. To rotate or oscillate the breasts.

Set-up. The performer’s figure.

Shimmy,
v
. To shake the whole body.

Skull. A comedian’s grimace.

Sleeper-jump. A dressing-room remote from the stage.

Slinger, or peeler, or shucker, or stripper. A strip-teaser.

Snake. A sinuous and accomplished teaser.

Third banana. A comedian who submits to assault by another comedian.

Trailer. The strip-teaser’s exhibitionary strut before beginning to take off her clothes.

Wham. A strip-tease in which the teaser removes virtually all her clothes.

Wheel. A circuit of burlesque theatres.

Yock. A loud laugh.
1

Other books

Return to the Black Hills by Debra Salonen
A Sixpenny Christmas by Katie Flynn
Outfoxed by Rita Mae Brown
Silas: A Supernatural Thriller by Robert J. Duperre
Summer Secrets by Sarah Webb
Steal the Day by Lexi Blake