Tutt Brothers Explained
Salem Tutt Whitney (Salem Tutt; 15 November 1875 – 12 February 1934) and J. Homer Tutt (Jacob Homer Tutt; 31 January 1882 – 10 February 1951), known collectively as the Tutt Brothers, were American vaudeville producers, writers, and performers of the late 19th and early 20th century. They were also known as Whitney & Tutt, Tutt & Whitney and the Whitney Brothers. They were prominent in black vaudeville and created over forty revues for black audiences.
Biography
Salem Tutt Whitney was born in Logansport, Indiana (birth-year varies: 1869, 1875, 1876, or 1878), as was his brother J. Homer Tutt. They referred to themselves as brothers, and may have been half-brothers. Whitney originally intended to become a minister but later decided to become a performer, and left college. He attended the National School of Journalism and gained amateur experience in acting, comedy and writing.
From 1888 through 1905, the brothers performed in their traveling tent show called Silas Green from New Orleans. The show, which ran until the 1940s, was bought by circus owner Ephraim "Eph" Williams although the brothers never received payment.
They formed the Smart Set Company in the 1910s, possibly taken over from Sherman H. Dudley. From 1910 to 1925 Whitney and Tutt produced more than 40 revues for black performers and audiences, writing and performing in the shows themselves. Some of their performers found fame in their own right, including blues singer Mamie Smith, who danced in the brothers' Smart Set as a teenager.
One of the Brothers' main productions was a musical farce called George Washington Bullion. Starring Whitney as a tobacco plantation owner, it was popular with audiences and ran for two decades. Their musical Oh Joy! played on Broadway for four weeks. It had originally starred Ethel Waters when performed in Boston. But when the only theatre space the Brothers could find in New York City was on a tennis court under a tent, Waters pulled out and was replaced by Ethel Williams. Both of the brothers performed in Marc Connelly's play The Green Pastures (1930).
They also acted in films, spanning both silent films and talkies, including Birthright (1924), directed by Oscar Micheaux and adapted from a novel of the same name by T. S. Stribling; Marcus Garland (1925), The Broken Violin (1927), and A Daughter of the Congo (1930).
Salem Tutt Whitney died in Chicago, February 12, 1934, and J. Homer Tutt died in Los Angeles, February 10, 1951.
Works
- Silas Green from New Orleans
- Prince Bungaloo (1908)
- Blackville Strollers (1908-1909)
- The Mayor of Newtown (1909)
- George Washington Bullion (1910)
- "Love Me Anywhere"
- "Manyanna" ("Land of To-morrow")
- "Old Kentucky Blues"
- "Dear Old Southern Moon"
- The Wrong Mr. President (1913)
- His Excellency, the President (1914)
- George Washington Bullion Abroad (1915)
- How Newtown Prepared (1916)
- My People (1917)
- Darkest Americans (1918-1919)
- (The) Children of the Sun (1919-1920)
- Betwixt and Between (1920s)
- Bamboula (1921)
- Small Town Doings (1921)
- Up and Down (1922)
- Jump Steady (1922)
- Oh Joy! (1922)
- North Ain't South (1923)
- Come Along Mandy (1923-1924)
- Who Struck John? (1923-1924)
- Hide and Seek (1924)
- Non-Sense (1925)
- When Malinda Sings (1925)
- Rainbow Chasers (1926)
- Deep Harlem (1929)
- The Witching Eyes (1929) directed by Ernest Stern
Family
Salem Tutt Whitney was married three times, his first to Emma A. Baynard (; 1872–1908) (her second marriage). They married May 6, 1903, in Philadelphia at Crucifixion Episcopal Church – Rev. Henry Laird Phillips (1848–1947), officiating. Rev. Phillips, in 1877, became the first African-American rector of the Crucifixion Church in 1877. Baynard was a sister of William Andrew Baynard, a pianist, who, with Salem and Emma, had, in 1900, performed with the Oriental Troubadours. Emma was a soporano and prima donna with the Troubadours. She previously, on March 17, 1897, in Williamstown, Pennsylvania, married Lewis E. Puggsley (1858–1935), an operatic tenor soloist, with whom she had a son, Baynard Lewis Puggsley (1898–1956). Lewis Puggsley was a brother of Charles Henry Puggsley (1868–1932), who, in 1900, was second tenor and soloist with the Oriental Troubadours.
