The 1920s Arts and Entertainment: Chronology
The 1920s Arts and Entertainment: Chronology
1920: Joseph Stella paints Brooklyn Bridge.
1920: F. Scott Fitzgerald publishes his first novel, This Side of Paradise.
1920: Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray, and Katherine Dreier organize the New York Societé Anonyme to promote modern art.
1920: The Julliard Foundation is established in New York to encourage music in the United States.
1920: June 7 George White's Scandals, a musical revue, opens on Broadway with songs by George Gershwin.
1920: November 1 The Emperor Jones, by Eugene O'Neill, premieres at the Provincetown Playhouse in Greenwich Village.
1921: Poet Edna St. Vincent Millay publishes Second April.
1921: Booth Tarkington publishes his novel Alice Adams.
1921: The Love for Three Oranges, by Sergei Prokofiev, has its world premiere at the Chicago Civic Opera.
1921: Nanook of the North, a documentary filmed by Robert Flaherty, premieres in New York City.
1921: James Joyce's Ulysses is published in book form.
1921: Poet T. S. Eliot publishes The Waste Land.
1921: George Bellows paints The White House.
1921: May 23 Abie's Irish Rose, a comedy of an intermarriage between an Irish Catholic and a Jew, opens in New York City and runs for a record 2,327 performances.
1923: Robert Frost publishes New Hampshire, a collection of his poems.
1923: Rockwell Kent paints Shadows of Evening.
1923: February 16 Blues singer Bessie Smith makes her first recordings ("Down Hearted Blues" and "Gulf Coast Blues").
1923: March 19 The Adding Machine, an early expressionistic drama by Elmer Rice, opens in New York City.
1923: April 6 Louis Armstrong records his first solo on "Chime Blues" with King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band.
1924: Georgia O'Keeffe paints Dark Abstraction.
1924: Michel Fokine forms the American Ballet.
1924: February 24 Rhapsody in Blue, a symphonic composition by George Gershwin, is performed by Paul Whiteman and his orchestra in New York City.
1924: November 24 They Knew What They Wanted, a play by Sidney Howard, opens in New York City.
1925: Man Ray paints Sugar Loaves.
1925: Paul Manship sculpts Flight of Europa.
1925: September 21 The operetta, The Vagabond King, with music by Rudolf Friml, opens in New York City.
1926: John Barrymore stars in the film Don Juan.
1926: Ernest Hemingway's first novel The Sun Also Rises is published.
1926: Langston Hughes publishes his first volume of poetry, The Weary Blues.
1926: September 15 Jelly Roll Morton makes his first recordings with the Red Hot Peppers, including "Black-bottom Stomp."
1927: John Gilbert and Greta Garbo co-star in the film Love.
1927: September 8 Bix Beiderbecke records his solo piano classic, "In a Mist."
1927: October 6 The Jazz Singer, starring Al Jolson, premieres in New York City at the Warner Theatre.
1927: December 27 Paris Bound, a play by Philip Barry, opens in New York City.
1928: Djuna Barnes publishes the novel Ryder.
1928: Erich von Stroheim directs and stars in the film The Wedding March.
1928: Le Sacre du Printemps is produced with featured dancer Martha Graham.
1929: Husband and wife Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford co-star in a film version of The Taming of the Shrew, by William Shakespeare.
1929: Alexander Calder sculpts Circus.
1929: January 10 Street Scene, by Elmer Rice, opens at the Playhouse in New York City.
1929: November 27 Fifty Million Frenchmen, a musical comedy with songs by Cole Porter, premieres in New York City.