By the mid-1920s, audiences were starting to crave storylines; Carroll took notice. With
Murder at the Vanities (1933), he successfully inserted a revue into a book musical. The first edition of ''The Earl Carroll's Sketch Book
opened in 1929, but patrons surmised that it was merely the Vanities'' under a different guise. Carroll's last attempt to re-stage his signature revue on Broadway closed after twenty-five performances. Bankruptcy prompted Carroll to take his operation to Los Angeles, where his
spacious theatre drew appreciative crowds, especially among soldiers on leave during World War II. The new venue, with its table-and-chair seating arrangement, had the
cabaret atmosphere he had once hoped to achieve in New York, notably with the fourth edition of the
Vanities. In 1945, the
Vanities inspired a
musical film of the same title. Two other films inspired by Carroll's productions were
Murder at the Vanities and
Earl Carroll Sketchbook. ==References==