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Wikipedia

Taxi dancer

A taxi dancer is a paid dance partner in a ballroom dance. Taxi dancers work (sometimes for money but not always) on a dance-by-dance basis. When taxi dancing first appeared in taxi-dance halls during the early 20th century in the United States, male patrons typically bought dance tickets for a small sum each.[1][2][3] When a patron presented a ticket to a chosen taxi dancer, she danced with him for the length of a song. She earned a commission on every dance ticket she received. Though taxi dancing has for the most part disappeared in the United States, it is still practiced in some other countries.

Poster for the film Ten Cents a Dance (1931) with Barbara Stanwyck as a taxi dancer

Etymology edit

The term "taxi dancer" comes from the fact that, as with a taxi-cab driver, the dancer's pay is proportional to the time they spend dancing with the customer. Patrons in a taxi-dance hall typically purchased dance tickets for ten cents each, which gave rise to the term "dime-a-dance girl". Other names for a taxi dancer are "dance hostess" and "taxi" (in Argentina). In the 1920s and 1930s, the term "nickel hopper" gained popularity in the United States because out of each dime-a-dance, the taxi dancer typically earned five cents.[4]

History edit

 
Lobby card for The Taxi Dancer (1927)

Taxi dancing traces its origins to the Barbary Coast district of San Francisco which evolved from the California Gold Rush of 1849. In its heyday the Barbary Coast was an economically thriving district, inhabited mostly by men, that was frequented by gold prospectors and sailors from all over the world.[5] That district created a unique form of dance hall called the Barbary Coast dance hall, also known as the Forty-Nine ['49] dance hall. Within a Barbary Coast dance hall female employees danced with male patrons, and earned their living from commissions paid for by the drinks they could encourage their male dance partners to buy.[6]

Still later after the San Francisco Earthquake of 1906 and during early days of jazz music, a new entertainment district developed in San Francisco and was nicknamed Terrific Street.[7][8][9] And within that district an innovative dance hall, The So Different Club, implemented a system where customers could buy a token which entitled them to one dance with a female employee.[10][11] Since dancing had become a popular pastime, many of the So Different Club's patrons went there to see and learn the latest new dances.[12]

In 1913, San Francisco enacted a law against dancing in any café or saloon where alcohol was served.[13] The closure of the dance halls on Terrific Street fostered a new kind of pay-to-dance scheme, called a closed dance hall, which did not serve alcohol.[14] That name was derived from the fact that female customers were not allowed—the only women permitted in these halls were the female employees.[15] The closed dance hall introduced the ticket-a-dance system which became the centerpiece of the taxi-dance hall business model.[14] A taxi dancer earned her income from the tickets she traded for dances.

Taxi dancing then spread to Chicago where dance academies, which were struggling to survive, began to adopt the ticket-a-dance system for their students.[16] The first instance of the ticket-a-dance system in Chicago occurred at Mader-Johnson Dance Studios. The dance studio's owner, Godfrey Johnson, describes his innovation:

I was in New York during the summer of 1919, and while there visited a new studio opened by Mr. W___ W___ of San Francisco, where he had introduced a ten-cent-ticket-a-dance plan. When I got home I kept thinking of that plan as a way to get my advanced students to come back more often and to have experience dancing with different instructors. So I decided to put a ten-cent-a-lesson system in the big hall on the third floor of my building... But I soon noticed that it wasn't my former pupils who were coming up to dance, but a rough hoodlum element from Clark Street... Things went from bad to worse; I did the best I could to keep the hoodlums in check.[17]

This system was so popular at dance academies that the taxi-dance system quickly spread to an increasing number of non-instructional dance halls.

Taxi dancers typically received half of the ticket price as wages and the other half paid for the orchestra, dance hall, and operating expenses.[18] Although they only worked a few hours a night, they frequently made two to three times the salary of a woman working in a factory or a store.[19] At that time, the taxi-dance hall surpassed the public ballroom in becoming the most popular place for urban dancing.[20]

Taxi-dancing flourished in the United States during the 1920s and 1930s, as scores of taxi-dance halls opened in Chicago, New York, and other major cities. Like other nightlife venues, the taxi-dance hall ran the gamut from the classy establishment to the cramped and seedy hole-in-the-wall. Roseland in New York City, for example, which offered taxi dancing in the late 1930s, appealed to the more discerning patron. Far more common were halls catering to a working-class clientele. By the mid-1920s taxi dancing had become a nightlife entertainment staple in many large American cities. Reflecting this popularity, the entertainment industry got into the act, releasing the crowd-pleasing song "Ten Cents a Dance" (1930) and the movies The Taxi Dancer (1927), with star Joan Crawford, and Ten Cents a Dance (1931), featuring Barbara Stanwyck. Also in Lady of the Night (1925) taxi-dancing is the profession of one of the dual roles played by Norma Shearer, with Joan Crawford as body double. In 1931, there were over 100 taxi-dance halls in New York City alone, patronized by between 35,000 and 50,000 men every week.[21][22]

At the same time taxi dancing was growing in popularity, the activity was coming under the increasing scrutiny of moral reformers in New York City and elsewhere, who deemed some dance halls dens of iniquity. Most establishments were properly run, respectable venues, but a handful were less so. In the less reputable halls, it was not uncommon to find charity girls engaged in treating working as dancers. Although treating activity did occur in a good number of halls, and even in some of the more respectable places,[23] it rarely crossed into prostitution. The taxi dancers who engaged in treating, or the receipt of "presents," typically drew sharp distinctions between the activity and that of prostitution, but they often walked a fine line between the two. Periodically, licentious "close" dancing also was happening (see taxi dancer experience below) in some of the shady halls. Considered scandalous and obscene by many reformers, this kind of dancing was another concern to the authorities. Before long taxi-dance hall reform gained momentum, leading to licensing systems and more police supervision, and eventually some dance halls were closed for lewd behavior.[24] In San Francisco where it all started, the police commission ruled against the employment of women as taxi dancers in 1921, and thereafter taxi dancing in San Francisco forever became illegal.[25]

