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I thought a thread on this might be fun (Bartenders: if there is one, please feel free to move this post there or eliminate it altogether - no hard feelings).
Based on TV shows, movies, books from the period (in addition to speaking with several people I've known from the Golden Era and cultural, social, historical books I've read / documentaries I've seen on the period), it seems that going out to dinner and dancing was incredibly common and popular.
While we are probably all familiar - from the movies - with the idea of wealthy people in the Golden Era getting all dressed up and going out to fancy restaurants for dinner and dancing, it seems that it was quite common for people to go to very ordinary places and dance to either a small band, a jukebox or even a radio. These where not high-end places, but quite often (at least in the movies) dives, bars or diners.
Since I'm old enough to just bridge the gap, it doesn't seem crazy to me, but I bet most people under 40 and definitely under 30 would see this as some "crazy thing people did back in the day." Sure, there is dancing at weddings and a few dinner-dance places still exist, but from the above-mentioned sources, it seems that a meaningful number of places that served food also offered, or at least allowed for, dancing.
I don't have a specific example in mind, but regularly, when I'm watching TCM, a couple might be in a basic, not-fancy restaurant and a song will come on the radio and they'll get up and dance - sometimes on a small dance floor, sometimes just in an open area - and there might or might not be other couples doing the same, but nobody looks askance at them. This also happens at home where you'll see, in a movie of the period, a couple - middle class or working class (not just the swells) - start dancing in their living room or kitchen to a song on the radio (especially, but not exclusively) if they are eating or drinking.
One thought I've always had was that in a period of, at least outwardly, restrictive sexual codes and norms, dancing was an acceptable way to get physically close in a prurient manner. Today - if some TV shows are to be believed - some young men and women have sex and then go on their date so that it isn't "hanging out there," but back in the GE, dancing was one of the few publicly and even privately acceptable ways to get intimate.
I was wondering what others thought about this cultural norm / what experiences they had with it / memories of it / impressions from their parents / knowledge of its history / etc?
Based on TV shows, movies, books from the period (in addition to speaking with several people I've known from the Golden Era and cultural, social, historical books I've read / documentaries I've seen on the period), it seems that going out to dinner and dancing was incredibly common and popular.
While we are probably all familiar - from the movies - with the idea of wealthy people in the Golden Era getting all dressed up and going out to fancy restaurants for dinner and dancing, it seems that it was quite common for people to go to very ordinary places and dance to either a small band, a jukebox or even a radio. These where not high-end places, but quite often (at least in the movies) dives, bars or diners.
Since I'm old enough to just bridge the gap, it doesn't seem crazy to me, but I bet most people under 40 and definitely under 30 would see this as some "crazy thing people did back in the day." Sure, there is dancing at weddings and a few dinner-dance places still exist, but from the above-mentioned sources, it seems that a meaningful number of places that served food also offered, or at least allowed for, dancing.
I don't have a specific example in mind, but regularly, when I'm watching TCM, a couple might be in a basic, not-fancy restaurant and a song will come on the radio and they'll get up and dance - sometimes on a small dance floor, sometimes just in an open area - and there might or might not be other couples doing the same, but nobody looks askance at them. This also happens at home where you'll see, in a movie of the period, a couple - middle class or working class (not just the swells) - start dancing in their living room or kitchen to a song on the radio (especially, but not exclusively) if they are eating or drinking.
One thought I've always had was that in a period of, at least outwardly, restrictive sexual codes and norms, dancing was an acceptable way to get physically close in a prurient manner. Today - if some TV shows are to be believed - some young men and women have sex and then go on their date so that it isn't "hanging out there," but back in the GE, dancing was one of the few publicly and even privately acceptable ways to get intimate.
I was wondering what others thought about this cultural norm / what experiences they had with it / memories of it / impressions from their parents / knowledge of its history / etc?