VAUDEVILLE (1997) ¢ ¢ ¢ 1/2
W: Greg Palmer
When I was a kid, there was a guy who used to show up on television from time to time called the Banana Man. The Banana Man would come out wearing a long, bulky overcoat and he'd pull stuff out of his overcoat - bananas, hundreds of them, but lots of other stuff, too. It was amazing what he could pull out of his overcoat. That was it. That was what he did. The Banana Man had been a novelty act in Vaudeville, and he turns up briefly in this American Masters documentary with more than a hundred other performers, some of them famous and a lot of them (these days) obscure. Starting in the 19th century, Vaudeville, with its comics, dancers, jugglers, musicians, plate-spinners, regurgitators, magicians, contortionists and acrobats, was massively popular at a time when live entertainment was the only entertainment there was. What killed it was technology, specifically radio and film. The irony, watching a movie like this, is that film is the sole reason most of these performances still exist, an art form preserved by the medium that brought it to an end. Immortality, of sorts, for the Banana Man.