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Q: Who recorded hall of the mountain king in the 50's 60's or 70's?
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Continue Learning about History of Western Civilization

How did the fashion look like in the 50s?

If you've ever seen "Hairspray" the fashion in that is very similar to the popular fashions during the 50s.


When did 50s pop orriginate?

In the 1950s, of course.


What did a tuxedo look like in the 1950?

In most regards, very much like it does now. The black jacket, satin lapels and pant leg stripe, black bow tie and cummerbund or vest, and patent leather shoes were all quite well established. A well-dressed man from 1950 could quite easily walk into a black-tie ball in 2008 without changing his clothes. There have been some changes, most relatively minor. In the 50s, most lapels would have been either "peak" lapels, which are pointed, or "shawl" lapels, which are curved. Today, the most common lapel on tuxedos is the "notch" lapel, which is the same lapel as on a business suit. In the 50s, most tuxedos would have had one button, with some having two. Today, the two-button variety is probably more common, with three- and four-button models sometimes seen. Some tuxedos in the 50s would have been midnight blue, which has become much less common. Tuxedo vests in the 50s would have been very low-cut, generally with three buttons. Most tuxedo vests sold and rented now are simply satin three-piece suit vests, high-cut and with five or six buttons. Some men wear black four-in-hand ties with tuxedos today, although this is obviously a bad idea. So, minor changes aside, a man could wear a black jacket with peak or shawl lapels and a black bow tie and cummerbund and be welcomed by society in the 50s and the present.


What did women wear in the 50s?

In the 1950's a women would wear a dress, or a poodle skirt with a button-down cardigan and saddle shoes. A tween would wear the same or usually a preppy plaid skirt with (sometimes) crinilin under it to make it flare or "poof"


What is the difference between the 1950s and 1960s?

There were numerous differences between the 1950s and 1960s.The 1950s were characterized by:WWII was forgotten by younger generationssock hops in school gymnasiumssock hop music (beginning of rock 'n roll before rock)dance was still mostly separate and "respectable"going steady was expected before engagementengagement was expected before marriagemarriage was expected before parenthoodfew homes had TVs but this was increasingmost homes had radios and was the source of entertainmentnewspapers were the main source of local, state, and national newsthe soda shop, movie theater, and pool hall were main hang-outsboys who got into trouble in groups were "ruffians" or "hoodlums"teen boys drooled over their first carsthe car and the girl were status symbolsgetting "honors" in high school really was an honor"Sweet 16" for girls really meant somethingThe 1960s were characterized by:disillusionment with authority figures and "the establishment"movement toward folk musicThe Vietnam War brought protestsJohn F. Kennedy was adored; the country believed he would save and redeem us allfrom grade school children to old age, people were affected by JFK's assassinationJFK's assassination was followed by Bobby Kennedy's assassination; the world seemed to have gone "crazy" (insane) in that short timeMartin Luther King was gone"conspiracy" theories began about the deathsRoswell's UFO conspiracy had already been going on for more than a decadeadults viewed younger persons as being the "Hippie" generation; many "hippies" joined hippie "communes"the majority of "hippies" felt they were working toward social changesWoodstock! most of us from the 1960s-1970s generation need to say no morehowever, drugs, pot, LSD use became widespreadguys grew long hair and beardsgirls wore Indian-style headbandsthe mini-shirt was introducedyoung men became draft evaders, refusing to go to Vietnamother young men were being killed daily in the war; silver-colored POW bracelets were worn by many in schoolsuniforms were still required in many schools, but more could dress as they wantedVatican II changed the rites of the Catholic Churchdisillusionment entered even among "religious" orders: Catholic priests and nuns left the professionNuns who stayed in the profession changed from the black habit to street clothesThe 1970s kinda limped in. The USA was wearied from the Vietnam War. As Don McClean wrote in American Pie, the dream had died; a new generation would need to carry on the fight for justice, equality, social change. But the young adults of the 1970s didn't have the remarkable political and social figures that the 1960s had. MLk, JFK and Bobby were dead. Many top Rock 'n Rollers had died from overdoses or airplane tragedies. If the kids from the '50s had been holding a collective breath that was forced into balloons held by the kids of the 1960s, then the young of the 1970s just didn't know what to do to keep the balloons afloat. The balloons lacked direction... sputtered... deflated... until the wind just swept all those lofty ideas away. The youth of the '70s benefited from the ideals of the '60s youth, yet we also paid a price, caught between adults' "I told them so" and a certain cynicism we couldn't overcome. Kids in the '70s had access to drugs, but only as if riding coattails of the 1960s' ghosts. All the mighty words seemed to have already been said; the country (establishment) had been pushed as far as it would go. The "pigs" (police) of the '60s were, seemingly, back in charge (even though many had been the counter-culture of the 1960s). The Age of Aquarius and the Both Sides of clouds and clowns were musical, but not very applicable by the mid-70s. The 'real world' intruded too much: veterans coming home to jeers instead of cheers; MIAs and POWs thought to have been left behind; political corruption; overseas leaders to be feared; and, the fear leftover from the 1960s that at any time some overseas dictator would blow up the world with an atomic bomb. So, while many in the 1970s wished and wanted to carry on the goals and fights of the 1960s.... we instead just sang along to "Bye, bye, American Pie, drove my Chevy to the levy but the levy was dry... Good old boys drinking whiskey and rye singing 'This will be the day that I die...this will be the day that I die..."Yet, most of us teens from the mid-70s carried on as though life was "normal": we graduated HS, went to college or got jobs; got married, had kids; started pension funds... and wondered, "Is this all there is?"