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Vernon and Irene Castle popularized ragtime dancing in the years just before World War I and made dancing a respectable pastime in America. The whisper-thin, elegant Castles were trendsetters in many ways: they traveled with a black orchestra, had an openly lesbian manager, and were animal-rights advocates decades before it became a public issue. Irene was also a fashion innovator, bobbing her hair ten years before the flapper look of the 1920s became popular. From their marriage in 1911 until 1916, the Castles were the most famous and influential dance team in the world. Their dancing schools and nightclubs were packed with society figures and white-collar workers alike. After their peak of white-hot fame, Vernon enlisted in the Royal Canadian Flying Corps, served at the front lines, and was killed in a 1918 airplane crash. Irene became a movie star and appeared in more than a dozen films between 1917 and 1922. The Castles were depicted in the Fred Astaire-Ginger Rogers movie Vernon and Irene Castle's Ragtime Revolution (1939), but the film omitted most of the interesting and controversial aspects of their lives. They were more complex than posterity would have it: Vernon was charming but irresponsible, Irene was strong-minded but self-centered, and the couple had filed for divorce before Vernon's death (information that has never before been made public). Vernon and Irene Castle's Ragtime Revolution is the fascinating story of a couple who reinvented dance and its place in twentieth-century culture.
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Reviews
"Golden makes a contribution to scholarship in dance and theatre studies through a well-constructed and well-researched biography of two fascinating people. Golden has obviously done a great deal of research, and her understanding of the Castles is engagingly delivered and told with compassion, humor, and telling detail."
Ann Dils, coeditor of Moving History/Dancing Cultures: A Dance History Reader
"Eve Golden writes an engaging story filled with interesting tidbits of information about her subjects and the period in which they were most well-known."
Renée Camus, Founder and Artistic Director of Centuries Historical Dance
"Golden, author of four other biographies, has done a commendable job separating fact from fiction."
Library Journal