Down the Chimney by Shepherd Knapp
page 20 of 22 (90%)
page 20 of 22 (90%)
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SANTA CLAUS--The conventional costume; white hair and beard; pack, with
few toys protruding from the top. THE GRANDMOTHER--Gray hair, lace cap, gray or black dress. THE GRANDCHILDREN--Four boys in pajamas, with wrappers over them; four girls in night dresses with kimonos over them. Scenery And Scenic Effects SCENE I. The Chimney, which must be large enough to hold two people, one of them Santa Claus with his pack of toys, may consist of a light frame covered with turkey red cambric and backed with cardboard or heavy paper. The cambric should be marked off into bricks. The face is produced by cutting away the cardboard or paper backing behind two bricks for the eyes, one for the nose and two together for the mouth. Boxes must cover these openings on the inside, one for each eye and a larger one for mouth and nose together. In these three boxes are three electric lights which can be turned on and off independently by the boy inside the chimney. Dry batteries have been used when an electric current was not available. The light shining through the cambric makes the face. Turning off, and on again, the light behind one of the eyes makes the chimney wink, etc. Small hooks or nails, sticking out above the eyes, under the nose, and under the mouth, should be provided to hold the snow which the |
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