SAVOY BALLROOM
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      • JC Heard
      • Walter "Big'un" Page
      • Lawrence "Deacon" Brown
      • Lester "Prez" Young
      • Roy "Little Jazz" Eldridge
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      • Scale Model of "The Track"
      • FRAN
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  • Classes
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  • DanceCOMP
    • Competition Dancing in SL
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    • COSTUMES for Competition >
      • 401 RL Costume Lookbook
      • 401 SL Costume Lookbook
  • SHOWS
    • Events Calendar
    • DJs & Musicians
    • Why Savoy?
    • Savoy SL Videos
    • Archived Shows >
      • Fran's Celebration >
        • May 11 Press Release
      • Boai Honglian Dancers
      • Party in the Past
  • SwingTown
    • SwingTown in Creations Park
    • ATTRACTIONS >
      • Savoy Museum
      • Savoy Rooftop Art Gallery
      • The TRACK Scale Floorplanl
      • Savoy Ballroom
      • Dance 301 Swing Era
      • Dance 101 Classroom
      • Lenox Lounge
      • Lan Lian
      • Seranade Gallery
      • BB's Bakery
      • Back to 1955
    • Swing Town SHOPS >
      • AMUI
      • ¡En Yo!
      • G Sloane
      • Kastle Rock Couture
      • Mirage
      • Prism
      • SmartBots
      • Splintered Creations
      • Tayren's
      • Swing Town TENANTS

About SAVOY in Real Life

Below are some of the web resources we have used to learn about the original Savoy.   2LDance.org, the organization that created our dance classes, our LEA1 project, and continues to evolve the Savoy, has extensive resources accumulated from countless books, articles, news items and magazines.   
Picture
  http://www.welcometothesavoy.com/

"Welcome to The Savoy is a project to recreate the now lost Savoy Ballroom, in virtual reality. We want to transport people to the Savoy, Harlem’s most captivating nightspot, to experience the thrills of swinging big bands, breathtaking dancers and jazz age glamour."
Picture
savoyballroom.weebly.com

"​During the 1920’s, African-Americans had more opportunities to express themselves, despite their continued sergregation and degradation, blacks advanced music, dance, literature, and the arts in general. The Savoy Ballroom gave integrated audiences a chance to enjoy these black performers, and whites began to appreciate and accept black cultural contributions, opening America's mind to a fully integrated society."

​
Picture
frankiemanning.com
Although legendary Lindy hopper Frankie Manning passed away in 2009, his spirit lives on in the hearts and feet of swing dancers around the world. Frankie is remembered and revered for his vital role in the history and revival of swing dancing, as well as for his radiant and charismatic personality. His legacy is hugely important and widely influential.

​
Picture
https://aaep1600.osu.edu/book/01_SavoyBallroom.php
​

"At a time when racial segregation was quite strict, the Savoy enforced a non-discrimination policy and it was one of the few, if not the only place where both Whites and African Americans were welcome in an unsegregated public space. It is estimated that 85% of the clientele was black and 15% White, but sometimes there would be closer to an even split, 50% Black and 50% White. "

​
Picture
http://www.streetswing.com/histmain/d5savoy1.htm
​

​"The Savoy was pink on the inside and had a good size foyer as you entered the building, was very well ventilated (Air-conditioning not yet invented), and had modern furniture of the times and mirrored walls. The ballroom itself was huge, had two bandstands, colored spotlights, and a dance floor that was rectangular in shape (nicknamed the track) and was over 10,000 square ft. of spring loaded, wooden dance floor. The floor had to be replaced every three years due to the tremendous use it went thru. "
Picture
http://sydneyswingkatz.com.au/blog/2010/12/the-savoy-ballroom-harlem-ny/

 "The vision of these two young men was to create one of the first racially integrated public places in the country, which proved to be a wise business decision as well, attracting a wide range of clientele. (The allowing of inter-racial dancing of Blacks and Whites, was really frowned upon by both races at the time at other night spots, but not at the Savoy. The Savoy hardly had any problems with fights or trouble makers due to racial issues. People learnt to overlook there differences and respect the true meaning of the Savoy, it’s music and dance and if not its strict bouncers would fix any problems fast.)"


