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Θυμός. Απαγορευμένο συναίσθημα ή επιλογή;

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στις 17/12/2020

Ομιλία της Κατερίνας Δημητρίου στο Βυζαντινό μουσείο (2019)

 

Last modified on Saturday, 19 Δεκεμβρίου 2020 11:50

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    It's the city that never sleeps... and never was that truer than in the heyday of Manhattan nightlife - the post-war 1940s
    and the Golden Age of the 1950s. 

    In the age of jazz, the Cotton Club was where it was at.
    By the time it was disco's turn to rule, Studio 54 became the place to be and
    be seen. But before disco, New Yorkers and aspiring New Yorkers flocked to the likes of
    El Morocco, the Stork Club and the Copacabana.

    They were a home away from home for the rich, the famous and the glamorous.

    They were places to drink and dance the night away, escape the wartime darkness and
    embrace the 50s. No matter what was happening outside inside, life was golden. And in most cases, the clubs have long been consigned to history -
    and mythology.  

    El Morocco - or Elmo as it was known to regulars - ruled the roost,
    with its famous zebra print banquette seating and an endless throng of Hollywood celebrities milling around
    with society movers and shakers, titans of art and literature, business and sports. The crowd was eclectic
    - and always exclusive. 




     Marilyn Monroe dances the night away with Truman Capote at El Morocco on March 24, 1955.

    Capote described an encounter with Monroe in his 1980 book Music for Chameleons.
    A 2001 re-print included the photograph of Monroe and Capote dancing on the book cover





     Elizabeth Taylor with her first husband Conrad 'Nicky' Hilton Jr.

    at El Morocco in 1950. She was just 18 when they married in May 1950 and
    the wedding was the social event of the year but
    the marriage was short-lived. He was a violent, abusive drunk.
    Taylor announced their separation in December 1950 and was granted a divorce a month later on the grounds of mental cruelty





    Taylor also dined at Elmo with her third husband, the producer Mike Todd (pictured
    together in 1957). At the time of their union, Taylor was 24 and Todd, 49.
    The third of her seven husbands, he was the
    only one she didn't divorce. He was killed in 1958 when his private plane,
    the Liz, crashed in New Mexico, leaving Taylor a widow and single mother to their daughter
    Elizabeth Frances (Liza)





    (From left to right) Jack Warner, Natalie Wood, Rock Hudson, Phyllis Gates in 1956, a year after Hudson married Gates and
    starred alongside Wood in the film One Desire.
    Gates filed for divorce in 1958 and never remarried





    (From left to right) Actor Jackie Gleason, artist Salvatore Dali, El
    Morocco owner John Perona, and singer Johnny Ray in 1954.
    Perona was the owner of El Morocco until his death in 1961, when his son Edwin Perona took over.
    Maurice Uchitel bought the club from Edwin later that
    year





    Gloria Swanson and a companion pictured on the iconic zebra print banquet seating in 1950.
    After achieving fame for her work in silent films, Swanson won a Golden Globe in 1951
    for her portrayal of Norma Desmond in the 1950 film Sunset Boulevard.
    She divorced her fifth husband in 1946 and did not
    remarry until 1976





    Judy Garland and her daughter Liza Minelli pictured
    with Judy's third husband Sid Luft in 1956. Luft produced the
    1954 film A Star is Born, which starred Garland and James
    Mason. Garland was nominated for an Oscar for her role but lost to Grace Kelly.
    The couple had two children and separated in 1963





    Marlene Dietrich smiles while playing the violin for Jean Gabin at the
    Elmo on July 14, 1943. The two dated from 1941 to 1948 and starred in the 1946 French
    crime film Martin Roumagnac (The Room Upstairs)





    Marilyn with her then-husband, baseball legend Joe
    DiMaggio, on September 12, 1954. The pair married in January 1954 at City Hall.
    Their marriage blew up after the two fought on the set
    of The Seven Year Itch, and divorced the same month this photograph was taken





    John Wayne and his wife, Pilar Pallete at El Morocco on January 4, 1955.
    Wayne and Pallete met in Hawaii while she was still married to Richard
    Weldy and they wed on November 1, 1954. Wayne and Pallete separated in 1973 but remained married until he died in 1979