After World War II the popularity of taxi dancing in the United States began to diminish. By the mid-1950s large numbers of taxi-dance halls had disappeared, and although a handful of establishments tried to hold on for a few more years in New York City and elsewhere, taxi dancing had all but vanished from the nightlife scene in the U.S. by the 1960s.[26]

Experience edit

In the 1920s and 1930s, taxi-dancer work was seen by many as a questionable occupation, somewhat on the margins of proper society. Even though most taxi dance halls were respectable venues, staffed with ordinary young women just working to make a proper living, some establishments were more suspect. The less reputable halls tended to draw a rougher, lower-class clientele, as well as the ire of reformers, and the image of the taxi dancing profession as a whole suffered. Often the young women who took up taxi dancing determined not to tell their parents and neighbors about their employment, or just outright lied if queried.

The dance halls, which were often sparsely decorated and dimly lit, were usually located on the second floors of buildings in the nightlife areas of cities. Several taxi-dance halls, for instance, were located in New York City's Times Square.[27] A barker was normally stationed outside the venue, and patrons typically had to climb stairs to enter the establishment. Before admittance patrons had to buy a ticket or a set of dance tickets. Usually they were not allowed in free to survey the scene.

In the hall, the taxi dancers were usually gathered together behind a waist-high rope or rail barricade on one side or corner of the room, and, as such, were not permitted to freely mingle with patrons. Because the male patron selected his dancing partner, the dancers had to appeal to him from their quarantined position. This produced a competitive situation, and on slow nights, which were not uncommon, the taxi dancers often cooed and coaxed to draw attention in their direction.[28] In time, and with more experience, a dancer usually developed some sort of distinctiveness or mannerism, in dress or personality, to attract the male patron. Those who did not were often not successful. Once selected, the taxi dancer tried to build a rapport with her partner so he stayed with her, dance after dance. Successful taxi dancers usually had a few patrons who came to a hall solely to dance with them, and for long periods. In some of the less reputable establishments the dancing at times was particularly close; the dancer used her thighs to make her partner erect, and if encouraged to continue, ejaculate.[29]

Patrons who tired of dancing but wished to continue talking with a taxi dancer usually could do so. A section in the dance hall with tables and chairs was reserved for this purpose. It was called "talk time," although other terms were used. In 1939, at the Honeymoon Lane Danceland in Times Square, the fee to sit and chat with a dancer was six dollars an hour, a princely sum for the time. At Honeymoon, although the dancer and patron were able to sit side by side, a low fence-like structure separated them due to police regulations.[30] It was not uncommon for taxi dancers to date patrons they had met in the dance halls, and this was generally acquiesced to by management.

It was at Wilson's Dancing Academy in Times Square in 1923, where author Henry Miller first encountered Juliet "June" Smerdt, who became his second wife in 1924. She was working as a taxi dancer. Using either the alias June Mansfield or June Smith, she had started at Wilson's as a dance instructor in 1917, aged 15. (Wilson's was later renamed the Orpheum Dance Palace in 1931.)

Background edit

Generally, what is known today about the life and lives of the taxi dancer of the 1920s and 1930s comes from a major sociological study published by the University of Chicago Press in 1932 (see 'Classic sociological study' section below). According to the study, the typical taxi dancer of the period was an attractive young woman between the ages of 15 and 28 who was usually single. Although some dancers were undoubtedly older, the taxi-dancer profession tended to skew strongly toward the young and single. A majority of the young women came from homes in which there was little or no financial support from a father or father figure. The dancers were occasionally runaways from their families, and it was not unusual for a young woman to be from a home where the parents had separated. Despite their relatively young age range, a sizable percentage of taxi dancers had been previously married.

Often the dancers were immigrants from European countries, such as Poland, Sweden, the Netherlands, Germany, and France. Due to cultural differences, conflicts often arose between parents and their dancing offspring, especially if the parents were originally from rural areas. Sometimes a young woman of an immigrant family who worked as a taxi dancer was the primary financial support of the family. When this occurred and the young woman supplanted the parent or parents as breadwinner, sometimes she assumed an aggressive role in the family by "subordinating the parental standards to her own requirements and demands."

These conflicts in values between young women taxi dancers and their parents frequently caused the young women to lead so-called "double lives", denying that they worked at a taxi-dance hall. To further this divide, the young women sometimes adopted aliases so news of their activities might not reach their families' ears. When parents found out, there were three typical outcomes: the young woman either gave up her dancing career, left home estranged from the family or was encouraged to continue.

Despite the frequent hardships, many taxi dancers seemed to enjoy the lifestyle and its enticements of "money, excitement, and affection". Most young women interviewed for the study spoke favorably about their experiences in the taxi-dance hall.

One dancer [case #15] from the 1920s describes her start at a taxi-dance hall:

I was working as a waitress in a Loop restaurant for about a month. I never worked in a dance hall like this and didn't know about them. One day the "boss" of this hall was eating in the restaurant and told me I could make twice as much money in his "dancing school." I went there one night to try it – and then quit my job at the restaurant. I always liked to dance anyway, so it was really fun.

A dancer from Chicago [case #11] spoke positively of her experiences:

After I had gotten started at the dance hall I enjoyed the life too much to want to give it up. It was easy work, gave me more money than I could earn any other way, and I had a chance to meet all kinds of people. I had no dull moments. I met bootleggers, rum-runners, hijackers, stick-up men, globe-trotters, and hobos. There were all different kinds of men, different from the kind I'd be meeting if I'd stayed at home with my folks in Rogers Park... After a girl starts in the dance hall and makes good it's easy to live for months without ever getting outside the influence of the dance hall. Take myself for instance: I lived with other dance-hall girls, met my fellows at the dance hall, got my living in the dance hall. In fact, there was nothing I wanted that I couldn't get through it. It was an easy life, and I just drifted along with the rest. I suppose if something hadn't come along to jerk me out, I'd still be a drifter out on the West Side.

