Celebrities In The 1920s

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1920s Celebrities
In the 1920s, talent seemed like a natural part of life. There were various celebrities ranging from artists, gangsters, entrepreneurs, musicians, actors, and more. The perspective and roles of women changed as they achieved their goals and dreams. Sports were an important impact that blacks and whites took part in. Jack Dempsey was a famous boxer. African Americans grew economically and politically. Because of the start of Jazz, popularity of sports, art, and movies the 1920s was a time period full of celebrities.
Jack Dempsey grew up in a hardscrabble mining country near Colorada. He was a copper miner, hall bouncer, lumberjack, and trainer as a boxer as a teenager. In 1926, Jack Dempsey was defeated by Gene Tunney. A year …show more content…

In order for blacks to become famous they had to fight society and the economy. Jim Crow Laws restricted African Americans and whites to play against each other. Blacks and whites were segregated in basketball, football, baseball, and boxing. They played on different courts, fields, gyms, and rings. Blacks tried to fight for what they believe in and to protest against the segregation laws. For example, In 1929 Blacks organized a boycott in Chicago. African Americans refused buy from whites who would not hire blacks. The movement was known as the “ Don’t Buy Where You Can’t Work” movement. The movement spread to other cities quickly and forced America to look at African American economic potential. The time period that brought African Americans and whites together was the Harlem Renaissance. The Harlem Renaissance is a period when the African American culture was expressed through, music, poetry, stage performances, and art. It was the evolution of the Harlem neighborhood in New York City, and it last from the late 1910s all the way to the mid 1930s. Whites wanted places where they could listen to jazz music performed by African Americans but they did want to socialize with the blacks. White people made the Cotton Club and other clubs similar to it, so that the jazz music could be catered to them. The Cotton Club was the most successful club that whites went to.Duke Ellington and Cab Calloway performed in the Cotton Club often. These club were ignored by some African Americans, meanwhile others saw it as a grow in the African American