    Actor Milton Berle at dinner with a companion at El Morocco on December 8, 1956.
    Millions of television viewers referred to Berle as Mr.
    Television during the first Golden Age of television. His entertainment career began to decline in the 1960s
    after The Milton Berle Show ended in 1956





    (From left to right) Italian actress Gina Lollobrigida, Laurence Oliver, and
    Kirk Douglas appear entertained during the European star's going away party
    at El Morocco in 1950. Lollobrigida and Douglas did not
    appear in films together, but the pair were photographed together
    at several events in the 1950s

    Regulars included business magnate Aristotle Onassis (always seated at table one).
    Hollywood crème de la crème Marlene Dietrich, Henry Fonda and Marilyn Monroe hobnobbed with New York's
    biggest names (the Rockefellers and the Astors), European royalty and society doyennes. 

    It was there that Elizabeth Taylor dined with her
    husbands; there that Humphrey Bogart started a fight over a stuffed panda  - and got
    thrown out. And it was from there that Zsa Zsa Gabor was banned
    for life (or at least until the club's owner John Perona died) after she spat in his face for taking out her
    sister and refusing to buy her a new mink coat, according to Air Mail. 

    Little wonder then that gossip columnists staked the place
    out, and the legendary columnist Liz Smith spent almost every night at
    Elmo in the late 50s.




    The McGuire Sisters Chris, Phyllis, and Dorothy (left to right) smiled for the camera at El Morocco in 1957.
    The singers signed with Coral Records in 1952 and were named Godfrey's Merry McGuires
    by Cosmopolitan magazine in 1953





    Cary Grant smiled at actress Betsy Drake while dancing with her at El Morocco nightclub in 1950.
    The entertainers wed in 1949 and played a married couple in the 1952 film Room for One More.
    The two divorced in 1962 and remained friends until
    Grant died in 1986





    The first-ever visual image of Breakfast at Tiffany's character Holly Golightly was shown at
    the El Morocco nightclub in 1957. The photo that
    illustrated Truman Capote's novel of the same name was featured in Esquire Magazine in 1958.

    The book was made into a film in 1961, starring Audrey Hepburn





    Actor Charlie Chaplin danced with Betsy Cushing Roosevelt Whitney at the El Morocco in New York
    on October 13, 1940. He was married to Paulette Goddard.
    Whitney was the former daughter-in-law of President Franklin D.
    Roosevelt and was one of the most prestigious figures in New
    York society





    (From left to right) Restaurateur Bernard 'Toots' Shor, Marian Shor,
    Frank Sinatra, and a guest at El Morocco on November 30, 1944.
    Sinatra, a regular at El Morocco, was known for his $100-$150 tips.
    The singer was also a regular at Toots Shor's restaurant on 51st Street until it closed in 1971





    El Morocco had been a nightclub frequented by celebrities between the 1930s-1950s.
    Attendees would usually come with dates or be part of a
    large group of guests. Regulars dubbed it Elmo





    Elmo was known for its ubiquitous zebra print which appeared throughout the club, was plastered across the booths and even on the club's matchbooks 

    But Elmo was far from the only joint in town.

    It wasn't just the rich and famous who needed somewhere to dance away their cares and let their hair down. Among the clubs now consigned to history
    - and mythology - were the Havana-Madrid, and the Stork Club.
    Leon & Eddie's and the Vanity Fair became
    popular among discharged soldiers, partly because of
    the lure of the can-can dancers. 

    The singers and can-can dancers of the New York City nightlife scene
    won over audiences with their talent and seductive outfits. 

    Performers were dolled up in sparkly dresses and headpieces that would cost as much as $500 per outfit.  

    Clubs like Vanity Fair and Copacabana may have provided enough
    female entertainment to dazzle the crowd without needing singers like
    Frank Sinatra or Dean Martin to perform. 