Classic sociological study edit

In 1932, the University of Chicago Press published The Taxi-Dance Hall: A Sociological Study in Commercialized Recreation and City Life by researcher Paul G. Cressey. In its examination of Chicago's taxi-dancing milieu of the 1920s and early 1930s, the book, utilizing vivid, firsthand interviews of taxi dancers as well as their patrons, brought to light the little-known world of the taxi dance hall. The study is now considered one of the classic urban ethnographies of the Chicago School.[31]

Vocabulary edit

As taxi dancing evolved to become a staple in the American nightlife of the 1920s and 1930s, taxi dancers developed an argot of their own. In his 1932 sociological study, Cressey took note of the specialized vocabulary in the Chicago dance halls:[32]

  • black and tan – a colored and white cabaret
  • buying the groceries – living in a clandestine relationship
  • class – term used by Filipinos to denote the taxi-dance halls
  • fish – a man whom the girls can easily exploit for personal gain
  • fruit – an easy mark
  • hot stuff – stolen goods
  • line-up, the– immorality engaged in by several men and a girl
  • make – to secure a date with
  • mark – a person who is gullible and easily taken advantage of
  • monkey-chaser – a man interested in a taxi dancer or chorus girl
  • monkey showsburlesque shows with chorus girls
  • nickel-hopper – a taxi dancer
  • on the ebony – a taxi-dance hall or taxi dancer having social contacts with men of races other than white
  • opera – burlesque show
  • paying the rent – living in a clandestine relationship
  • picking up – securing an after-dance engagement with a taxi dancer
  • playing – successfully exploiting one of the opposite sex
  • professional – a government investigator; one visiting the taxi-dance hall for ulterior purposes
  • punk – a novitiate; an uninitiated youth or young girl, usually referring to an unsophisticated taxi dancer
  • racket – a special enterprise to earn money, honestly or otherwise
  • shakedown – enforced exaction of graft

Modernity edit

Although the ticket-per-dance system of taxi dancing has become nearly nonexistent in the United States and around the world, some nightclubs and dance instruction establishments continue to offer dancers who may be hired as dance partners.[33] Most often these dance partners are female, but sometimes male. Instead of being called taxi dancers, the dancers are today usually referred to as "dance hostesses". Dance hostesses are often employed to assist beginners to learn to dance or may be utilized to further the general goal of building the dance community of an establishment.

In social settings and social forms of dance, a partner wanting constructive feedback from a dance hostess must explicitly request it. As the hostess's role is primarily social, she (or he) is unlikely to criticize directly. Due to the increased profile of partner dances during the 2000s, hostessing has become more common in settings where partners are in short supply, for either male or female dancers. For example, male dancers are often employed on cruise ships to dance with single female passengers. This system is usually referred to as the Dance Host program. Dance hostesses (male and female) are also available for hire in Vienna, Austria, where dozens of formal balls are held each year.

Volunteer dance hostesses (experienced male and female dancers) are often used in dance styles such as Ceroc to help beginners.

United States edit

There remain a handful of nightclubs in the United States, particularly in the cities of New York and Los Angeles, where an individual can pay to dance with a female dance hostess.[34] Usually these modern clubs forgo the use of the ticket-a-dance system, and instead have time-clocks and punch-cards that allow a patron to pay for the dancer's time by the hour. Some of these dance clubs operate in buildings where taxi dancing was done in the early 20th century. No longer called taxi-dance halls, these latter-day establishments are now called hostess clubs.[35]

Argentina edit

The growth of tango tourism in Buenos Aires, Argentina, has led to an increase in formal and informal dance hostess services in the milongas, or dance halls. While some operators attempt to sell holiday romance, reputable tango agencies offer genuine host services to tourists who find it hard to cope with the cabeceo—the eye contact and nodding-method of finding a dance partner.

In popular culture edit

Since the 1920s when taxi dancing boomed in popularity, various films, songs and novels have been released reflecting the pastime, often using the taxi-dance hall as a setting or chronicling the lives of taxi dancers.

Films

Books

  • The Taxi Dancer by Robert Terry Shannon (1931)
  • The Confessions of a Taxi Dancer by Anonymous (booklet, 1938)
  • The Adventures of Sally by P. G. Wodehouse (1939)
  • Crosstown by John Held, Jr. (1951), "Showgirl Mazie's rise from Taxi-Dancer to Broadway star"
  • Taxi Dancers by Eve Linkletter (1959) (adult paperback)
  • Ten Cents a Dance by Christine Fletcher (2010)
  • The Bartender's Tale by Ivan Doig (2012), features a character who was formerly a taxi dancer
  • A Girl Like You: A Henrietta and Inspector Howard Novel by Michelle Cox (2016)
  • The Night Tiger by Yangsze Choo (2019) - main character Ji Lin works as a dance hall hostess in 1930s British Malaya

Songs and music videos

Musical theatre

Television

  • In Big Sky, the character Ronald reveals he is a taxi dancer.
  • In Cold Case'' season 5 World End murder victim was a taxi dancer.
  • L.A. Law features an episode (Season 5, Episode 7) where two of the characters (Benny and Murray) visit a taxi dance hall in Los Angeles during 1990.
  • Laverne & Shirley has an episode ("Call Me a Taxi", 1977) where the two are laid off and take jobs as taxi dancers.
  • Psych season 6 episode "Autopsy Turvy" features a taxi dance hall and dancers who provide clues regarding a murder.
  • In The Waltons episode "The Achievement" (Season 5, Episode 25), John-Boy travels to New York to check on his book manuscript, and finds his friend Daisy working as a taxi dancer.

