Time To Remember - Teenage Flapper 1920s - Reel 1 (1920-1929)

  Рет қаралды 194,936

British Pathé

British Pathé

10 жыл бұрын

Pathe have rights to clips in Time to Remember programmes but not to commentary or whole programme as screened.
Reel 1.
01:00:13 Short shot of a speeding train is followed by footage of a fashion parade inside a train. Nice 1920s frocks and hats are modelled for an audience seated in the train. Joyce Grenfell begins her commentary with the traditional "Time To Remember" opening speech with some "flapper" style modifications.
01:00:44 Opening sequence and title "Time to Remember - A programme to take you back - however young you may be - recalled by Joyce Grenfell."
01:01:07 Nice sequence beside a swimming pool - women suddenly appear from changing cubicles wearing swimsuits. They pose in their outfits looking coy then parade by the side of the pool - they are probably chorus girls but could be used to illustrate a beauty contest or fashion parade. M/S and C/Us of the girls modelling fabulous swimwear including a jaunty hat.
01:01:46 Two shots of schoolgirl sports teams - they wear gymslips and smile at the camera. A coin is tossed and they begin their game of lacrosse - various shots.
01:02:14 A male teacher demonstrates cricket technique for a group of schoolgirls who sit on the grass. A coin is tossed and a women's cricket match begins. Various shots of the game and spectators. Joyce Grenfell does an impression of the games mistress who used to say "a straight bat through life fears no fast bowlers".
01:02:47 Exteriors of very grand house beside a park as Joyce talks about a friend whose parents were very well off. Woman in a drawing room setting models a suit, a friend comes and joins her showing off her own outfit.
01:03:16 Woman sits at a table pouring a cup of tea. She places a hand made tea cosy over the teapot - it is in the form of a doll!
01:03:30 Sequence showing a woman trying on a hat shape. The two friends chat about the methods involved in decorating hats with crepe paper then some are modelled.
01:04:06 Traffic in London. Various shots of a group of children dancing around a hurdy gurdy as Joyce Grenfell tells how a woman doctor of the time said: "If British economic conditions didn't allow for large families, then people ought to go and have them in the wide open spaces of the Empire - so there!"
01:04:33 Political rally - probably in Hyde Park relating to women's rights.
01:04:43 Traffic - cars driving beside the park.
01:04:49 Sequence showing fashions at a racecourse or similar. Nice shots of extravagantly dressed women.
01:05:04 Footage of the wedding procession of the Duke of York (later King George VI) to Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon (later Queen Mother). Crowds.
01:05:19 Short shot of two women climbing out of their car. Joyce tells of her visit to the dressmaker and we see footage of Alphonse Berg constructing a dress out of a large piece of fabric and a few pins. His model stands with her hands in the air as in lightning time Alphonse constructs a gown.
01:05:41 Beauty parlour - C/U of a woman having a face massage by a woman with electrodes attached to her arms.
01:05:48 Short shot of London traffic.
01:05:52 M/S of a woman sitting at a dressing table. She begins to take off each layer of her undergarments - there are a lot of flimsy items.
01:06:18 C/U of a woman with a marvellous fan made of feathers. She takes a powder puff out of the fan and powders her nose. She looks at the camera in a conspiratorial manner then fans herself. C/U of a woman with a feather fan hiding her face. She winks at the camera - very sexy.
01:06:33 Fashion sequence - a group of people in evening wear - the women wear elaborate fur cloaks which they take off to reveal very ornate gowns. A little over the top really!
01:07:18 Theatre sequence - night shots of Piccadilly - many neon lights.
01:07:23 Feature film clip - sequence featuring Owen Nares and unnamed actress (check copyright). It is a dramatic love scene. Joyce Grenfell speaks of how her friend Daphne had "broken many a shoulder strap" over Owen Nares but Jack Buchanan was more her cup of tea. Dance sequence follows - Jack Buchanan dancing on stage with unnamed woman (I think it might be "June".)
