The Art of American Entertainment
This
insight, in turn, was itself the product of something that
can be called the art of American entertainment --
a combination of artistry and showmanship that melded the performing
arts traditions of the diverse peoples who had come to this
country into a new democratic idiom that not only entertained
us, but expressed our collective hopes and fears and dreams
so dynamically that the entertainment arts became the single
greatest instrument in enabling Americans to come together,
imagine and re-imagine ourselves, and define our American Experience
to the world.
So it was that spectacular Movie Palaces were built across
the country in the 1920s. And the public flocked to them.
The elaborate designs of the Movie Palaces were often based
on the grand opera houses and palaces of Europe. But the Movie
Palaces were unabashedly American in spirit, and unlike their
Old World antecedents, were not built for a privileged elite,
but for everyone. The banker and the shop girl sat side by
side in the Palaces and were equally entertained.
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