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Cressey (1932), pp. 3, 11, 17.
  2. ^ Burgess, Ernest (1969). "Introduction". The Taxi-Dance Hall: A Sociological Study in Commercialized Recreation and City Life. Montclair, NJ: Paterson Smith Publishing. pp. xxviii. ISBN 0875850766.
  3. ^ Freeland, David. Automats, Taxi Dances, and Vaudeville: Excavating Manhattan's Lost Places of Leisure. (New York: NYU Press, 2009), p. 192.
  4. ^ Cressey, Paul G. The Taxi-Dance Hall: A Sociological Study in Commercialized Recreation and City Life (Montclair, NJ: Patterson-Smith Publishing Co., 1969), p. 17
  5. ^ Asbury, Herbert. The Barbary Coast: An Informal History of the San Francisco Underworld. (New York: Basic Books, 2002), p. 3.
  6. ^ Cressey (1932), p. 179.
  7. ^ Knowles (1954), p. 64.
  8. ^ Asbury (1933), p. 99.
  9. ^ Stoddard, Tom. Jazz On The Barbary Coast. (Berkeley, CA: Heyday Books, 1982), p. 10.
  10. ^ Stoddard (1982), p. 13.
  11. ^ Richards, Rand (2002). Historic Walks in San Francisco. San Francisco: Heritage House Publishers. p. 183. ISBN 1879367033.
  12. ^ Asbury (1933), p. 293.
  13. ^ Asbury (1933), p. 303.
  14. ^ a b Cressey (1932), p. 181.
  15. ^ Report of Public Dance Hall Committee of San Francisco of California Civic League of Women Voters, p. 14
  16. ^ Cressey (1932), p. 183.
  17. ^ Cressey (1932), p. 184.
  18. ^ Cressey (1932), p. 3.
  19. ^ Cressey (1932), p. 12.
  20. ^ Cressey (1932), p. xxxiii.
  21. ^ VanderKooi, Ronald. University of Illinois at Chicago Circle, March 1969.
  22. ^ Freeland (2009), p. 190.
  23. ^ Ross, Leonard Q. The Strangest Places (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1939), p. 87
  24. ^ Freeland (2009), p. 194.
  25. ^ Cressey (1932), p. 182.
  26. ^ Clyde Vedder: "Decline of the Taxi-Dance Hall," Sociology and Social Research, 1954.
  27. ^ Ross, Leonard Q. The Strangest Places (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1939), p. 81
  28. ^ Ross, Leonard Q. The Strangest Places (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1939), p. 83
  29. ^ Clement, Elizabeth Alice. Love for Sale: Courting, Treating, and Prostitution in New York City, 1900–1940 (Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press, 2006), p. 190.
  30. ^ Ross, Leonard Q. The Strangest Places (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1939), p. 90
  31. ^ Fritz, Angela. "‘I was a Sociological Stranger’: Ethnographic Fieldwork and Undercover Performance in the Publication of The Taxi‐Dance Hall, 1925–1932", Gender & History, Vol. 30, No. 1, March 2018, pp. 131–152.
  32. ^ Cressey, Paul G. The Taxi-Dance Hall: A Sociological Study in Commercialized Recreation and City Life (Montclair, NJ: Patterson Smith, 1969), pp. 33–37.
  33. ^ Kilgannon, Corey. "At $2 a Dance, a Remedy for Loneliness" The New York Times, February 20, 2006.
  34. ^ Kilgannon (February 20, 2006).
  35. ^ Wright, Evan. "Dance With A Stranger", LA Weekly, January 20, 1999.

Further reading

  • Anonymous. Confessions of a Taxi Dancer. (Detroit: Johnson Smith & Co., 1938).
  • Asbury, Herbert (9 October 2002). The Barbary Coast: An Informal History of the San Francisco Underworld. (New York: Garden City Publishing Co., 1933; Basic Books, 2002). ISBN 1560254084.
  • Cressey, Paul G. (2008). The Taxi-Dance Hall: A Sociological Study in Commercialized Recreation and City Life. (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1932; 2002). ISBN 978-0226120515.
  • Field, Andrew David. Shanghai's Dancing World: Cabaret Culture and Urban Politics, 1919–1954. (Hong Kong: The Chinese University Press, 2010).
  • Freeland, David (2009). Automats, Taxi Dances, and Vaudeville: Excavating Manhattan's Lost Places of Leisure. New York: NYU Press. ISBN 978-0814727638.
  • Knowles, Mark (25 March 2009). The Wicked Waltz and Other Scandalous Dances. (Jefferson, North Carolina & London: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2009). ISBN 978-0786437085.
  • McBee, Randy D. (2000). Dance Hall Days: Intimacy and Leisure among Working-Class Immigrants in the United States. New York and London: NYU Press.
  • Montanarelli, Lisa; Harrison, Ann (2005). Strange But True San Francisco: Tales of the City by the Bay. (Guilford, Connecticut: Globe Pequot Press, 2005). ISBN 076273681X.
  • Salerno, Roger A. Sociology Noir: Studies at the University of Chicago in Loneliness, Marginality and Deviance, 1915–1935. (Jefferson, North Carolina & London: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2007).
  • Ross, Leonard Q. The Strangest Places. (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, Inc., 1939).
  • Stoddard, Tom (1998) [1982]. Jazz On The Barbary Coast. Berkeley, CA: Heyday Books. ISBN 189077104X.

