Bill LeFurgy Scandals of the Gilded Age and Roaring 20s
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The Ziegfeld Follies: Revolutionizing Broadway, Hollywood, and Culture

The Ziegfeld Follies changed American entertainment in a big way. When Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr., introduced the Follies of 1907 at the New York Theatre on Broadway, he took spectacle to a whole new level. It started as an uncertain experiment. It blossomed into an entertainment empire that ran until 1931 (with periodic revivals after Ziegfeld’s…

Edythe Baker, Jazz Pianist and Ziegfeld Girl
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Edythe Baker: Fabulous Ziegfeld Girl and Jazz Piano Star

Edythe Baker was a distinctive figure in jazz world during the 1920s and 1930s, making her mark in a male-dominated profession. She excelled as a jazz pianist, composer, and recorder of popular music. Her beauty and talent also led her to both dance and play the piano in the renowned Florenz Ziegfeld’s Midnight Frolic. Performing…

Nyota Inyota
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Authentic Spectacle: The “Exotic” Dancer Who Almost Thrilled the Ziegfeld Follies

During the early 20th century, Western audiences wanted spectacle. They couldn’t get enough of so-called “exotic” performances—female dancers with bare flesh draped in jewels, moving with sensuous rhythms. But it wasn’t just about the dance. It was about the story, the illusion, the fantasy. Audiences craved the escape, the thrill of something different, the titillating…