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Black Bottom (dance)

Black Bottom
Edith Wilson dancing the Black Bottom in the London production of Lew Leslie's Blackbirds of 1926
Year1920s
"The U.S.A. is Black Bottom Crazy" "Let's Do Black Bottom" ad in The Film Daily, 1926

The Black Bottom is a dance which became popular during 1920s amid the Jazz Age. It was danced solo or by couples. Originating among African Americans in the rural South, the black bottom eventually spread to mainstream American culture and became a national craze in the 1920s.[1] The dance was most famously performed by Ann Pennington, a star of the Ziegfeld Follies, who performed it in a Broadway revue staged by Ziegfeld's rival George White in 1926.[2]

  1. ^ "The Black Bottom, African roots in American dance". African American Registry. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  2. ^ S.D., Trav (23 December 2010). "Ann Pennington and Her "Black Bottom"". Travalanche. Retrieved 30 January 2018.

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