成人快手

Life during the Depression - WJECThe impact of popular entertainment

The Depression was a traumatic period for many British families. However, some areas surprisingly prospered during the 1930s. How were people able to cope with the challenges of the Depression years?

Part of HistoryDepression, war and recovery, 1930-1951

The impact of popular entertainment

People needed a distraction to help them cope with the effects of the Depression so they turned to accessible forms of entertainment. These helped to raise the morale of many people, while also offering a sense of escapism.

The importance of radio

A radio with a wooden casing and decorative design.
Figure caption,
Gecophone radio, 1933

The radio, or wireless, appeared in 1922, but soon they were cheaper to purchase as they were mass produced. By 1937, half the households in Britain, even in the poorer areas of Wales, had a radio.

The establishment of a Welsh region of the 成人快手 in 1937 gave radio in Wales a further boost with local programmes being made in both Welsh and English. The 成人快手 was able to offer a great variety, including live theatre, news, music, plays and comedy.

Cinema

The cinema was probably the most popular form of entertainment in the 1930s. Silent films had been shown since the beginning of the century, but from the end of the 1920s people were attracted to the new talkies.

The attraction of seeing Hollywood film stars such as Errol Flynn, Greta Garbo and Clark Gable, low admission prices, and the growth of new luxury cinemas meant that the cinema was a great attraction.

By 1934, Cardiff had over 20 cinemas and there were over 320 in the whole of Wales. It became a place for young people to meet, children to watch action-packed matinees, and for adults to briefly escape the reality of the Depression. The first Welsh language talkie was screened in 1935.

Black and white photograph of a crowd of children watching a film at the Penny Church Cinema in Cardiff, September 1935.
Image caption,
A crowd of children watching a film at the Penny Church Cinema in Cardiff in September 1935

By 1939 there were 4,776 cinemas in Britain and an average of 23 million tickets were sold per week.

Most films shown were made in America, although one famous film called The Proud Valley was filmed on location in South Wales in 1939. It starred the American singer and actor Paul Robeson, and the film tells the story of a black American miner and singer who gets a job in a mine and joins a male voice choir. .

Sport

This was another pastime which helped people to cope, and grew in popularity and importance throughout these difficult times.

Rugby union was popular, and in 1935 the Welsh team beat both England and New Zealand. The Glamorgan cricket team enjoyed success in the 1930s.

Tommy Farr and Joe Louis holding out their fists to one another wearing boxing shorts. Other men in suits look on.
Figure caption,
Boxers Tommy Farr and Joe Louis before their fight at the Yankee Stadium, New York in 1937

Tommy Farr was an extremely successful boxer and a Rhondda hero. His world heavyweight championship bout against the famous American boxer Joe Louis was legendary, even though he lost the fight.

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