    (From left to right) Actress Merle Oberon, John Jacob Astor, and tennis star Frank Shields got together for
    a night on the town at the Havana-Madrid nightclub in New York on April 20, 1938.
    It is unclear how these three are connected, but Shields, who died in 1975, is the grandfather of actress Brooke
    Shields





    (From left to right) Puerto Rican actress Mapy Cortes,
    club owner Benito Collada, and Puerto Rican singer
    Rosita Rios had drinks at El Chico in New York on November 22,
    1944. Collada and Rios were mutual friends with Alfredo Gonzales, whose Fiesta Hop fundraiser in 1948 featured Collada and Rios as the star performers





    Charlie Chaplin and his wife Oona O'Neill were all smiles at the Stork Club in New York on April 10, 1947.  O'Neill, who was his fourth wife, married
    Chaplin despite her being 18 and he being 54. The
    couple remained married until his death and had eight children





    (From left to right) Tom Lewis, actress Loretta Young, comedian Rosalind Russell, and her husband, Fredrick Brisson, had
    drinks at El Morocco on September 19, 1953. Young had
    just begun hosting The Loretta Young Show on September 2,
    where Russell appeared as a guest.





    Milton Berle visited the Stork Club on November 24, 1941 with Joyce Matthews - an actress and
    show girl whom he married that year. Berle and Matthews divorced in 1947
    and remarried in 1949, divorcing for a second time just one year later.

    Berle married three more women and Matthews wed
    four more men prior to their deaths





    Betty Reed and murky financier - and convicted draft-dodger -
    Serge Rubinstein raised their glasses at Nino's La Rue supper club in January 1955.
    Rubinstein was murdered hours after returning home from the
    club on January 27, 1955. He was found with his hands and feet bound by
    cord and tape covering his nose and mouth. The United Press
    rated his unsolved murder one of the biggest stories of 1955.
    A year later the movie Death of a Scoundrel, loosely based on Rubenstein's life, was released





    The future I Love Lucy star Lucille Ball at the Stork Club in 1945.
    She had roles in films from the 1930s before starring in I Love
    Lucy with her then-husband and co-star Desi Arnaz from 1951 to 1957.
    Ball and Arnaz made several appearances at the Stork Club during the 1940s after they eloped in 1940





    Humphrey Bogart with his wife, Lauren Bacall, in the Cup Room in the
    Stork Club in 1949. Bacall was Bogart's fourth and final wife before he died in 1957.
    The legendary actors starred in the 1944 film To Have and Have Not, eventually
    naming one of their children after Bogart's character





    (From left to right) Martha Hemingway, actor Gary Cooper,
    his wife Veronica Balfe, and Ernest Hemingway sat at
    a booth during a get-together at the Stork Club in 1943.
    Cooper starred in a film adaption of Hemingway's book For Whom the Bell Tolls
    the same year. The actor received an Academy Award nomination for his portrayal of Robert Jordan





    Swedish singer and actress Monica Zetterlund gave one
    of her first public performances at the Basin Street East nightclub on December 15, 1959.
    The 22-year-old sang on The Steve Allen Show one month later. 
    The jazz songstress died in 2005 after releasing more than 20 studio albums





    Jazz pianist and bandleader Lionel Hampton was known to excite the crowd in his shows, one taking place at
    the Band Box in the summer of 1953. He collaborated with several musicians during
    his career and was awarded the National Medal of
    Arts award in 1996





    Actress Gene Tierney and Prince Aly Khan were caught by a cameraman at the Copacabana nightclub on November 8,
    1954. The two began dating while Khan was married
    to film star Rita Hayworth and were engaged from
    1952 to 1953 despite being met with disapproval from
    Khan's father





    Actor and World War II Veteran Harold Russell helped his wife,
    Rita Russell-Nixon, light a cigarette in the Cub room at the Stork Club in 1946.
    Russell had lost both of his hands in 1944 and became the first non-professional actor to win an Academy Award in 1946





    Actress Lucille Ball and her husband, Desi Arnaz, spent a night out at the
    Stork Club in 1945. The television actress at a bottle of
    Sortilege - the Stork Club's house perfume.
    The fragrance was created by Le Galion French perfumery and because wealthy clients purchased bottles, the Stork Club gave
    the perfume to their guests as a gift and called it the fragrance of the
    Stork Club





    Judy Garland and film director Vincente Minnelli made an appearance at the Stork Club in 1945.
    The pair married in 1945 at a church in New York City. Garland gave birth to their daughter, Liza Minnelli, in 1946.
    Garland and Minnelli divorced in 1951 and after his death in 1986, he left his
    Beverly Hills Home to Liza 





    Orchestra leader Artie Shaw and Ava Gardner smoked cigarettes together in 1945
    at a table in the Stork Club. Gardner and Shaw married that year after the actress divorced her first husband, Mickey Rooney.

