What was entertainment in the 1920s




















The hospital refused to treat her because she was black and she died. Listening to the radio was arguably the most popular form of entertainment. Mass production, the spread of electricity and buying on hire-purchase meant that approximately 50 million people, that's 40 per cent of the population, had a radio set by the end of the s.

More daring dances became popular after World War One. Popular music and culture Some referred to the s as The Roaring Twenties. More activities included playing board games, watching movies, listening to the radio, and reading.

They played a lot of board games as families, like using the Ouija board and playing Hokum and Tiddledy Winks. Suits were almost always wool, even in summer, but wool flannel and wool cassimere were softer and easier to move in, making them ideal for active teens.

In the s cars were a symbol of independence more than the fashions, the jazz, the booze, because they made those things possible. Dance Marathons became very popular in the s. The Charleston involves the fast-paced swinging of the legs and big arm movements. Flappers were young Western women in the s who wore short skirts, bobbed their hair, listened to jazz, and flaunted their disdain for what was then considered acceptable behavior.

Flapper dresses were straight and loose, leaving the arms bare, flapper look required heavy makeup, and Bee stung lips. Begin typing your search term above and press enter to search. Examples include 20 th Century Fox, Paramount, and MGM which controlled their amenities for production and held certain directors and actors under contract.

Disney Studios was also created during this decade in Early films during the Roaring Twenties were silent, but in sound was created in movies. These movies were played in movie theaters, but not the modern ones seen today. Theaters were referred to as movie palaces, and were luxurious and adorned with columns and a sense of royalty. Grauman, who owned several movie palaces, started the tradition of Hollywood celebrities putting their handprints and footprints in cement.

The film industry changed American society and became a popular form of entertainment. United States Takes on the World. Americans flocked to see Hollywood spectacles such as Cecil B. DeMille's Ten Commandments with its "cast of thousands" and dazzling special effects. Comedies, such as the slapstick masterpieces starring Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton, enjoyed great popularity as well.

Like radio, movies created a new popular culture with common speech, dress, behavior, and heroes. Like radio, Hollywood did its share to reinforce racial stereotypes by denigrating minority groups.

The radio, the electric phonograph, and the silver screen both molded and mirrored mass culture. Spectator Sports Spectator sports attracted vast audiences in the s. The country yearned for heroes in an increasingly impersonal, bureaucratic society, and sports provided them. Prize fighters like Jack Dempsey became national idols. Team sports flourished, however, Americans focused on individual superstars, people whose talents or personalities made them appear larger than life.

Professional football began during the s. Baseball drew even bigger crowds than football. The decade began, however, with the sport mired in scandal.

In , three members of the Chicago White Sox told a grand jury that they and five other players had thrown the World Series.



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