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Entertainment During The Great Depression Essay

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Entertainment of the Great Depression
Entertainment became very popular during The Great Depression. People could take their friends and family to see movies. They even influenced how people thought, dressed, and what music they listened to. Musicals were also popular, along with radio shows. There were even laws to regulate what media could, and could not show to the audience. Radio shows and musicals were even made to be relatable to viewers and listeners. In fact, some of the most influential movies, musicals, and radio shows that society knows and loves today were produced in the Great Depression.
First, most people know about movies. Some famous movies like the Wizard of Oz, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, and Gone with the Wind. In fact Gone with the Wind, and The Wizard of Oz were some of the first movies to be “expensively produced with Technicolor” (Tim Dirks "Film History of the 1930s"). In 1937, the well-known Walt Disney film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was released and “was the first feature-length animated film” (Tim Dirks "Film History of the 1930s"). It is still watched by millions of children today, same with The Wizard of Oz. However, with great movies came rules to make sure they were appropriate for the …show more content…

These musicals usually related to the people watching them. A big show that is still being produced today in different parts of the world is Forty-Second Street. The last time the show was revived was May of 2001, but all good things must come to an end, and the show closed in early January of 2005, but it still ran longer than most shows. In 2001 alone the show won five awards, and nominated for many others. Forty-Second Street first started out as a movie however, so more people could see it. It related to most people because “The main character in Forty-Second Street is broke” (Hanes 1). Most musicals in the 1930s were like this

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