Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | PN 1993.5 .U6 B385 2010 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5019044 |
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PN 1993.5 .S95 Q37 2003 Arabic al-Fīlm al-riwāʼī fī Sūrīyah / | PN 1993.5 .U6 A825 2014 Screen ages : a survey of American cinema / | PN 1993.5 .U6 B365 2009 American cinema/American culture / | PN 1993.5 .U6 B385 2010 Mass appeal : the formative age of the movies, radio, and tv / | PN 1993.5 .U6 B655 1985 The classical Hollywood cinema : film style & mode of production to 1960 / | PN 1993.5 .U6 C623 2008 Screen plays : how 25 scripts made it to a theater near you--for better or worse / | PN 1993.5 .U6 D35 2012 The art of film funding : alternative financing concepts / |
"Mass Appeal describes the changing world of American popular culture from the first sound movies through the age of television. In short and accessible vignettes, the book reveals the career patterns of people who became big movie, TV, or radio stars. Eddie Cantor and Al Jolson symbolize the early stars of sound movies. Groucho Marx and Fred Astaire represent the movie stars of the 1930s, and Jack Benny stands in for the 1930s performers who achieved their success on radio. Katharine Hepburn, a stage and film star, illustrates the cultural trends of the late 1930s and early 1940s. Humphrey Bogart and Bob Hope serve as examples of performers who achieved great success during the Second World War. Walt Disney, Woody Allen, and Lucille Ball, among others, become the representative figures of the postwar world. Through these vignettes, the reader comes to understand the development of American mass media in the twentieth century"-- Provided by publisher.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Sound comes in, vaudeville and silent pictures go out -- 2. From Broadway to Hollywood with Groucho, Fred, and Ginger -- 3. Radio nights -- 4. From the 30s to the 40s with Kate, Bud, and Lou -- 5. Bogie, Bob, and the boys at war -- 6. The postwar movie scene -- 7. Make room for TV -- 8. Putting it together : Walt Disney introduces the baby boom to television -- 9. The end of an era?
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