Here are some examples of popular music of the time period.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Links of Interest
Here are some resources surrounding the musical itself.
Playwrights and History
Reviews
More Reviews
The Movie
Slang of the Time
Playwrights and History
Reviews
More Reviews
The Movie
Slang of the Time
Cab Calloway video—shadow dancer
1930s fashion show—SET, CHARACTER RESEARCH FEMALES
1930s pulp fiction covers—COSTUMES, SET, LIGHTS
Kottonmouth Kings - reefer madness -i know they just come off as a dumb hip hop group that just wants to smoke but in this song they really make some good points. i was surprised.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D44pyeEvhcQ - i looked up Cab Calloway and found this. i guess this is what they meant by jazz in the play.
backstory on marijuana in us/anslinger - tells about Anslinger and other things he tried to get Americans to fear.
1930s slang - just reading it helps you get a feel for the time period
Vaudeville- certain aspects of Reefer Madness makes me think about vaudeville and some moments almost seem right out of it
1930s Gangster movies
Little Caesar 1930
Anti-Marijuana PSA Video by the American Medical Association
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skoWq27KYeE&feature=related
Turtle Tips: Marijuana (PSA, early 90s)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mqtY88BUi0M&NR=1
The POT Conspiracy - The Real Reason Cannabis Has Been Outlawed
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tLOtC4CprX0&feature=related
Exposing the Myth of Smoked Medical Marijuana / Anti-Marijuana PSA Video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IiWpyWsMVPg&feature=related
The Medical Facts On marijuana
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pLQPtZs5TP8&feature=related
Bill O'Reilly
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CzWXzuoKjSU&NR=1
Bill O'Reilly vs. Cheech & Chong
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIuFr5u6Di8&feature=related
Stephen Colbert on The O'Reilly Factor
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QquTUR9nbC4&feature=related
The Real Stephen Colbert (Out of Character)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DNvJZCFpdp8&feature=related
Grass: The History Of Marijuana--Very informative documentary
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sknoKWsVlAA&feature=related
Anti-Marijuana PSA Video by the American Medical Association
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Turtle Tips: Marijuana (PSA, early 90s)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
The POT Conspiracy - The Real Reason Cannabis Has Been Outlawed
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Exposing the Myth of Smoked Medical Marijuana / Anti-Marijuana PSA Video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
The Medical Facts On marijuana
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Bill O'Reilly
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Bill O'Reilly vs. Cheech & Chong
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Stephen Colbert on The O'Reilly Factor
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
The Real Stephen Colbert (Out of Character)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Grass: The History Of Marijuana--Very informative documentary
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
The Time
Here are a few timelines showing some of the events surrounding the production of the original film and the decade in which our production is set.
1930
- Gandhi's Salt March
- Pluto Discovered
- Stalin Begins Collectivizing Agriculture in the U.S.S.R.
1931
- Al Capone Imprisoned for Income Tax Evasion
- Auguste Piccard Reaches Stratosphere
- Christ Monument Built on Rio de Janeiro Hilltop
- Empire State Building Completed
- Scottsboro Boys Accused of Rape
- U.S. Officially Gets National Anthem
1932
- Air Conditioning Invented
- Amelia Earhart First Woman to Fly Solo Across the Atlantic
- Lindbergh's Baby Kidnapped
- Scientists Split the Atom
- Zippo Lighters Introduced
1933
- Adolf Hitler Becomes Chancellor of Germany
- Assassination Attempt on FDR
- FDR Launches New Deal
- First Nazi Concentration Camp Established
- Loch Ness Monster First Spotted
- Prohibition Ends in the U.S.
- Wiley Post Flies Around the World in 8 1/2 Days
1934
- Bonnie and Clyde Killed by Police
- Cheeseburger Created
- The Dust Bowl
- Mao Zedong Begins the Long March
- Parker Brothers Sells the Game "Monopoly"
1935
- Alcoholics Anonymous Founded
- Germany Issues the Anti-Jewish Nuremberg Laws
- John Maynard Keynes Suggests New Economic Theory
- Social Security Enacted in U.S.
