Contact Us FAQ Français
Home / The Roaring 20s: History By the Numbers Series

The Roaring 20s: History By the Numbers Series

Maple Leaf This item is only available for Canadian orders.
This title is a part of the series History By the Numbers Series


Catalogue Number:  BAM1441
Producer:  Blue Ant Media
Producers:  Grogan, Mick
Directors:  Nicholson, Felicia
Producing Agencies:  Saloon Media
Subject:  American History, Arts, Black History, Business Studies, Canadian World Studies, Consumer Studies, Documentary, Economics, Family Studies/Home Economics, Gender Studies, History, Music, Social Issues, Social Sciences, Tech/Voc, Women's Studies
Language:  English
Grade Level:  9 - 12, Post Secondary, Adult
Country Of Origin:  Canada
Copyright Year:  2021
Running Time:  46:02


Request Preview Access

Exactly a hundred years after the world's last great global pandemic, find out if the 2020s will roar anything like the 1920s - the decade of jazz, flappers and speakeasies.

In the mid-1920s a young economist called George Taylor is writing an academic thesis on the silk stocking industry when he becomes the first to notice how women's hemlines are rising at the same rate as the stock market. Freed from wearing nearly 20 yards of fabric women can now play sport, drive cars and dance the Charleston.

When the Harlem Hellfighters, an African American regiment and the most decorated American unit of the first World War, return to New York their victory parade takes them the length of 5th Avenue. When they reach Harlem, they switch the music up from a military march to a jazzy swing, and the Jazz Age is born.

After a wannabe dancer and actress from the mid-West, known as pie-face to her best friend, is fired from her latest gig she finds comfort in a chocolate milkshake and a new hair-do. It's the world's first "shingle bob" and it will become the trademark cut of the flapper. Louise Brooks will go on to become the star of the silent movie era and her name will be lit up in Hollywood.

It's a decade of new possibilities when childhood dreams really can come true: Bessie Coleman becomes the first woman of African American and Native American descent to get a pilot's license; Shuffle Along becomes the first Broadway hit for an all-African American musical; and Harry Walters takes first prize in Harlem's annual drag queen's ball.

MORE RESOURCES



Related Titles

Hollywood Undressed, Looking for the Golden Age Costume Designers

Média TV, Orange Cinéma Series A173-009

The doors of the mythical Hollywood studios enclose a great deal of forgotten treasures. Amongst...

Post-War Design: Design By Decade (Episode 1)

Blue Ant Media BAM077

The post-war period in Canada was a golden age of progress and production. After the Second World...

20th Century Gals

GAPC Productions GAP017

This "docudramedy", hosted by Babe (a.k.a. Cathy Jones of This Hour Has 22 Minutes) is a mix of...

Gone South: How Canada Invented Hollywood

Less Bland Productions LESS04

The award-winning feature length comedic documentary Gone South: How Canada Invented Hollywood is a...

Lady Be Good: Instrumental Women in Jazz

Passion River Films PR3388

This 80 minute documentary film concentrates on the contributions of American female...


Browse Our Collection By Subject

View All Subjects