- A stage-struck young woman becomes an heiress, and hopes to use her new-found wealth to fulfill a fantasy.
- Charles Murray, a property man, and Slim Summerville, a billposter, love Polly Moran, a stage-struck maiden, who, in turn adores a matinee idol. Hale Hamilton. Harry Booker, who is Polly's father, receives word from the executor of his brother's estate that he is the heir. They move into a mansion where Polly and Murray are about to be married. Hamilton is a wedding guest. Before the ceremony, Murray's jealousy manifests itself and the two men quarrel. Summerville and Booker also get into the argument and a general melee follows. All kinds of handy ammunition is used in a running battle among the trees and shrubbery of the Booker estate. The final result of the dispute is Polly's refusal to wed Murray and her suggestion to Hamilton that she will back him in a new production if he will assign her to the leading woman's part. Polly appears at the theater and her inexperience causes many ludicrous situations. She ruins a scene and in the general disorder some inflammable material backstage catches fire. Murray grabs a hose and turns it on everybody. Polly is accidentally lifted with the curtain and falls from the top of the proscenium arch. A bomb is thrown on the stage and the explosion blows Hamilton, Murray and Slim out of sight. Hamilton leaves in disgust. Polly and Murray reunite.—Moving Picture World synopsis
- Ah the pleasures of vaudeville...or at least vaudeville veteran and great Hal Hamilton's performance as the throughly untalented vaudeville thespian makes this little known Keystone Cops two-reel film somewhat of a departure, in that it is deliberately poking fun at their own profession. Hamilton is the leader of an equally untalented vaudeville troupe. When the Keystone Cops get involved, the funnies roll out.—SindyMac
- As two stagehands are putting up a poster for a current show, a stage-struck young woman comes by, hoping to see the show's star actor, whom she idolizes. The two men joke with her and escort her home, but do not take her seriously. When she arrives home, she learns that her rich uncle is near death, which will make her an heiress. The two stagehands read about the news, and become rivals for her hand in marriage. But the woman herself offers to use her sudden wealth to finance the star's new show, provided that he makes her his leading lady.—Snow Leopard
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