Bolero
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 406
- Location
- Western Detroit Suburb...
Interesting selection of images, particularly the segretationists at the start. Would be interesting to know more about why / how these were all selected.
And why they were included as part of the "fabulous" fifties! How about "parts of the fifties that stank"?
And a 1920s montage --
A cartoon of John Barleycorn being banished by a stern-visaged woman dressed in black.
Women voting.
The S. S. Buford sailing eastward.
Emile Coue
Roscoe Arbuckle, in handcuffs
Babe Ruth crashing a home run and piddling around the bases on his little legs.
Warren Gamaliel Harding
Douglas Fairbanks
Mary Pickford
Andy Gump
Women playing mah-jongg
The front cover of "Babbitt"
A teenage boy sitting before an inscrutable device, while wearing headphones
Model T's rolling off the line
Charlie Chaplin
Mae Murray
Lillian Gish
Harold Lloyd dangling from a clock
Paul Whiteman
Walter Johnson, pitching in the rain
Red Grange tearing across the field
Calvin Coolidge wearing an Indian chief's headdress
Graham McNamee spieling into a microphone
Rudolph Valentino
The Chicago Tribune's "Pink Powder Puff" headline
The 100 Percent American Ku Klux Klan marching thru a small city in full regalia
Prohibition agents smashing kegs.
Al Capone
Dancers dancing the Charleston
The Ipana Troubadours
The Clicquot Club Eskimos
Al Smith wearing a brown derby
Jimmie Walker greeting a dignitary
Charles A. Lindbergh taking off
"Woof Woof! Don't Be a Goof!"
Ruth Snyder in the electric chair
Shipwreck Kelly atop a flagpole
Al Jolson in blackface down on one knee
Felix the Cat
Herbert Hoover
Times Square alight with advertising
A woman in a cloche hat and a dress just at knee length
"Painting The Clouds With Sunshine."
A man holding a pistol to his head, with a broker's letter on the table.
All to the tune of Roger Wolfe Kahn's recording of "Crazy Rhythm."
He never regarded it as any kind of golden age, it just was.
Harold Lloyd hanging off that clock is an image indelibly burned on my mind from childhood. I remember being about six years old and watching BBC2 from 6pm in the evening (because who wanted to watch the news!! especially a kid in Northern Ireland with the troubles still raging). I saw a lot of Laurel and Hardy, King Kong, old Godzilla Movies, the original Mighty Joe Young..... but the one I really remember the most was watching Harold Lloyd. It was a series where they'd added a fast-talking commentary over the top of the original films (it wasn't until some years later I discovered that they were originally silents). I loved them, both the visual humour and the wordplay in the commentary. The clock-climbing scene is, of course, one of the very most memorable.
Did Amercian women play Majong in the thirties? I first discovered the game on, I think, Windows 2000.... or XP, maybe.... When I went to China for the first time in 2006, I saw my first Mahjong set; after that, I discovered the history of the bracelets.
That particular series of Lloyd releases was put together by Time-Life Films in the early 1970s, just after Lloyd himself passed away. Lloyd had always resisted releasing his pictures to television because he feared they'd get the "Fractured Flickers" treatment, but as a result of that his films had become very hard to see -- and he himself largely dropped out of the public consciousness. His heirs, wanting to reverse that trend, put together the Time-Life deal, with an eye toward marketing it toward kids, hence the rickety-tickety music scores and the voice-over commentary. The series also had a ra-ta-ta-ta-ta theme song composed by trumpeter Neil Hefti in the same campy sensibility as his "Batman" theme. All this was done just as the twenties-thirties nostalgia craze was peaking, and the series was widely shown in the US on PBS stations, and ran for a very long time on BBC2. For a long while, these edits were the only editions of the Lloyd films to be widely available.
The mah-jongg fad had cooled by the thirties -- contract bridge was the big craze of the early thirties, supplanted in 1935-36 by Monopoly. But no doubt there plenty of lingering mah-jongg enthusiasts holding on from that game's American heyday in 1920-1923. Its following was overwhelmingly middle-class female -- during the fad, it was very much the thing for "Wednesday womens' clubs" to do, and Chinese-themed clothing and decorations were often part of the whole experience.
the series was widely shown in the US on PBS stations