    Shaw had been married to four women before Gardner, while the clarinetist was Gardner's second
    marriage. The pair divorced in 1946





    John F. Kennedy and his wife, Jackie Kennedy, were smiling at their table in the Stork Club on May 8, 1955.
    Kennedy had made several appearances at the Stork Club





    Actress Paulette Goddard and her husband, Burgess Meredith,
    ate in the Cub room at the Stork Club on December 27, 1946





    Performer Jimmy Durante opened for eleven nights at the Copacabana on March 27, 1952.

    He loved having fun with the dancers and found stardom in comedy films like Meet the Baron and Hollywood Party





    Actress Lana Turner and orchestra leader Artie Shaw pictured eating together at the
    Stork Club on November 14, 1941. The two eloped in 1939 after meeting two years
    prior and filed for divorce four months later. The two began planning a second marriage in 1941, but Turner
    went on to marry Joseph Stephen Crane in 1942





    Chorus girl Rosemary Schaefer was one of the many dancers that entertained
    guests at the New York Vanity Fair nightclub on January 31, 1947.
    The shows that took place at the venue on Broadway and 49th
    Street include wounded soldiers in the audience who would also watch dance rehearsals





    Singers and dancers at the Vanity Fair nightclub would
    participate in the venue's preview shows - a set of public performances that take place before the official
    opening. These shows were likely one of the things that made guests interested in going to the Vanity Fair nightclub
    in the 1940s





    Can-can dancer Lyda Alma participated in high energy
    routines at Leon & Eddie's, including this one on March 3,
    1950. The shows were a regular thing at the nightclub that
    was originally a speakeasy in the basement of a converted
    house





    The Village Barn was a country music nightclub in Greenwich Village that had various activities, including the Hobby-Horse race on March 3, 1950.
    The first country music program on network television took place at the Village Barn and the venue is now
    the home of Electric Lady Studios





    Actress Patricia Hardy made several appearances at the famous Copacabana nightclub in New York, one being on September 5, 1951.
    The star began her career by performing at the club with Danny Thomas and Jimmy Durante





    Showgirls Mickey Miller, Betty Anderson, and Rosemary Kittelton showed off their beautiful costumes
    during a routine that opened a New York French nightclub on June 20,
    1952. The costumes cost $500 each, which today is estimated at nearly $5,600 per outfit





    Strip tease artist Lili St. Cyr performed at the Club Samoa nightclub on August 10, 1952.

    A burlesque dancer, St. Cyr was known to include bubble baths in her routines.
    She retired from dancing in the 1970s and ran a lingerie business until her death on January 29, 1999





    Stork Club owner Sherman Billingsley spent January 1,
    1952 with four female models at his New York club. Prior to creating the Stork Club,
    the former bootlegger owned several drug stores throughout New York
    City and started a real-estate office to help him acquire more





    Jazz clubs were a highlight of New York City nightlife thanks to
    its musicians who played music that made all club goers want to dance in 1955.
    Many jazz clubs were located throughout 52nd Street
    and Times Square, Harlem, and Greenwich Village





    Concert promoter Lou Walters opened the Latin Quarter in 1942 with a French New Orleans theme.
    Mardi Gras de Paree was a popular show at the nightclub that featured Doreen Lord.
    Lord was known as the woman in the champagne glass who impersonated a goldfish and did so onstage
    at the nightclub on February 8, 1956





    The Audobon Theatre and Ballroom was becoming a popular venue to hold dance activities in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan. Dance events began taking place in the 1950s and the annual New York Mardi
    Gras Festival occur at the Audobon every year





    Actress Christine Jorgensen was known as the first
    person to be widely known for having sex reassignment surgery in the US.
    She began performing shows at the Cafe Society Club
    in Greenwich Village after the procedure. One of her routines she did at
    the club on April 28, 1956 featured her dancing in red ballet shoes





    The Audobon Theatre and Ballroom was also used as a movie theater
    and meeting hall after it was built in 1912.
    Meetings that took place at the venue were attended by many political activists, including Malcolm X





    Its popularity in the 1950s was in part due to events related
    to religious services and union meeting events. However, it
    was shut down shortly after Malcolm X was assassinated in the
    venue on February 21, 1965. The building was acquired by the state of New York in 1967 and was permanently closed in 1980





