In late 1910, Frank appears to have begun using the stage name “Frank Frazee” as a solo shadowgraphy artist. It was a name that he would keep using for more than a decade, perhaps for the rest of his life. Often at this time he presented his shadowgraphy as part of a vaudeville company. At the Nesbitt Theatre in Pennsylvania in January 1912, for example, he was described as “the human picture machine” who was presenting a cartoon offering in a variety program. Later that year, he made a brief Canadian tour. By then, Frank and Kathleen had given up performing together as the Dantes. They had apparently been living in San Francisco when, at the age of 29, she died in January 1914. Frank continued with shadowgraphy performances after Kathleen's death, but perhaps demand for his act dwindled as moving pictures became more popular, and he also got a job as a day watchman for the New York printing press manufacturing company,
R. Hoe & Co. During
World War I, Frank was drafted into the US Army in 1917 as Frank Eliason Frazee. In April 1919, in New York, he married Margaret E. Gordon (1884-?) from
Grantown-on-Spey, in the highlands of Scotland. About two years later, Frank was performing in a vaudeville show in New York when he fell, fracturing his skull, and was taken to hospital in a serious condition. This is the last known reference to Frank. His place and date of death has not been traced. Shipping passenger records show that Margaret Eliason-Frazee was still travelling between New York and Britain under that name at least until 1953, describing herself as a married “housekeeper”. However, it seems she always travelled unaccompanied and none of the known records gives any indication whether she was either widowed or divorced at the time. No record has been found of Frank having had any children. == Further reading ==