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Who'S in the Money? - The Great Depression Musicals and Hollywood's New Deal (Paperback)
Loot Price: R686
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Who'S in the Money? - The Great Depression Musicals and Hollywood's New Deal (Paperback)
Series: Traditions in American Cinema
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Explores the connections and tensions between Warner Bros. and the
Roosevelt administration during 1933Harry and Jack Warner were
among the most important advocates and fundraisers of President
Franklin Roosevelt during his 1932 presidential campaign,
supporting his New Deal legislation in successful Great Depression
musicals like '42nd Street, Gold Diggers of 1933', and 'Footlight
Parade'. But while the Warner brothers posed as exemplars of the
New Deal in real life and in their movies, they were attempting to
reverse Roosevelt's policies within their studio and their
industry.Using newly unearthed primary sources, this
ground-breaking book examines the bitter and little known struggle
in Hollywood and Washington D.C. during 1933 to create a National
Recovery Administration (NRA) code of practice for the motion
picture industry. But through the manipulation of New Deal
legislation, Harry and Jack Warner, along with other studio moguls,
sought to curtail workers' rights and salaries instead of
bolstering both sides of the labour/management divide as they were
supposed to do under NRA regulations, attempting to serve the
economic pain of the Depression as much as possible onto artists
and craftsmen, not owners or management. With its tales of
Hollywood stars and employees fighting to win a fair share of the
proceeds of their labour, the creation of the NRA code makes for an
intriguing story of financial survival, political intrigue and
backstabbing during the worst of the Great Depression.Key
featuresContains extensive primary research on the creation of the
NRA's motion picture code, including many new insights about the
processGives students of U.S. history a new and entertaining way to
examine the legacy of the Great Depression, the Hollywood studio
system and President Roosevelt's New Deal programExtensive analysis
of the historical significance of the Warner Bros.' Great
Depression MusicalsEntertaining stories and insights about
Hollywood and U.S. government figures whose names have echoed
through decades of American culture and historyDemonstrates how the
Warners' aggressive attempts to solidify their industry in 1933
ironically set the stage for the eventual downfall of the Hollywood
studio system in the years after World War II
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