External links edit

  • Strictly tango for the dance tourists, by Uki Goni, The Observer, 18 November 2007
  • Photograph of taxi dancers, Tokyo, c. 1930 at oldtokyo.com
  • Photographs of Helen Rogers, a taxi dancer at the Roseland Ballroom of New York City in 1937 at gettyimages.com
  • Two taxi dancers in Germany in 1949 at gettyimages.com

taxi, dancer, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december, 202. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Taxi dancer news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message A taxi dancer is a paid dance partner in a ballroom dance Taxi dancers work sometimes for money but not always on a dance by dance basis When taxi dancing first appeared in taxi dance halls during the early 20th century in the United States male patrons typically bought dance tickets for a small sum each 1 2 3 When a patron presented a ticket to a chosen taxi dancer she danced with him for the length of a song She earned a commission on every dance ticket she received Though taxi dancing has for the most part disappeared in the United States it is still practiced in some other countries Poster for the film Ten Cents a Dance 1931 with Barbara Stanwyck as a taxi dancer Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Experience 4 Background 5 Classic sociological study 5 1 Vocabulary 6 Modernity 6 1 United States 6 2 Argentina 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEtymology editThe term taxi dancer comes from the fact that as with a taxi cab driver the dancer s pay is proportional to the time they spend dancing with the customer Patrons in a taxi dance hall typically purchased dance tickets for ten cents each which gave rise to the term dime a dance girl Other names for a taxi dancer are dance hostess and taxi in Argentina In the 1920s and 1930s the term nickel hopper gained popularity in the United States because out of each dime a dance the taxi dancer typically earned five cents 4 History editMain article Taxi dance hall nbsp Lobby card for The Taxi Dancer 1927 Taxi dancing traces its origins to the Barbary Coast district of San Francisco which evolved from the California Gold Rush of 1849 In its heyday the Barbary Coast was an economically thriving district inhabited mostly by men that was frequented by gold prospectors and sailors from all over the world 5 That district created a unique form of dance hall called the Barbary Coast dance hall also known as the Forty Nine 49 dance hall Within a Barbary Coast dance hall female employees danced with male patrons and earned their living from commissions paid for by the drinks they could encourage their male dance partners to buy 6 Still later after the San Francisco Earthquake of 1906 and during early days of jazz music a new entertainment district developed in San Francisco and was nicknamed Terrific Street 7 8 9 And within that district an innovative dance hall The So Different Club implemented a system where customers could buy a token which entitled them to one dance with a female employee 10 11 Since dancing had become a popular pastime many of the So Different Club s patrons went there to see and learn the latest new dances 12 In 1913 San Francisco enacted a law against dancing in any cafe or saloon where alcohol was served 13 The closure of the dance halls on Terrific Street fostered a new kind of pay to dance scheme called a closed dance hall which did not serve alcohol 14 That name was derived from the fact that female customers were not allowed the only women permitted in these halls were the female employees 15 The closed dance hall introduced the ticket a dance system which became the centerpiece of the taxi dance hall business model 14 A taxi dancer earned her income from the tickets she traded for dances Taxi dancing then spread to Chicago where dance academies which were struggling to survive began to adopt the ticket a dance system for their students 16 The first instance of the ticket a dance system in Chicago occurred at Mader Johnson Dance Studios The dance studio s owner Godfrey Johnson describes his innovation I was in New York during the summer of 1919 and while there visited a new studio opened by Mr W W of San Francisco where he had introduced a ten cent ticket a dance plan When I got home I kept thinking of that plan as a way to get my advanced students to come back more often and to have experience dancing with different instructors So I decided to put a ten cent a lesson system in the big hall on the third floor of my building But I soon noticed that it wasn t my former pupils who were coming up to dance but a rough hoodlum element from Clark Street Things went from bad to worse I did the best I could to keep the hoodlums in check 17 This system was so popular at dance academies that the taxi dance system quickly spread to an increasing number of non instructional dance halls Taxi dancers typically received half of the ticket price as wages and the other half paid for the orchestra dance hall and operating expenses 18 Although they only worked a few hours a night they frequently made two to three times the salary of a woman working in a factory or a store 19 At that time the taxi dance hall surpassed the public ballroom in becoming the most popular place for urban dancing 20 Taxi dancing flourished in the United States during the 1920s and 1930s as scores of taxi dance halls opened in Chicago New York and other major cities Like other nightlife venues the taxi dance hall ran the gamut from the classy establishment to the cramped and seedy hole in the wall Roseland in New York City for example which offered taxi dancing in the late 1930s appealed to the more discerning patron Far more common were halls catering to a working class clientele By the mid 1920s taxi dancing had become a nightlife entertainment staple in many large American cities Reflecting this popularity the entertainment industry got into the act releasing the crowd pleasing song Ten Cents a Dance 1930 and the movies The Taxi Dancer 1927 with star Joan Crawford and Ten Cents a Dance 1931 featuring Barbara Stanwyck Also in Lady of the Night 1925 taxi dancing is the profession of one of the dual roles played by Norma Shearer with Joan Crawford as body double In 1931 there were over 100 taxi dance halls in New York City alone patronized by between 35 000 and 50 000 men every week 21 22 At the same time taxi dancing was growing in popularity the activity was coming under the increasing scrutiny of moral reformers in New York City and elsewhere who deemed some dance halls dens of iniquity Most establishments were properly run respectable venues but a handful were less so In the less reputable halls it was not uncommon to find charity girls engaged in treating working as dancers Although treating activity did occur in a good number of halls and even in some of the more respectable places 23 it rarely crossed into prostitution The taxi dancers who engaged in treating or the receipt of presents typically drew sharp distinctions