1920s Books

Gloves Long Whiteview

Gloves Long White

£6.15
Flapper Beadsview

Flapper Beads

£2.50
Flapper 1920s - Black -Ladies Costumeview

Flapper 1920s - Black -Ladies Costume

£31.75
Tiger Overhead Animal Maskview

Tiger Overhead Animal Mask

£15.85

Books of the 1920s

Books of the Nineteen-Twenties which may give you some alternative 20s costume ideas

  • All Quiet on the Western Front – Erich Maria Remarque
  • Decline and Fall – Evelyn Waugh (1928)
  • 1920 – Edith Wharton ‘The Age of Innocence’ – First woman to win a Pulitzer prize.
  • The Great Gatsby – F Scott Fitzgerald (1925)
  • The Mysterious Affair at Styles – Agatha  Christie (1st Hercule Poirot) (1920)
  • A Passage to India – E M Forster, a chance to wear Indian Costumes from our hire range
  • Tarka the Otter – Henry Williamson
  • Winnie-the-Pooh (1926) -The Winnie-the-Pooh stories written by A A Milne featured   Winnie, Piglet, Eeyore and Tigger. The original books (illustrated by Ernest Howard Shepard) show a rather more tatty teddy, than the one now associated with the Disney model.  There are standard Bear, Pig, Donkey and Tiger costumes available as well as the Disney interpretation.

Symbols & Settings for a 1920s Event

  • American Speakeasy
  • Country House
  • Jazz Club
  • Parisian Style Café

1920s Films

Gangster Boyview

Gangster Boy

£16.80
Flapper 1920s - Black -Ladies Costumeview

Flapper 1920s - Black -Ladies Costume

£31.75
Musketeer Mens Costumeview

Musketeer Mens Costume

£30.25
Robin Hood Adult Costumeview

Robin Hood Adult Costume

£31.80
Charlie Chaplin Moustache Blackview

Charlie Chaplin Moustache Black

£1.85
Chaplin Caneview

Chaplin Cane

£3.70
Phantom of the Opera Budget Maskview

Phantom of the Opera Budget Mask

£1.25
Zorro Maskview

Zorro Mask

£3.30

1920 Movies – General Introduction

During the 1920s, the Music Hall, Theatre and Opera were gradually being superseded by the arrival of the Cinema in the UK. The 1920s saw this medium gradually increase and become more sophisticated, with the silent movies gradually being superseded with ‘talking pictures’ at the end of the decade. There is such a wide variety of films released during this decade that is will also be able to give you plenty of costume inspiration if you are looking for an alternative to the traditional Gangsters & Molls costumes that are commonly worn for a 1920s themed fancy dress party.

Film Stars of the Nineteen-Twenties

The 1920s era was when the movie stars began to take control. In the early days of the ‘silents’ the Studios controlled their ‘talent’ but as the popularity of the stars grew, they realized their strength and bargaining power and some – the ‘United Artists’ of Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks and DW Griffiths even started their own Studio in 1919.

Not all artists adapted well as the ‘talkies’ took over, but many remain legendary for their work and charisma as early media stars.  The 1920s saw the very first Academy Awards presented at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in 1929.

Theda Bara A leading ‘femme fatale’ actress in silent movies, who was one of the first to be termed a ‘Movie Vamp’. Her ‘oriental’ style costumes left little to the imagination, whilst her dark/smokey-eyed make-up was another of her trademarks. Although she did try to vary her range, she became typecast in the vamp roles, one of her most famous being that of Cleopatra – see our Egyptian costumes

Charlie Chaplin Probably one of the best known of the silent film stars of the 1920s, whose work continued through the ‘talkies’ and, as producer/director, into the late 20th century. The classic image is ‘the Tramp’, which consisted of an ill-fitting suit with baggy trousers, bowler hat and cane was seen in several of his films including The Kid.