Picture
http://www.vintageinn.ca/tag/facts-about-the-savoy-ballroom/

"If you’re a Lindy hopper or a lover of the 1930’s/1940’s, you know the Savoy Ballroom in Harlem. You know that it is the hallowed ground of swing dancers everywhere and the ‘Home of the Happy Feet’. All the greats played here AND danced here and anyone who was anyone passed thru it’s doors. It truly was a magical place, where your skin colour did not matter, only the music and the dance did."

​
Picture
https://www.harlemworldmagazine.com/the-savoy-ballroom-harlem-new-york-1930/

The Savoy was one of many Harlem hot spots along Lenox, but it was the one to be called the “World’s Finest Ballroom”. It was in operation from March 12, 1926, to July 10, 1958, and as Barbara Englebrecht writes in her article ‘Swinging at the Savoy’, it was “…a building, a geographic place, a ballroom, and the ‘soul’ of a neighborhood”.
Picture
https://atlanticlindyhopper.wordpress.com/2015/10/09/7/

"The Savoy was more than a ballroom – it was the beating heart of Harlem. Here is where the best musicians and dancers came together to create swing. It was the largest and most elegant ballroom in Harlem. For a start it was on a different scale to other ballrooms, occupying a whole block from 140th to 141st street, about 250ft by 50ft with two bandstands – it could fit thousands on the dance floor, over 5,000 attended on its opening night on 12 March 1926[i] with Fletcher Henderson’s band."
Picture
https://welcometoharlem.wordpress.com/2010/12/22/the-savoy-ballroom/

​"The vision of these two young men was to create one of the first racially integrated public places in the country, which proved to be a wise business decision as well, attracting a wide range of clientele. (The allowing of inter-racial dancing of Blacks and Whites, was really frowned upon by both races at the time at other night spots, but not at the Savoy. The Savoy hardly had any problems with fights or trouble makers due to racial issues. People learnt to overlook there differences and respect the true meaning of the Savoy, it’s music and dance and if not its strict bouncers would fix any problems fast.)"
On December 1, 2018, our name officially changed to SAVOY BALLROOM
Some of our historical records will continue to show our original name:  "CP Swing"

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  • Home
    • Project History
    • SL20B
  • SAVOY
    • SAVOY in Real Life >
      • About CP Swing
    • SAVOY All Stars >
      • Martin Block >
        • Make Believe Ballroom
      • Earl "Fatha" Hines
      • Maxine Sullivan
      • JC Heard
      • Walter "Big'un" Page
      • Lawrence "Deacon" Brown
      • Lester "Prez" Young
      • Roy "Little Jazz" Eldridge
    • Swing Era Museum >
      • 1st Floor
      • 2nd Floor
      • History Hall
      • Scale Model of "The Track"
      • FRAN
    • SavoySTREAM
    • Savoy Imagineers
    • Savoy RL Videos
  • Classes
    • Dance Classes
    • Dance 101 Intro to Dance
    • Dance 301 The Swing Era
  • DanceCOMP
    • Competition Dancing in SL
    • Competitor GUIDE
    • DanceCOMP JUDGING
    • COSTUMES for Competition >
      • 401 RL Costume Lookbook
      • 401 SL Costume Lookbook
  • SHOWS
    • Events Calendar
    • DJs & Musicians
    • Why Savoy?
    • Savoy SL Videos
    • Archived Shows >
      • Fran's Celebration >
        • May 11 Press Release
      • Boai Honglian Dancers
      • Party in the Past
  • SwingTown
    • SwingTown in Creations Park
    • ATTRACTIONS >
      • Savoy Museum
      • Savoy Rooftop Art Gallery
      • The TRACK Scale Floorplanl
      • Savoy Ballroom
      • Dance 301 Swing Era
      • Dance 101 Classroom
      • Lenox Lounge
      • Lan Lian
      • Seranade Gallery
      • BB's Bakery
      • Back to 1955
    • Swing Town SHOPS >
      • AMUI
      • ¡En Yo!
      • G Sloane
      • Kastle Rock Couture
      • Mirage
      • Prism
      • SmartBots
      • Splintered Creations
      • Tayren's
      • Swing Town TENANTS