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Automats, Taxi Dances, and Vaudeville - Excavating Manhattan's Lost Places of Leisure (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,672
Discovery Miles 26 720
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Automats, Taxi Dances, and Vaudeville - Excavating Manhattan's Lost Places of Leisure (Hardcover)
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Winner of the Publication Award for Popular Culture and
Entertainment for 2009 from the Metropolitan Chapter of the
Victorian Society in America Named to Pop Matters list of the Best
Books of 2009 (Non-fiction) From the lights that never go out on
Broadway to its 24-hour subway system, New York City isn't called
"the city that never sleeps" for nothing. Both native New Yorkers
and tourists have played hard in Gotham for centuries, lindy
hopping in 1930s Harlem, voguing in 1980s Chelsea, and refueling at
all-night diners and bars. The slim island at the mouth of the
Hudson River is packed with places of leisure and entertainment,
but Manhattan's infamously fast pace of change means that many of
these beautifully constructed and incredibly ornate buildings have
disappeared, and with them a rich and ribald history. Yet with
David Freeland as a guide, it's possible to uncover skeletons of
New York's lost monuments to its nightlife. With a keen eye for
architectural detail, Freeland opens doors, climbs onto rooftops,
and gazes down alleyways to reveal several of the remaining hidden
gems of Manhattan's nineteenth- and twentieth-century entertainment
industry. From the Atlantic Garden German beer hall in present-day
Chinatown to the city's first motion picture studio-Union Square's
American Mutoscope and Biograph Company-to the Lincoln Theater in
Harlem, Freeland situates each building within its historical and
social context, bringing to life an old New York that took its
diversions seriously. Freeland reminds us that the buildings that
serve as architectural guideposts to yesteryear's recreations
cannot be re-created-once destroyed they are gone forever. With
condominiums and big box stores spreading over city blocks like
wildfires, more and more of the Big Apple's legendary houses of
mirth are being lost. By excavating the city's cultural history,
this delightful book unearths some of the many mysteries that lurk
around the corner and lets readers see the city in a whole new
light.
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