1936
- Carnegie Publishes How to Win Friends and Influence People
- Hoover Dam Completed
- King Edward VIII Abdicates
- Nazi Olympics in Berlin
- Spanish Civil War Begins
1937
- Amelia Earhart Vanishes
- Golden Gate Bridge Opened
- The Hindenberg Disaster
- Japan Invades China
1938
- Broadcast of "The War of the Worlds" Causes Panic
- Chamberlain Announces "Peace in Our Time"
- "Extinct" Fish Found (Coelacanth)
- Hitler Annexes Austria
- The Night of Broken Glass (Kristallnacht)
1939
- First Commercial Flight Over the Atlantic
- German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact Signed
- Helicopter Invented
- Refugees on the St. Louis Refused Entry Everywhere
- World War II Begins
Timeline Number Two
| ||||||||
1933 | ||||||||
March 4, 1933 - President Franklin D. Roosevelt is inaugurated for the first time. His speech with its hallmark phrase, "We have nothing to fear, but fear itself" begins to rally the public and Congress to deal with great depression issues. His subsequent Fireside Chats, that began eight days later, would continue his addresses with the American public. March 9 - June 16, 1933 - The New Deal social and economic programs are passed by the United States Congress is a special one hundred day session to address depression era economics. The gold standard was dropped on April 19 and ratified during the time of this session on June 5. March 31, 1933 - The Civilian Conservation Corps is authorized under the Federal Unemployment Relief Act. It would provide work for two and one-half million men during the succeeding nine years and help construct many national park and other projects across the United States. May 27, 1933 - The Century of Progress World's Fair opens in Chicago, Illinois. Held along the banks of Lake Michigan on 427 acres, this depression era fair was a successful event, both in financial and attendance terms, taking advantage of cheap labor to keep costs low. It lasted for two seasons, drawing over 39 million visitors over its 1933 and 1934 years. November 1, 1933 - In South Dakota, a strong dust storm strips topsoil from depression era farms. It was one in a series of such storms to plague the Midwest during 1933 and 1934. December 5, 1933 - The 21st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is passed, ending prohibition. | ||||||||
1934 | ||||||||
April 6, 1934 - The United States pulls its troops from Haiti. The Master's golf tournament is held for the first time at Augusta National Golf Club, founded by the legendary amateur golfer Bobby Jones, in Augusta, Georgia. The 1934 winner was Horton Smith, of the United States, at four under par. June 6, 1934 - The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is established with the signing of the Securities Exchange Act into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. June 19, 1934 - The construction of the Natchez Trace Parkway, a scenic and historic trail between Nashville, Tennessee, and Natchez, Mississippi is approved in legislation signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. December 29, 1934 - Japan renounces the Washington Naval Treat of 1922 and the London Naval Treaty of 1930. | ||||||||
1935 | ||||||||
January 4, 1935 - Franklin D. Roosevelt issues a presidential proclamation designating the Fort Jefferson National Monument, now Dry Tortugas National Park, off the Florida Keys. The waters and islands of this area contain the largest all-masonry fort in the Western hemisphere. June 1, 1935 - The greatest hitter in the history of baseball, Babe Ruth, retires from Major League Baseball. He is among the charter class of players inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame, in Cooperstown, New York, in 1939. August 14, 1935 - The Social Security Act is passed by Congress as part of the New Deal legislation and signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. It would begin payouts to retirees within two years. Workers began contributing into the system during the same year, at a rate of 2% of the first $3,000 in earnings, half paid by the employee and half paid by the employer. August 21, 1935 - The Historic Sites Act is signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, declaring a national policy to preserve historic sites, including National Historic Landmarks. October 10, 1935 - Porgy and Bess, the opera by George Gershwin, opens in New York City. September 30, 1935 - Hoover Dam is dedicated by President Roosevelt. | ||||||||
1936 | ||||||||
