Albee set up the National Vaudeville Artists (NVA) as an alternative union under his control. Performers who wanted bookings on the Keith or Orpheum circuits had to warrant that they were NVA members. In 1916,
Harry Mountford of the
White Rats organized a strike against the UBO that began in Oklahoma City and then spread to Boston and New York. The strikes failed and the White Rats went bankrupt. In May 1918 the Federal Trade Commission charged that the Vaudeville Managers Protective Association was an illegal combination operating in restraint of trade. It dominated big-time vaudeville, forced performers to pay excessive fees and punished union members through the blacklist. The FTC also named the NVA, UBO and the Keith Vaudeville Collection Agency.
Marcus Loew, who had regional agencies for Famous Players and Universal Pictures, was seen as a co-conspirator by the government because many of the Keith theaters showed Loew-controlled films. The only result of the hearings was that the VMPA agreed to drop the requirement for a performer to belong to the NVA to obtain bookings. In 1919 Albee acquired the former
White Rats clubhouse as NVA headquarters. National Vaudeville Artists Club was at 229 West 46th Street.
Cary Grant performed there, doing comic sketches, juggling, performing acrobatics, and as "Rubber Legs", riding a unicycle. In March 1924 an article in
Equity magazine (
Actors' Equity Association) said the NVA "was formed so that the vaudeville artists could be herded into an organization under the control of the vaudeville managers. The N.V.A. is a lightning rod down which the collective strength of the vaudeville actor runs harmlessly into the ground."
Kennedy Cottage, at Saranac Lake, New York, a 1897 "
cure cottage" was used by the National Vaudeville Artists Philanthropic Association prior to the construction of the
National Vaudeville Artists Tuberculosis Sanitarium. In the 1920s a small hospital/lodge was built in
Saranac Lake, New York, for performers ailing from tuberculosis and other respiratory ailments. Later a larger hospital was built in the mid to late 1920s. It was called the National Vaudeville Artist Lodge. After the NVA went bankrupt and merged with what later became RKO in the 1930s, the hospital was renamed the
Will Rogers Memorial Hospital. The Tudor mansion still stands today as a retirement home. It was painstakingly restored and looks exactly as it did when it was originally built. Funds for the building and the upkeep of the hospital were raising through annual benefits in which many artists performed. To commemorate these efforts, souvenir books were created, featuring photographs of the many performers, a list of who was performing, cartoons, and poems written by performers. Stella Mayhew married singer and composer Billie Taylor; they divorced in 1922. Mayhew lost her house in
Beechhurst, New York, and her life savings, in the stockmarket crash in 1929, and she died "penniless" in 1934, aged 59 years, in t By 1934, there was a National Vaudeville Artists' Ward at
French Hospital, in
Manhattan, which cared for
Stella Mayhew. Vaudevillians safeguarded some of their specialties by submitting detailed descriptions and diagrams to National Vaudeville Artists, Inc.'s Protected Material Department, "extensively used for years by the creators of gags, routines, skits, stunts, and unique specialties." Fellow vaudeville comedian
Fred Allen described the procedure in his memoir: "Any member could protect his act. All he had to do was to enclose a copy of his material in a sealed envelope and deliver it to the N.V.A. office. The envelope was placed in the Protected Material files. Later, if a plagiarist was brought to bay, the act preferred charges, the sealed envelope was opened, and the N.V.A. officials dispensed justice. Hundreds of acts protected their material through this service. After
Albee's death, vaudeville started over the hill and took the N.V.A. club with it." The N.V.A. office finally discontinued the Protected Material Department on September 15, 1947, "owing to lack of space." The originators of the material were invited to claim it in person; after 30 days the N.V.A. would dispose of the files left unclaimed.
Ole Olsen remembered the storehouse of gags contained in the files, and purchased all of the remaining material that had been abandoned. ==Decline and dissolution==