between the activity and that of prostitution but they often walked a fine line between the two Periodically licentious close dancing also was happening see taxi dancer experience below in some of the shady halls Considered scandalous and obscene by many reformers this kind of dancing was another concern to the authorities Before long taxi dance hall reform gained momentum leading to licensing systems and more police supervision and eventually some dance halls were closed for lewd behavior 24 In San Francisco where it all started the police commission ruled against the employment of women as taxi dancers in 1921 and thereafter taxi dancing in San Francisco forever became illegal 25 After World War II the popularity of taxi dancing in the United States began to diminish By the mid 1950s large numbers of taxi dance halls had disappeared and although a handful of establishments tried to hold on for a few more years in New York City and elsewhere taxi dancing had all but vanished from the nightlife scene in the U S by the 1960s 26 Experience editIn the 1920s and 1930s taxi dancer work was seen by many as a questionable occupation somewhat on the margins of proper society Even though most taxi dance halls were respectable venues staffed with ordinary young women just working to make a proper living some establishments were more suspect The less reputable halls tended to draw a rougher lower class clientele as well as the ire of reformers and the image of the taxi dancing profession as a whole suffered Often the young women who took up taxi dancing determined not to tell their parents and neighbors about their employment or just outright lied if queried The dance halls which were often sparsely decorated and dimly lit were usually located on the second floors of buildings in the nightlife areas of cities Several taxi dance halls for instance were located in New York City s Times Square 27 A barker was normally stationed outside the venue and patrons typically had to climb stairs to enter the establishment Before admittance patrons had to buy a ticket or a set of dance tickets Usually they were not allowed in free to survey the scene In the hall the taxi dancers were usually gathered together behind a waist high rope or rail barricade on one side or corner of the room and as such were not permitted to freely mingle with patrons Because the male patron selected his dancing partner the dancers had to appeal to him from their quarantined position This produced a competitive situation and on slow nights which were not uncommon the taxi dancers often cooed and coaxed to draw attention in their direction 28 In time and with more experience a dancer usually developed some sort of distinctiveness or mannerism in dress or personality to attract the male patron Those who did not were often not successful Once selected the taxi dancer tried to build a rapport with her partner so he stayed with her dance after dance Successful taxi dancers usually had a few patrons who came to a hall solely to dance with them and for long periods In some of the less reputable establishments the dancing at times was particularly close the dancer used her thighs to make her partner erect and if encouraged to continue ejaculate 29 Patrons who tired of dancing but wished to continue talking with a taxi dancer usually could do so A section in the dance hall with tables and chairs was reserved for this purpose It was called talk time although other terms were used In 1939 at the Honeymoon Lane Danceland in Times Square the fee to sit and chat with a dancer was six dollars an hour a princely sum for the time At Honeymoon although the dancer and patron were able to sit side by side a low fence like structure separated them due to police regulations 30 It was not uncommon for taxi dancers to date patrons they had met in the dance halls and this was generally acquiesced to by management It was at Wilson s Dancing Academy in Times Square in 1923 where author Henry Miller first encountered Juliet June Smerdt who became his second wife in 1924 She was working as a taxi dancer Using either the alias June Mansfield or June Smith she had started at Wilson s as a dance instructor in 1917 aged 15 Wilson s was later renamed the Orpheum Dance Palace in 1931 Background editGenerally what is known today about the life and lives of the taxi dancer of the 1920s and 1930s comes from a major sociological study published by the University of Chicago Press in 1932 see Classic sociological study section below According to the study the typical taxi dancer of the period was an attractive young woman between the ages of 15 and 28 who was usually single Although some dancers were undoubtedly older the taxi dancer profession tended to skew strongly toward the young and single A majority of the young women came from homes in which there was little or no financial support from a father or father figure The dancers were occasionally runaways from their families and it was not unusual for a young woman to be from a home where the parents had separated Despite their relatively young age range a sizable percentage of taxi dancers had been previously married Often the dancers were immigrants from European countries such as Poland Sweden the Netherlands Germany and France Due to cultural differences conflicts often arose between parents and their dancing offspring especially if the parents were originally from rural areas Sometimes a young woman of an immigrant family who worked as a taxi dancer was the primary financial support of the family When this occurred and the young woman supplanted the parent or parents as breadwinner sometimes she assumed an aggressive role in the family by subordinating the parental standards to her own requirements and demands These conflicts in values between young women taxi dancers and their parents frequently caused the young women to lead so called double lives denying that they worked at a taxi dance hall To further this divide the young women sometimes adopted aliases so news of their activities might not reach their families ears When parents found out there were three typical outcomes the young woman either gave up her dancing career left home estranged from the family or was encouraged to continue Despite the frequent hardships many taxi dancers seemed to enjoy the lifestyle and its enticements of money excitement and affection Most young women interviewed for the study spoke favorably about their experiences in the taxi dance hall One dancer case 15 from the 1920s describes her start at a taxi dance hall I was working as a waitress in a Loop restaurant for about a month I never worked in a dance hall like this and didn t know about them One day the boss of this hall was eating in the restaurant and told me I could make twice as much money in his dancing school I went there one night to try it and then quit my job at the restaurant I always liked to dance anyway so it was really fun A dancer from Chicago case 11 spoke positively of her experiences After I had