    El Morocco had grown to be a popular nightclub at the height of cafe society that provided a unique atmosphere for club goers that were inside
    and outside the entertainment industry. Guests would arrive wearing fancy attire and be ready to
    eat, drink, or dance





    Whiskey was a favorite order in the 1950s jazz
    clubs, but guests would also order The Southside cocktail and
    Mai Tais





    Dancer Helen Haynes performed to Guy Warren's Love, The Mystery Of at the African Room nightclub in 1958.
    Haynes would also occasionally perform at the nightclub
    with fellow dancer Jon Lei. The African Room was allegedly the only club in the US at the
    time that offered authentic African singing and dancing





    The Latin Quarter became expensive after Lou Walters sold his share of the
    nightclub in 1956. It became known as a nightclub that was
    more expensive than the Copacabana with a show that was ‘a bit bigger, nakeder,
    and longer'





    Shows at the Latin Quarter continued to draw in crowds throughout the 1950s.

    Other than dancers, the nightclub also featured headliners such
    as Frank Sinatra, Frankie Laine, and the Andrews Sisters





    Rock and roll clubs began opening up at the end 1950s.
    One popular location was Trude Heller's - a Greenwich Village nightclub that opened
    in the 1950s and operated from the 1960s-1980s with swing music and go-go dancers





    Rock and roll clubs have helped legendary singers start their careers.
    Entertainers who performed acts at Trude Heller's that launched their careers were
    Duane and Gregg Heller from the Allmand Brothers, Cyndie Lauper, and the Manhattan Transfer





    The Stork Club, already having many a-list regulars, had hat check girls work in cloakrooms.
    One of the rooms at the nightclub in 1940 was full of military hats





    Guests at the Stork Club were expected to adhere to a dress code, men wearing suits
    and women wearing gowns with silk gloves. Men were also required to wear neckties with their suits.
    Those who arrived without, were lent one or had to buy one
    before entering the club





    Stork Club owner Sherman Billingsley insisted that all of the guests have an orderly conduct while in the venue.
    Fighting, drunkenness, and rowdiness was prohibited. He also controlled the seating placement within the club





    A balloon night in the early 1940s may have been one of the
    Stork Club's most popular events. Each balloon that fell from
    the ceiling contained either folded $100 bills or various
    prizes





    Participants had the chance to win items such as diamond bracelets or cars at the Stork Club's balloon night.
    Numbers found inside the balloons instead of $100 bills would be matched with others
    that were listed on their prize chart





    (From left to right) Actress Joan Leslie seemingly entertained three New York debutantes
    at the Stork Club on August 13, 1941. The star appeared in six movies in 1941, including High
    Sierra and The Great Mr. Nobody





    The Stork Club did not have a guest limit, but its last
    location was big enough to fit over 2,000 people. Starting out as a tenant in the Physicians and Surgeons Building,
    Sherman Billingsley bought the entire seven-story location to use for
    the club for $300,000 in 1946





    Lieutenant Douglas Fairbanks grinned from ear to ear while relaxing at the Stork Club in 1942 with his wife,
    Mary Lee Epling, and actor Roland Young. The lieutenant was
    on leave after many months of active duty at sea. Outside of
    his military career, Fairbanks had film roles in The Prisoner of Zenda and The Corsican Brothers





    The behavior Sherman Billingsley required of all guests at the Stork Club was not always followed by the celebrity clientele.
    Actor Humphrey Bogart was banned after arguing with Billingsley.
    Milton Berle was also barred for too much shouting and table-hopping










    Actress Constance Bennett and United States Air Force Colonel John Theron Coulter smiled at their table in the Stork Club in March 1946.
    The film star and war hero wed that year and remained
    married until Bennett's death in 1965 at age 60





    (From left to right) Brigadier General Elliot Roosevelt, his wife, Faye Emerson, and columnist Walter Winchell were settled at their
    table in the Stork Club with drinks in 1945. Roosevelt, the son of President Franklin D.
    Roosevelt, married Emerson in 1944. The two divorced in 1950, and despite
    her connection to the Roosevelts, Emerson supported Dwight D.
    Eisenhower in the 1952 presidential election





