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The New York Concert Saloon

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The New York Concert Saloon Synopsis

In this book Brooks McNamara explores the world of the concert saloon in New York from the Civil War to the early years of the twentieth century. A concert saloon is defined as an establishment offering various kinds of entertainment, including alcohol, with some also providing gambling and prostitution. All of these saloons employed 'waiter girls' to sell drinks and sit with male customers and all had bad reputations. McNamara focuses on the theatrical aspects of the concert saloon and examines the sources of saloon shows, the changes in direction during the century, the performing spaces and equipment, as well as the employees and patrons. McNamara paints a picture of a lively and theatrically fascinating environment and his work sheds light on our understanding of American popular theatre. The book contain informative illustrations and will be of interest to historians of theatre, popular culture and American social history.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780521036993
Publication date:
Author: Brooks New York University McNamara
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 172 pages
Series: Cambridge Studies in American Theatre and Drama
Genres: Other performing arts
Social and cultural history