gotten started at the dance hall I enjoyed the life too much to want to give it up It was easy work gave me more money than I could earn any other way and I had a chance to meet all kinds of people I had no dull moments I met bootleggers rum runners hijackers stick up men globe trotters and hobos There were all different kinds of men different from the kind I d be meeting if I d stayed at home with my folks in Rogers Park After a girl starts in the dance hall and makes good it s easy to live for months without ever getting outside the influence of the dance hall Take myself for instance I lived with other dance hall girls met my fellows at the dance hall got my living in the dance hall In fact there was nothing I wanted that I couldn t get through it It was an easy life and I just drifted along with the rest I suppose if something hadn t come along to jerk me out I d still be a drifter out on the West Side Classic sociological study editIn 1932 the University of Chicago Press published The Taxi Dance Hall A Sociological Study in Commercialized Recreation and City Life by researcher Paul G Cressey In its examination of Chicago s taxi dancing milieu of the 1920s and early 1930s the book utilizing vivid firsthand interviews of taxi dancers as well as their patrons brought to light the little known world of the taxi dance hall The study is now considered one of the classic urban ethnographies of the Chicago School 31 Vocabulary edit As taxi dancing evolved to become a staple in the American nightlife of the 1920s and 1930s taxi dancers developed an argot of their own In his 1932 sociological study Cressey took note of the specialized vocabulary in the Chicago dance halls 32 black and tan a colored and white cabaret buying the groceries living in a clandestine relationship class term used by Filipinos to denote the taxi dance halls fish a man whom the girls can easily exploit for personal gain fruit an easy mark hot stuff stolen goods line up the immorality engaged in by several men and a girl make to secure a date with mark a person who is gullible and easily taken advantage of monkey chaser a man interested in a taxi dancer or chorus girl monkey shows burlesque shows with chorus girls nickel hopper a taxi dancer on the ebony a taxi dance hall or taxi dancer having social contacts with men of races other than white opera burlesque show paying the rent living in a clandestine relationship picking up securing an after dance engagement with a taxi dancer playing successfully exploiting one of the opposite sex professional a government investigator one visiting the taxi dance hall for ulterior purposes punk a novitiate an uninitiated youth or young girl usually referring to an unsophisticated taxi dancer racket a special enterprise to earn money honestly or otherwise shakedown enforced exaction of graftModernity editAlthough the ticket per dance system of taxi dancing has become nearly nonexistent in the United States and around the world some nightclubs and dance instruction establishments continue to offer dancers who may be hired as dance partners 33 Most often these dance partners are female but sometimes male Instead of being called taxi dancers the dancers are today usually referred to as dance hostesses Dance hostesses are often employed to assist beginners to learn to dance or may be utilized to further the general goal of building the dance community of an establishment In social settings and social forms of dance a partner wanting constructive feedback from a dance hostess must explicitly request it As the hostess s role is primarily social she or he is unlikely to criticize directly Due to the increased profile of partner dances during the 2000s hostessing has become more common in settings where partners are in short supply for either male or female dancers For example male dancers are often employed on cruise ships to dance with single female passengers This system is usually referred to as the Dance Host program Dance hostesses male and female are also available for hire in Vienna Austria where dozens of formal balls are held each year Volunteer dance hostesses experienced male and female dancers are often used in dance styles such as Ceroc to help beginners United States edit There remain a handful of nightclubs in the United States particularly in the cities of New York and Los Angeles where an individual can pay to dance with a female dance hostess 34 Usually these modern clubs forgo the use of the ticket a dance system and instead have time clocks and punch cards that allow a patron to pay for the dancer s time by the hour Some of these dance clubs operate in buildings where taxi dancing was done in the early 20th century No longer called taxi dance halls these latter day establishments are now called hostess clubs 35 Argentina edit The growth of tango tourism in Buenos Aires Argentina has led to an increase in formal and informal dance hostess services in the milongas or dance halls While some operators attempt to sell holiday romance reputable tango agencies offer genuine host services to tourists who find it hard to cope with the cabeceo the eye contact and nodding method of finding a dance partner In popular culture editSince the 1920s when taxi dancing boomed in popularity various films songs and novels have been released reflecting the pastime often using the taxi dance hall as a setting or chronicling the lives of taxi dancers Films Dance Hall 1929 pre Code musical based on a Vina Delmar short story The Nickel Hopper 1926 silent short In the 1932 Warner Bros film Two Seconds Edward G Robinson meets a taxi dancer Vivienne Osborne who he marries when drunk and later kills out of jealousy Ten Cents a Dance 1931 starring Barbara Stanwyck inspired by the popular song of the same name Let s Dance 1933 short featuring George Burns as a sailor and Gracie Allen as a dance hostess at Roseland Dance Hall The Taxi Dancer 1927 starring Joan Crawford and Owen Moore Asleep in the Feet 1933 Hal Roach comedy short starring Thelma Todd and ZaSu Pitts Dime A Dance 1937 featuring Al Christie and Imogene Coca Child of Manhattan 1937 based on a play by Preston Sturges Deadline at Dawn 1946 about a New York dime a dance girl helping to clear a sailor framed for murder The Quiet American 2002 starring Michael Caine and Brendan Fraser various scenes take place in a taxi dance hall during Indochina War era Saigon In Lured 1947 Lucille Ball stars as a New York taxi dancer in London who works undercover to solve a string of murders In Killer s Kiss 1955 a film by Stanley Kubrick various scenes take place in a taxi dance hall In The Rat Race 1960 Debbie Reynolds stars as a struggling taxi dancer based on a play by Garson Kanin Sweet Charity 1969 musical comedy starring Shirley MacLaine directed and choreographed by Bob Fosse In A League of Their Own 1992 the character played by Madonna All the Way Mae Mordabito mentions that if the league folds she won t go back to taxi dancing and have guys sweat gin on her for ten cents a dance The