    (From left to right) John Randolph Hearst, William Randolph Hearst, Jr., and Captain Randolph Heart dine together at the Stork Club in 1945.
    The three men were sons of William Randolph Hearst Sr., who founded Hearst Communications in 1887 and became a member of the
    US House of Representatives





    (From left to right) Faye Emerson, Marsha Hunt, Sherman Billingsley, Elliot Roosevelt,
    George G. Nathan, and Julie Hayden were seated in different areas at the Stork Club one night in 1948.
    Billingsley, who promoted elegance at the Stork Club, appreciated the
    celebrity clientele he had during its prime years





    Prince Carl Johan of Sweden and Mrs. Kerstein Wijmark at the Stork Club on February 18,
    1946. Johan had renounced his right to the throne so that he could marry Wijmark, who
    was a commoner. They wed later that year and were married for 41 years





    Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz made their first appearance as a married couple at the Stork Club in 1946.
    The entertainment duo married in 1940 after having met while filming the
    Rodgers and Hart stage hit Too Many Girls. Divorced 20 years later, Ball
    and Arnaz remained good friends





    Producer and screenwriter Alfred Hitchcock dined with
    actress Claudette Colbert at the Stork Club in 1946.
    Hitchcock was known for his many films, including
    The Lady Vanishes and Shadow of a Doubt. In the years after this picture
    was taken, Hitchcock created film classics To Catch a Thief and Psycho in 1955 and 1960





    Sherman Billingsley was happy to have Joan Crawford be at the Stork Club on April 29, 1951 for
    a party in her honor. Crawford, who was a dancer before an actress,
    attended the party before meeting her fourth and final husband, Alfred Steele.
    She was also married to Stork Club guest, Douglas Fairbanks Jr.
    from 1929-1939





    (From left to right) Cuban-born actor and bandleader Desi
    Arnaz, Ruth Cosgrove, and Milton Berle smiled for a
    photo at their table in the Stork Club in January 1953.
    The photo was taken prior to Berle being barred from the club





    Don Ameche shared a table with actress and television host Kyle MacDonnell at the
    Stork Club in 1950





    (From left to right) Ernest Hemingway, Mary Welsh Hemingway, Slim Hawks,
    actor Spencer Tracy, actor-producer George Jessel,
    and Leland Hayward had a friendly get together at the Stork Club on June
    27, 1953. Hemingway was negotiating a deal to turn his
    book The Old Man and the Sea into a movie. The
    film adaptation was released in 1958 starring Tracy as The Old Man





    (From left to right) Actress Joan Crawford, comedian Ed Wynn, and Wynn's wife, Dorothy Elizabeth Nesbitt celebrated the actress at a Sunday night party at the Stork Club in 1951.
    Despite Crawford being affectionate with Wynn, the two stars never acted alongside one another
    and Wynn and his wife divorced in 1955





    Janis Carter had a girls night out at the Stork Club after leaving the New
    York nightclub with four friends in 1950.
    Carter, a popular stage and film actress, had starred in three
    movies that year. She eventually retired from acting in 1956 before marrying lumber
    and shipping tycoon Julius Stulman in 1956





    Producer Leland Hayward sat next to his then-wife Slim at the Stork Club in 1949.
    The entertainers got married in the estate owned by CBS president William S Paley that year, and kept it a secret until the pair left for their honeymoon. The actress and producer divorced in 1960





    (From left to right) Fashion designer Valentino Clemente Ludovico Garavani,
    a female companion, and Oscar Aristides Renta Fiallo attended a
    party at El Morocco. The two men, under the names Valentino and
    Oscar de la Renta, have designed clothing for Hollywood stars for several years and would talk with one another
    at public events until Fiallo died in 2014





    (From left to right) Robert Scott, his mother,
    Mabel Boll, and Theodore Cella sat together at the El
    Morocco nightclub in 1941. Boll was known as the Diamond Queen for her
    large collection of jewelry. She married Cella one year before
    the photo was taken and maintained good relationship with her son until his
    death in 1942





    Actress Mary Pickford embraced John Perona, owner and operator of El Morocco in his New York nightclub in 1945.
    Pickford was married to Charles Buddy Rogers when this picture was taken. Rogers was a band
    leader and film actor who occasionally made appearances
    with Pickford at El Morocco. He was the actress' third and final
    husband 





    (From left to right) Marlene Dietrich, Eddie Fisher, Dietrich's daughter Maria Riva, and
    a male friend hung out together at the El Morocco nightclub
    in 1953. The picture was taken six years before Fisher
    married Elizabeth Taylor and began going to El Morocco only with
    her. Riva, who began working on CBS television, was one of the
    first stars of the early kinescope-era television 





    El Morocco had similar standards to that of other elegant nightclubs in New York.
    Guests were expected to be formally dressed in suits and long dresses.