01:07:40 Cabaret sequence - slapstick dance routine - White and Manning at the Kit Kat Club - see EP 289 from which this is a short clip. Continued.
01:07:51 A door opens to reveal a woman sitting at a dressing table tending to her toilette. She is wearing a nightgown and negligee and boudoir cap. She poses for the camera and admires herself in a mirror. Continued.
FILM ID:1107.01
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Пікірлер: 27
@ladytron9188
@ladytron9188 4 жыл бұрын
Great film .The style of clothes and hair were beautiful back then.
@fifthbusiness1678
@fifthbusiness1678 24 күн бұрын
Great film? In what way? Nostalgia, perhaps, but while the narration was amusing the video is daft. Bizarre.
@Bigbro28
@Bigbro28 5 ай бұрын
I could listen to Joyce for as long as she could talk; love that voice.
@isabellaferretti7279
@isabellaferretti7279 2 жыл бұрын
Wonderful! And love Joyce Grenfell's voiceover
@magx01
@magx01 5 жыл бұрын
Amazing footage.
@FunSizeSpamberguesa
@FunSizeSpamberguesa Жыл бұрын
"With all that paper about, it was just as well she didn't smoke." I don't know why, but that made me laugh harder than it probably should have.
@christina-yp6jy
@christina-yp6jy Жыл бұрын
Love the clothes from that era.
@caitlyngarden7269
@caitlyngarden7269 5 ай бұрын
Such a wondrous time! Even just the way they spoke, one would say its ‘positively charming’.
@quantumfluxlife
@quantumfluxlife 8 ай бұрын
WONDEROUS
@madelineflorio8460
@madelineflorio8460 2 жыл бұрын
all thumbs! great old slang!
@user-dw4kn9oi1m
@user-dw4kn9oi1m 4 ай бұрын
Classic old 1920s film of young women Flappers
@johnathandaviddunster38
@johnathandaviddunster38 2 ай бұрын
1920s flappers !!!! 2020s slappers !!!!!❤
@marlonosborne3770
@marlonosborne3770 2 ай бұрын
The 1920s officially was between 1921 and 1930👍🏼
@princesssparkle529
@princesssparkle529 Ай бұрын
What... 1920-1929
@turlyprincessangela6627
@turlyprincessangela6627 Жыл бұрын
4:40 Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon
@shadow_hillsgrandma8224
@shadow_hillsgrandma8224 Жыл бұрын
Wow rich English girls a lot different than American girls
@tr1954
@tr1954 Жыл бұрын
Indeed! None of them will ever be mistaken for being Louise Brooks.
@iamcarbonandotherbits.8039
@iamcarbonandotherbits.8039 7 ай бұрын
The only changes from then to now is the name. We call them Torys today, instead of flappers.😊
@WitchKing-Of-Angmar
@WitchKing-Of-Angmar Ай бұрын
Toryism has been popular since the 1700s.
@sarahlouise7163
@sarahlouise7163 2 ай бұрын
"outnumbered and shouted down" very unfortunate choice of words, considering so many men and young lads died, so these women could be free to visit dressmakers and get their jolly old faces done. a rather lumpen time, style wise
@WitchKing-Of-Angmar
@WitchKing-Of-Angmar Ай бұрын
In the 1776 and 1860s Aristocratic women invented war talk, which was very eerie humour that underestimated topics at hand in a laden kind of way. They talked about it to take their mind at it. "We're sipping tea and those old boys are falling down in french trenches; ghastly, one can imagine." "Falling dead?" "Heavens no!, falling dead in the trenches." They didn't have to have conviction as to how shaken women were during war period, so this dark humour was a way to keep it in the corner of their mind, downplaying it on purpose as to not raise stress. That iconized the 1930s socialite speech impediment where everything you said including a dreary understone "This sun is an awfully swell thing isn't it?" "Oh you dreadful thing, stop it!" "A right old terribly clever idea..!" Exclamations, drama, and the undertones of a macabre meledramacist played keenly in the lives of these women, from Britian to America, all socialites upheld this tradition, and all socialites had at least one alligator for a pet. Odd birds they were, the vamps were even lousier things in the 1910s.
@Bloom100000000000
@Bloom100000000000 7 ай бұрын
0:56 3:54
@kaiserchaoui6143
@kaiserchaoui6143 10 ай бұрын
Men in drag, such a sad life indeed.
@princesssparkle529
@princesssparkle529 Ай бұрын
Wtf
@princesssparkle529
@princesssparkle529 Ай бұрын
These are women
@kaiserchaoui6143
@kaiserchaoui6143 Ай бұрын
@@princesssparkle529 of course they are.
@johnathandaviddunster38
@johnathandaviddunster38 2 ай бұрын
Quick!!! Call a AMBULANCE FASHION VICTIMS ..
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