White Countess 2005 directed by James Ivory tells the story of a Russian countess Natasha Richardson who works as a taxi dancer in Shanghai in the 1930s to support her family of White emigres Books The Taxi Dancer by Robert Terry Shannon 1931 The Confessions of a Taxi Dancer by Anonymous booklet 1938 The Adventures of Sally by P G Wodehouse 1939 Crosstown by John Held Jr 1951 Showgirl Mazie s rise from Taxi Dancer to Broadway star Taxi Dancers by Eve Linkletter 1959 adult paperback Ten Cents a Dance by Christine Fletcher 2010 The Bartender s Tale by Ivan Doig 2012 features a character who was formerly a taxi dancer A Girl Like You A Henrietta and Inspector Howard Novel by Michelle Cox 2016 The Night Tiger by Yangsze Choo 2019 main character Ji Lin works as a dance hall hostess in 1930s British Malaya Songs and music videos Ten Cents a Dance 1930 music by Richard Rodgers lyrics by Lorenz Hart Taxi War Dance 1939 jazz instrumental by Count Basie featuring Lester Young Dime a Dance 1972 recorded by Vicki Lawrence the flip side of The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia from the album of the same name Aja 1977 music and lyrics by Steely Dan refers to dime dancing Taxi Dancer 1979 music and lyrics by John Mellencamp The music video for the 1983 Pat Benatar song Love Is a Battlefield follows the experience of a young woman who runs away from home and becomes a taxi dancer Taxi Dancing 1984 Hard to Hold movie soundtrack by Rick Springfield featuring Randy Crawford Taxi Dancer 2013 by the band Dengue Fever Private Dancer 1983 music and lyrics by Mark Knopfler recorded by Tina Turner on the album of the same name Musical theatre Simple Simon 1930 music by Richard Rodgers lyrics by Lorenz Hart book by Guy Bolton the song Ten Cents a Dance was introduced in this show sung by Ruth Etting Sweet Charity 1966 music by Cy Coleman lyrics by Dorothy Fields and book by Neil Simon Television In Big Sky the character Ronald reveals he is a taxi dancer In Cold Case season 5 World End murder victim was a taxi dancer L A Law features an episode Season 5 Episode 7 where two of the characters Benny and Murray visit a taxi dance hall in Los Angeles during 1990 Laverne amp Shirley has an episode Call Me a Taxi 1977 where the two are laid off and take jobs as taxi dancers Psych season 6 episode Autopsy Turvy features a taxi dance hall and dancers who provide clues regarding a murder In The Waltons episode The Achievement Season 5 Episode 25 John Boy travels to New York to check on his book manuscript and finds his friend Daisy working as a taxi dancer See also editBallroom dance Lap danceReferences editNotes Cressey 1932 pp 3 11 17 Burgess Ernest 1969 Introduction The Taxi Dance Hall A Sociological Study in Commercialized Recreation and City Life Montclair NJ Paterson Smith Publishing pp xxviii ISBN 0875850766 Freeland David Automats Taxi Dances and Vaudeville Excavating Manhattan s Lost Places of Leisure New York NYU Press 2009 p 192 Cressey Paul G The Taxi Dance Hall A Sociological Study in Commercialized Recreation and City Life Montclair NJ Patterson Smith Publishing Co 1969 p 17 Asbury Herbert The Barbary Coast An Informal History of the San Francisco Underworld New York Basic Books 2002 p 3 Cressey 1932 p 179 Knowles 1954 p 64 Asbury 1933 p 99 Stoddard Tom Jazz On The Barbary Coast Berkeley CA Heyday Books 1982 p 10 Stoddard 1982 p 13 Richards Rand 2002 Historic Walks in San Francisco San Francisco Heritage House Publishers p 183 ISBN 1879367033 Asbury 1933 p 293 Asbury 1933 p 303 a b Cressey 1932 p 181 Report of Public Dance Hall Committee of San Francisco of California Civic League of Women Voters p 14 Cressey 1932 p 183 Cressey 1932 p 184 Cressey 1932 p 3 Cressey 1932 p 12 Cressey 1932 p xxxiii VanderKooi Ronald University of Illinois at Chicago Circle March 1969 Freeland 2009 p 190 Ross Leonard Q The Strangest Places New York Harcourt Brace and Co 1939 p 87 Freeland 2009 p 194 Cressey 1932 p 182 Clyde Vedder Decline of the Taxi Dance Hall Sociology and Social Research 1954 Ross Leonard Q The Strangest Places New York Harcourt Brace and Co 1939 p 81 Ross Leonard Q The Strangest Places New York Harcourt Brace and Co 1939 p 83 Clement Elizabeth Alice Love for Sale Courting Treating and Prostitution in New York City 1900 1940 Chapel Hill NC The University of North Carolina Press 2006 p 190 Ross Leonard Q The Strangest Places New York Harcourt Brace and Co 1939 p 90 Fritz Angela I was a Sociological Stranger Ethnographic Fieldwork and Undercover Performance in the Publication of The Taxi Dance Hall 1925 1932 Gender amp History Vol 30 No 1 March 2018 pp 131 152 Cressey Paul G The Taxi Dance Hall A Sociological Study in Commercialized Recreation and City Life Montclair NJ Patterson Smith 1969 pp 33 37 Kilgannon Corey At 2 a Dance a Remedy for Loneliness The New York Times February 20 2006 Kilgannon February 20 2006 Wright Evan Dance With A Stranger LA Weekly January 20 1999 Further reading Anonymous Confessions of a Taxi Dancer Detroit Johnson Smith amp Co 1938 Asbury Herbert 9 October 2002 The Barbary Coast An Informal History of the San Francisco Underworld New York Garden City Publishing Co 1933 Basic Books 2002 ISBN 1560254084 Cressey Paul G 2008 The Taxi Dance Hall A Sociological Study in Commercialized Recreation and City Life Chicago The University of Chicago Press 1932 2002 ISBN 978 0226120515 Field Andrew David Shanghai s Dancing World Cabaret Culture and Urban Politics 1919 1954 Hong Kong The Chinese University Press 2010 Freeland David 2009 Automats Taxi Dances and Vaudeville Excavating Manhattan s Lost Places of Leisure New York NYU Press ISBN 978 0814727638 Knowles Mark 25 March 2009 The Wicked Waltz and Other Scandalous Dances Jefferson North Carolina amp London McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers 2009 ISBN 978 0786437085 McBee Randy D 2000 Dance Hall Days Intimacy and Leisure among Working Class Immigrants in the United States New York and London NYU Press Montanarelli Lisa Harrison Ann 2005 Strange But True San Francisco Tales of the City by the Bay Guilford Connecticut Globe Pequot Press 2005 ISBN 076273681X Salerno Roger A Sociology Noir Studies at the University of Chicago in Loneliness Marginality and Deviance 1915 1935 Jefferson North Carolina amp London McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers 2007 Ross Leonard Q The Strangest Places New York Harcourt Brace and Company Inc 1939 Stoddard Tom 1998 1982 Jazz On The Barbary Coast Berkeley CA Heyday Books ISBN 189077104X External links editStrictly tango for the dance tourists by Uki Goni The Observer 18 November 2007 Photograph of taxi dancers Tokyo c 1930 at oldtokyo com Photographs of Helen Rogers a taxi dancer at the Roseland Ballroom of New York City in 1937 at gettyimages com Two taxi dancers in Germany in 1949 at gettyimages com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Taxi dancer amp oldid 1193743462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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