Copyrights
Copyrights
2 c. indicates two copies received, followed by the date.
Bibliography
References
News media
- News: . Baltimore Sun, The . October 10, 1920 . Some Green Room Gossip . 18 . 1. 4, 15 (section 4 at p. 15) . January 29, 2021 . . subscription . Baltimore Sun .
- News: . California Eagle . March 1, 1951 . Final Rites for Homer Tutt, Retired Actor . 71 . 48. 11 . February 2, 2021 . . subscription . California Eagle .
- News: . Cincinnati Enquirer . June 12, 1915 . News of the Courts . 72 . 163. 7 (column 5, 7th paragraph – "A rather peculiar story ") . January 29, 2021 . . subscription . Cincinnati Enquirer .
- News: . Philadelphia Inquirer . July 30, 1963 . Charles Taylor . obituary . 269 . 30. 24 (column 4) . January 31, 2021 . . subscription . Philadelphia Inquirer .
- News: . Pittsburgh Courier . Calvin . Floyd J. (Floyd Joseph Calvin; 1902-1939) . January 1, 1927 . Salem Tutt Whitney Scores Poor Stage Facilities . 18 . 1. 1 (section 2) . January 29, 2021 . . subscription . Pittsburgh Courier .
Books, journals, magazines, and papers
- Book: . Cullen . Frank . Hackman . Florence . McNeilly . Donald . 2007 . Tutt Brothers . Vaudeville Old & New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performances in America . https://books.google.com/books?id=XFnfnKg6BcAC&pg=PA1136 . en-US . 1 of 2 . . 1136 . 9780415938532 . April 22, 2010 . . (Cullen and McNeilly are founders of the American Vaudeville Museum). . . .
- Book: Peterson, Bernard Lee, Jr. (1926–2000) . . Early Black American Playwrights and Dramatic Writers . . 1990 . 9 . 0-313-26621-2 . . (Peterson retired in 1988 as Professor Emeritus of English and Drama, Elizabeth City State University) . . . .
- Book: . Peterson . Bernard Lee, Jr. . 1993 . Pugsley Brothers . A Century of Musicals in Black and White – An Encyclopedia of Musical Stage Works by, About, or Involving African Americans . https://books.google.com/books?id=IJQyBe_wDj8C&q=%22oriental+troubadours&pg=PA125 . en-US . . 208–209 . 9780313064548 . January 29, 2021 . . . . . .
- Book: . Peterson . Bernard Lee, Jr. . 1997 . Oriental Troubadours . The African American Theatre Directory, 1816–1960: A Comprehensive Guide to Early Black Theatre Organizations, Companies, Theatres, and Performing Groups . https://books.google.com/books?id=pH2npoewU5cC&q=%22montrose+douglass%22&pg=PA159 . en-US . . 159 . 9780313295379 . January 29, 2021 . . . . .
- Book: . Peterson . Bernard Lee, Jr. . 2001 . Pugsley Brothers . Profiles of African American Stage Performers and Theatre People, 1816–1960 . https://books.google.com/books?id=94Vkm-y_3CEC&q=%22pugsley&pg=PA208 . en-US . . 208–209 . 9780313295348 . January 29, 2021 . . . . .
- Book: . Oliver . Paul . Paul Oliver . 2002 . Smith (née Robinson), Mamie . http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/J417000?q=mamie+smith&search=quick&pos=2&_start=1#firsthit . Kernfeld . Barry Dean . Barry Kernfeld . . en-US . 3 of 3 . 2nd . . 10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.J417000 . 1-5615-9284-6 . 5104788497 . April 22, 2010 .
- Book: . Stearns . Marshall Winslow, PhD (1908–1966) . Marshall Stearns . Stearns . Jean . Jean Stearns . 1994 . 1971; 1968 . Jazz Dance: The Story of American Vernacular Dance .
- Collier-Macmillan (1968). .
- Macmillan (1971). .
- Schirmer (1979). . .
- Da Capo Press (paperback) (1994). . . .
(page nos. correspond to the Da Capo edition, accessible via Archive.org – link)- "J. Homer Tutt". pp. 152, 255.
- "Salem Tutt-Whitney". pp. 76, 152, 156, 255.
- Book: . Workman . Christopher . Howarth . Troy . 2016 . Tome of Terror: Horror Films of the Silent Era . Midnight Marquee Press. 348. 978-1936168-68-2.