March 19, 1936 - Located at the homestead of Daniel Freeman, a filer of one of the initial homestead applications under the Homestead Act of 1862, the Homestead National Monument in Nebraska is signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. This historic site pays tribute to the many pioneers who settled the western states. May 12, 1936 - The Santa Fe Railroad inaugurates the all-Pullman Super Chief passenger train service between Chicago, Illinois and Los Angeles, California. August 1, 1936 - The Summer Olympics Games open in Berlin, Germany under the watchful eye of German leader Adolph Hitler, whose policies of Arian supremacy had already begun to take shape. The star of the games was Jesse Owens, a black American, who won four gold at the Berlin 1936 Games. November 3, 1936 - Franklin D. Roosevelt overwhelms his Republican challenger, Alfred Landon, for a second presidential term. His Electoral College margin, 523 to 8, and 62% of the popular vote insured Roosevelt carte blanche in his goals of the New Deal. Gone with the Wind is published by Margaret Mitchell. | ||||||||
1937 | ||||||||
February 16, 1937 - Wallace H. Corothers patents the polymer, invented in the Dupont labs. March 26, 1937 - William Henry Hastie is appointed to the federal bench, becoming the first African-American to become a federal judge. May 6, 1937 - At Lakehurst, New Jersey, the German airship Hindenburg bursts into flames while mooring. The fire consumes the largest airship in the world, 804 feet long, within one minute, causing the death of thirty-six people. May 27, 1937 - The Golden Gate Bridge opens to pedestrian traffic and one day later, after a ceremonial press of a button from Washington, D.C. by President Roosevelt, receives its first vehicles. It created a vital link between San Francisco and Marin County. August 14, 1937 - The Appalachian Trail, extending two thousand miles from Mount Katahdin, Maine to Springer Mountain, Georgia is completed. | ||||||||
1938 | ||||||||
May 17, 1938 - Naval expansion act passed. June 28, 1938 - The National Minimum Wage is enacted within the federal legislation known as the Fair Labor Standards Act. It established a minimum wage of $0.25 at the time (approx. $3.22 in 2005), as well as time and one half for overtime and the prohibition of most employment for minors. July 3, 1938 - The final reunion of the Blue and the Gray is held. It commemorated the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. (Photo above) The Cemetery Gate at Gettysburg after the 1863 battle. July 18, 1938 - "Wrong Way" Douglas Corrigan, with his faulty compass, lands his plane in Dublin, Ireland, after departing from Brooklyn, New York on a trip to the west coast of the United States. October 30, 1938 - A nationwide scare develops when Orson Welles broadcasts his War of the Worlds radio drama, which included fake news bulletins stating that a Martian invasion had begun on earth. | ||||||||
1939 | ||||||||
January 5, 1939 - President Franklin D. Roosevelt asks the U.S. Congress for a defense budget hike. April 30, 1939 - The New York World's Fair opens for its two year run. This world's fair, spectacularly conceived for the Flushing Meadows trash dump made famous by F. Scott Fitzgerald in Queen's, New York, is often credited with proving to the American public that prosperity and good times could lay ahead after the decade of depression. The fair was centered by the Trylon and Perisphere theme structures and included the participation of 52 nations and 11 colonies, despite the growing presence of a looming World War. The New York fair closed on October 21, 1940 and drew 45 million paid visitors. During the same year, a competing fair in San Francisco, known as the Golden Gate Exposition, became a second example of a spectacular world's fair signaling the end of the depression era. Held in the middle of San Francisco Bay, it opened February 18, 1939 and would close on September 29, 1940 with an attendance of over 15 million. June 12, 1939 - The Baseball Hall of Fame opens in Cooperstown, New York, home of one of baseball's founders, Abner Doubleday. The first class of inductees included Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Christy Mathewson, and Walter Johnson. August 2, 1939 - Albert Einstein alerts Franklin D. Roosevelt to an A-bomb opportunity, which led to the creation of the Manhattan Project. Einstein had arrived as a fugitive from Nazi Germany six years earlier on October 17, 1933. September 5, 1939 - The United States declares its neutrality in the European war after Germany invaded Poland, effectively beginning World War II after a year of European attempts to appease Hitler and the aims of expansionist Nazi Germany. (Photo below) U.S. Troops land on the beach at Normandy, France in 1944. The United States ended its neutrality after the attack on Pearl Harbor in December of 1941. |
Source
The Original Film

As you probably already know Reefer Madness the musical is based off of a 1936 anti-drug propaganda film used as a scare tactic against marijuana use. Here is a link to the entire original film in five parts. Enjoy!
Click here to view film!
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