Emmanuel collado urena
The Cotton Club was the most famous club in 1920.In New York the Cotton Club was opened in 1923.The Cotton Club was famous for its flower show lights and women dancing.The Cotton Club was most famous for entertainment during the roaring 20’s.
The Cotton Club was famous because of the entertainers who played there it opened many doors for many black musicians and dancers.The Cotton Club excluded black, expect as entertainers and even most of the theaters was open only to whites.Some of the widely know blues and jazz performers of their time including ethel water sang there the Cotton Club was devoted to the idea of creating. Shows at the Cotton Club were musical revues that featured singers and comedians. The race riols of Harlem in 1935 forced the Cotton Club to close until late 1936.
The Cotton Club was the most famous club because for the comedians and singers and the musical.The Cotton Club excluded black people to entertainers the people but opened many black musicians and dancers. The Cotton Club was an important place where black people could perform.
Gustavo Martinez
The Cotton Club was one of the most famous Club in the 1920’s. Owney Madden used the Cotton Club to sell his first beer to the prohibition crowd Although the Club was closed for a long time in the 1920’s for the sell of alcohol, the owners political connection allowed them to reopen the Club quickly. The Cotton Club and Jazz Club events were part of African American culture known as the Harlem Revival.
Harlem was a big neighborhood in the northern section in the New York City. The Harlem Renaissance was the name given to the cultural and artistic explosion that happened in Harlem, New York between the end of WW1 and the middle of the 1930’s.
Cotton and Jazz music were events of Africans Americans cultural known as the Harlem revival. The Harlem revival was so important because they made American history more important with their skills. Like they could dance, play instruments, and dance in all Clubs.
Work Cited
"The Cotton Club. The famed Harlem, New York, nightclub is seen here at night, with the illuminated..." Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History, edited by Colin A. Palmer, 2nd ed., vol. 2, Macmillan Reference USA, 2006. U.S. History in Context, link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/PC3444787117/UHIC?u=pl2634&xid=bd6cdc85. Accessed 2 Feb. 2017