Night Clubbing With The Italian Crooners!  5/21/2023

You can dance anywhere, even if only in your heart. ~Author Unknown

After Dinner Dancing (Page Three)

Dance Navigation Icon Page 1 - Pre-Dinner Visiting  
Page 2 - Who Was Here Tonight?
Page 3 - Serious Dancing Gets Underway  
Page 4 - Comic View Of The Evening
Page 5 - Night Club Movie
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Did You Know? - Los Angeles: Not surprisingly, Los Angeles nightlife in the 1940s was teeming with movie stars. Hollywood luminaries patronized nightspots along the Sunset Strip, including the Players Club, Zamboanga South Seas Club, Don's Beachcomber, Slapsie Maxie's and Ruby Foo's. Ciro's opened on the Sunset Strip in 1940 and swiftly became one of Hollywood's most star-studded nightclubs. Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall or Cary Grant could be spotted at the tables on any given night. Songsters like Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland and Peggy Lee performed at Ciro's.

Crooners
Perry Como

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Leading the way!

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Ready to play... Ready to dance?

Did You Know? - New York City nightlife flourished in the 1940s. The bebop jazz scene developed at venues such as Three Deuces and Onyx Club on West 52nd Street and Minton's Playhouse in Harlem. Café Society was the downtown spot for up-and-coming singers like Big Joe Turner and Sarah Vaughan. The Latin-themed Copacabana, one of New York's most celebrated nightclubs, opened in midtown Manhattan in 1941. Throughout the decade, famous entertainers headlined at the ritzy supper club, including Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis and Jackie Gleason.

Crooners
Vic Damone

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A little Texas Line Dancing!

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Turn to the left!

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The band has the best seats in the house!

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The room is rocking!

Did You Know? - Miami Beach Nightclubs Miami Beach specialized in Latin music during the 1940s. Nightclubs featured Cuban and Puerto Rican superstars such as Xavier Cugat, Tito Puente and Tito Rodriguez. Strolling down the street at night, you might hear Desi Arnaz performing his signature, "Babalu." One of the most famous and lavish venues in the city was aptly named The Latin Quarter, a former 1920s speakeasy. Inspired by the Moulin Rouge in Paris. The world's most talented dancers and showgirls performed there. Entertainers such as Jack Benny, Milton Berle and Sammy Davis, Jr. put on three nightly shows, along with a cavalcade of chorus girls. The Latin Quarter attracted glamorous celebrities and crowds of well-heeled tourists until 1959, when a fire destroyed the building.

Crooners
Buddy Eckstine

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Visiting continues!

Crooners
Rudy Vallee

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Waltz time.

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30% of the people are dancing, the rest visiting.

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How about some Cowboy Cha Cha?

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Moving about the floor with great ease!

Crooners
Peggy Lee

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The backdrop got a lot of action this dance!

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Ready for a little rest?

Crooners
Bob Crosby

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Franks brother was here tonight!

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Rumba, Cha Cha, Tango? What ever you might like!

Crooners
Buddy Clark

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Did You Know? - Chicago Nightclubs In the 1940s, Chicago's upscale hotels housed nightclubs that featured ballroom dancing, big bands and floor shows. Among these were the Boulevard Room at the Stevens Hotel, the Empire Room at the Palmer House, and the Panther Room at the Hotel Sherman's College Inn. Other notable Windy City nightclubs were freestanding venues like the Blackhawk Restaurant and Chez Paree, the latter of which reigned for nearly two decades as Chicago's hottest nightspot. Chez Paree opened in 1932 and hosted such legendary entertainers as Louis Armstrong, Lena Horne and Tony Bennett. A legion of dancing girls dubbed the Adorables also graced the smoky stage. Until it closed in 1960, Chez Paree occupied the landmark Schatz Building, erected in 1917 for the Horn & Hardart Automat Company.

Crooners
Nat King Cole!

Crooners

Dance Navigation Icon Page 1 - Pre-Dinner Visiting
Page 2 - Who Was Here Tonight?
Page 3 - Serious Dancing Gets Underway  
Page 4 - Comic View Of The Evening
Page 5 - Night Club Movie
Dance Navigation Icon

"In the Mood" is a popular big band-era jazz standard recorded by American band leader Glenn Miller. "In the Mood" is based on the composition "Tar Paper Stomp" by Wingy Manone. The first recording under the name "In the Mood" was released by Edgar Hayes & His Orchestra in 1938.