Mass commercial nightlife began in a Japanese Pleasure Garden in 1657 and it’s blossomed ever since – via Victorian Vauxhall, cabaret Paris, jazz-driven New Orleans, flappers, speakeasies, moonshine, Studio 54 and the rave palaces of the 21st Century. Imogen Willetts tracks its riotous evolution in ‘Up All Night: A History of Going Out’ and wonders if the invention of the iPhone has burst the balloon. She talks to us here about …
... the Tango, the Can-Can: dances that got you arrested
… how bourgeois French ‘slummers’ found a taste of danger
… the heady allure in the Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens as an escape from Victorian squalor
… how Anita Berber’s chloroform ballet shocked and delighted Weimar Berlin
… when dancing was a mating ritual and the impact of Dating Apps
… democracy on the dancefloor: the unrepeatable mix of punters and celebrities at Studio 54
… and how the invention of the electric light got people going out and the iPhone made them stay home
Order ‘Up All Night’ here: https://www.weidenfeldandnicolson.co.uk/titles/imogen-willetts/up-all-night/9781399617093/
Help us to keep The Longest Continuous Conversation In Rock going: https://www.patreon.com/wordinyourear
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