    However, it is unclear if the El Morocco club owner arranged the venue's seating





    Charlie Chaplin and Al Jolson shared a few laughs at the El Morocco nightclub on March 28, 1947.
    The two entertainers had been friends for many
    years prior to their outing at the New York club. They were photographed together at
    various events and Jolson even visited Chaplin on a film set in 2018





    (From left to right) Actor Bruce Cabot, starlet Rita Hayworth and heiress Gloria Vanderbilt were all smiles at their table in El Morocco in 1941.

    Cabot and Hayworth co-starred in the 1939 film Homicide Bureau.

    Vanderbilt, a successful fashion designer and socialite, was the subject of a high-profile custody case between her
    mother and aunt in the 1930s





    Ava Gardner and Artie Shaw made multiple appearances
    at El Morocco nightclub, one being in 1945 before their wedding.
    Gardner was married to the entertainer from 1945 to 1946.
    Shaw, who was known for his many marriages, wed Forever Amber author Kathleen Winsor the year he and Gardner divorced, but it was annulled
    in 1948  





    Elizabeth Taylor and Eddie Fisher spent time at El Morocco
    on May 15, 1959, the year they got married.
    Taylor and Fisher began dating while he was married to Debbie Reynolds.
    Their affair became a public scandal, and people thought Taylor was a homewrecker.
    The actress admitted after their divorce in 1964 that she married him because of her grief over Mike Todd





    Like the Stork Club, El Morocco had many lavish
    party for its guests, and visitors who were
    not members of the rich and famous were invited to attend.
    Their New Year's Eve parties were a big hit at the club that celebrities would
    go to when they were available





    Natalie Wood and her husband Robert Wagner smiled for a photo at
    El Morocco in 1957, which was the year they got married.
    Wood and Wagner divorced in 1962 and remarried in 1972.
    The Rebel Without a Cause star died under mysterious circumstances in 1981 and Wagner was named a person of interest in 2018





    Many guests at El Morocco ordered alcohol drinks, some even bought bottles for their entire tables.
    The nightclub also had a champagne room for private dining, which was frequented by clientele who were
    members of cafe society





    Johnnie Ray was a talented singer and pianist who played
    at the El Morocco nightclub in 1954. Known as the father of rock and roll, Ray was highly popular
    in the 1950s and starred alongside Marilyn Monroe in the
    1954 film There's No Business Like Show Business





    Besides its celebrity guests and zebra motif,
    the El Morocco was a fun place for couples to dance, one being
    watched by several dinner guests on March 6, 1955. The dancing was top-notch,
    but it was not what made El Morocco a go-to nightclub of the 1950s





    Nightlife in New York was one of the things that helped bring positivity to people during the Second World
    War. Wounded soldiers who were home also found happiness in the
    dancers and other acts that would perform at these clubs in the 1940s-1950s that helped make the
    venues so popular during that time





    Most of the nightclubs around today no longer exist or
    closed down permanently between the 1960s-1980s.
    However, there have been some cases where the venues that
    once closed down became reopened, including the legendary Copacabana nightclub that reopened on February 5,
    2022 





    An unknown female singer sang her heart out at the La Vie Parisienne in New York on December 18,
    1942. The French club was located at 3 East
    52nd Street and became the La Grenouille restaurant in 1962 that serves fantastic food and live jazz music





    Showgirls and several other dinner guests enjoyed dancing at Leon & Eddie's nightclub in New
    York on April 14, 1944. Leon & Eddie's was popular in the 1930s-1940s during the World War II era in Times
    Square and closed in 1958 after Leon Enken retired





    While New York nightclub owners began protesting against War Mobilization Director James F Byrnes' midnight curfew request,
    Nicky Blair opened the Carnival nightclub. The place became a New York hot spot on 51st Street in the
    1940s



    Brooke ShieldsCrimeWorld War II

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