Clara Bow Clara Bow was a leading actress of the 1920s silent movies. She, like others, became regarded as a screen sex symbol, but Clara was more the fun-loving girl-next-door flapper than the brooding ‘vamp’.  It was said she was the original ‘It’ girl, ‘It’ being defined as the quality possessed by some that draws others by its magnetic force. The 1920s short curly bob style was part of her look. She was a redhead, who enhanced her look with henna dye and used red lipstick to create a ‘Clara Bow’. She also helped popularize sailor pants and pleated skirts as fashion items.

Louise Brooks – Popular ‘flapper’ star, who pioneered the trademark bobbed hairstyle. Our Flapper costumes are ideal to portray this 1920s lady.

Lon Chaney – Known as the ‘Man of a Thousand Faces’ this versatile actor eventually specialized in ‘grotesque’ character roles such as the Phantom of the Opera & Quasimodo.

Douglas Fairbanks Snr – Silent screen actor specializing in action hero roles, such as Robin Hood. In 1927 he was elected first president of the Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts and Sciences.

Greta Garbo – Swedish film star. One of the few stars who made the transition from silent screen to talkies.  Famous for wanting to be alone!

Buster ‘Stoneface’ Keaton, Harold Lloyd or other comedy heroes of the silent screen – Buster Keaton was known for wearing a boater, whilst the small moustache, bowler and cane became Chaplin’s trademark symbols.  Others such as Laurel & Hardy wore standard 1920s clothing.

Pola Negri – Polish ‘femme fatale’ actress who claimed (after his death) that she and Rudolph Valentino had planned to marry.

Mary Pickford – The ‘girl with the curls’ and movie sweetheart who helped found United Artists and the American Motion Picture Academy. Her second husband was Douglas Fairbanks Snr, who she was married to throughout the 1920s. Curly hair and flowery dresses depict this silent screen star.

Gloria Swanson Gloria Swanson was a prominent actress, fashion icon and a true glitz and glamour star from the silent film era. She helped popularize glittery evening gowns with feathered cloaks, capes or accessories, but her trademark accessory (obviously widely copied as a result) were high-heel shoes decorated with imitation pearls and rhinestones. Not all artists adapted well as the ‘talkies’ took over, but many remain legendary for their work and charisma as early media stars.

Her popularity faded in the 1930s.  In 1950 Swanson effectively parodied herself, taking the role of the fading silent movie star Norma Desmond in the film ‘Sunset Boulevard’ (“ You were in silent pictures. You used to be big” “I am big – it’s the pictures that got small.”)

Rudolph Valentino - Probably the first screen heart-throb, his most iconic role being in the film The Sheikh (our Arab man costumes are ideal), although he  also played a matador in ‘Blood and Sand’ and various gangsters in early silent films. His death in 1928, aged just 31, created its own drama when 100,000 people lined the streets of New York for the funeral. A second funeral was also held on the US West Coast, for the benefit of his other fans.

MOVIES RELEASED DURING THE 1920s

When it comes to dressing up for a 1920s event, why not look at some of the film suggestions that were around in the cinema at the time? Given that the films of the period were all in black and white, the interpretation of the idea and colour scheme is up to you! There are some film titles you might even recognise, as some films and stage shows were re-imagined during the 20th and 21st centuries.

Action/ADVENTURE
The General (1926) – Buster Keaton pursuing a train through enemy lines, in this comedy classic.

The Gold Rush (1925) – Charlie Chaplin in his tramp persona, heads for the Klondike in search of gold.

The Mark of Zorro (1920) – The first appearance of Zorro in the movies. In this version he is played by action hero Douglas Fairbanks. We have a great selection of capes, masks & swords for a Zorro costume

The Sheik (1921) – This was Rudolph Valentino’s iconic role. There was also a follow-up ‘Son of the Sheik’ (1926).

The Thief of Baghdad (1924) – Douglas Fairbanks in this fantasy adventure of a thief who pursues a princess.

Chick Flicks/Romance

Flesh and the Devil (1926)

John Gilbert, Greta Garbo & Lars Hanson caught in an eternal love triangle.