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  1. Joan Crawford

    Joan Crawford (March 23 1905 - May 10 1977), was an acclaimed, iconic, Academy Award-winning American actress, arguably one of the greatest from the Golden Age of Hollywood from the 1920s through 1940s. The American Film Institute named Crawford among the Greatest Female Stars of All Time, ranking her at number ten. Starting as a dancer, she was signed to a motion picture contract by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios in 1925 and played in small parts.

  2. Clara Gordon Bow

    There are some actresses who are adored by critics and the public alike, and some who find adulation with fans despite critical derision. Clara Bow falls into the latter category. Virtually ignored by the press in her day - the roaring 20s, when cinema's silent days were approaching the highest levels of artistic achievement - Clara was the greatest sensation for legions of admirers. A lovely woman with ethereal beauty, Clara also had talent.

  3. Zelda Fitzgerald

    Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald (July 24, 1900 - March 10, 1948), born Zelda Sayre in Montgomery, Alabama, was the wife of writer F. Scott Fitzgerald, whom she married in 1920. She published an autobiographical novel, "Save Me the Waltz", in 1932. Considered by many of her era to embody the quintessential flapper, Fitzgerald gained notoriety as much for her own exploits and as for her role in inspiring many of her husband's most famous characters, …

  4. John Held Jr.

    John Held Jr. (January 10, 1889 -March 2, 1958) was a United States illustrator, one of the most famous magazine illustrators of the 1920s. His cheerful art defined the flapper era so well that many people are familiar with it today. Born in Salt Lake City, he was a son of Annie (Evans) and John Held. His father, born in Geneva, Switzerland and was adopted by Mormon educator John R. Park who brought him to Salt Lake City.

  5. Jean Patou

    Jean Patou (Paris, 1880-1936) was a French fashion designer. The designer, who was born in Normandy, France, opened his couture house in 1919 after serving in WWI. He became known for eradicating the flapper look by lengthening the skirt and returning to a natural waistline. Patou also is credited with introducing sportswear for women and is considered the inventor of the knitted swimwear and the tennis skirt. He also was the first designer to popularize the cardigan, …

  6. Annette Hanshaw

    Annette Hanshaw (October 18, 1901 - March 13, 1985) was one of the first great female jazz singers. In the late 1920s she ranked alongside Ethel Waters, Bessie Smith and the Boswell Sisters. Her singing style was relaxed and suited the new jazz-influenced pop music of the late 1920s. Although she had a low opinion of her own singing, she continues to have fans because of how she combined the voice of an ingenue with the spirit of a flapper.

  7. Lois Long

    Lois Long (also known under the psuedonym Lipstick) was a popular writer for The New Yorker during the 1920s and the epitome of a flapper. She was born to a Congregationalist minister in Stanford, Connecticut and graduated from Vassar. Long had worked at Vogue and Vanity Fair fefore finding fame at The New Yorker. Harold Ross hired her to write a column on New York nightlife. Under the name of Lipstick, Lois Long chronicled her nightly escapades of drinking, dining, …

  8. Pauline Garon

    Pauline Garon (September 9, 1900 - August 30, 1965) was a Canadian-born silent-film actress. She became a popular example of a flapper. Garon was slim, blonde, and weighed just over one hundred pounds.

  9. Virginia Lee Corbin

    Virginia Lee Corbin (born December 5, 1910 Prescott, Arizona - June 5, 1942 Winfield, Illinois) was an American silent film actress. Corbin began her career as a child actress in 1916, and went on to become a youthful flapper in the 1920s. Unfortunately she was one of the many silent stars that would not make it in the sound era, and was put to retirement in the early 1930s.

  10. Rick Flapper
  11. Vilmos Huszár

    Vilmos Huszár was a Hungarian painter and designer, most famously known for being one of the founder members of the Dutch art movement De Stijl. He emigrated to The Netherlands in 1905, settling at first in Voorburg, and was influenced by Cubism and Futurism. He met other influential artists such as Piet Mondrian and Theo van Doesburg, both central figures in establishing the De Stijl movement with Huszár in 1917.

  12. Jessica Flapper

    an actor, a lover, a poet, a dancer,.

  13. Dan Flapper

    In a Past Life...

  14. Joe E. Flapper

    Dumb but not dumb, All-American yet alien mutant.

  15. Robert Flapper

    www.tripledutch.nl.

  16. Ronald Flapper
  17. Eric Flapper
  18. Arno Flapper
  19. Olaf Flapper
  20. Fritz Flapper
  21. Peter Flapper
  22. Wera Flapper
  23. Aad Flapper
  24. Robert Flapper
  25. Tim Flapper
  26. Robert Flapper
  27. Marco Flapper
  28. Jeroen Flapper
  29. Stephan Flapper
  30. Mark Flapper
  31. Marion Flapper
  32. Paul Flapper
  33. Koert Flapper
  34. Richard Flapper
  35. Titus Flapper
  36. Paul Flapper
  37. Daan Flapper
  38. Karin Flapper
  39. Ron Flapper
  40. Gert-Jan Flapper

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