Since the 1920s when taxi dancing boomed in popularity, various films, songs and novels have been released reflecting the pastime, often using the taxi-dance hall as a setting or chronicling the lives of taxi dancers.
Films •
Dance Hall (1929),
pre-Code musical based on a
Viña Delmar short story. •
The Nickel-Hopper (1926), silent short. • In the 1932 Warner Bros. film
Two Seconds,
Edward G. Robinson meets a taxi dancer (
Vivienne Osborne), who he marries when drunk, and later kills out of jealousy. •
Ten Cents a Dance (1931), starring
Barbara Stanwyck; inspired by the popular song of the
same name. • ''Let's Dance'' (1933), short featuring
George Burns as a sailor and
Gracie Allen as a dance hostess at
Roseland Dance Hall. •
Follow the Fleet (1936), starring
Fred Astaire and
Ginger Rogers. Rogers's character sings in a taxi-dance hall at the beginning. •
The Taxi Dancer (1927), starring
Joan Crawford and
Owen Moore. •
Asleep in the Feet (1933),
Hal Roach comedy short starring
Thelma Todd and
ZaSu Pitts. •
Dime-A-Dance (1937), featuring
Al Christie and
Imogene Coca. •
Child of Manhattan (1937), based on a play by
Preston Sturges. •
Deadline at Dawn (1946), about a New York dime-a-dance girl helping to clear a sailor framed for murder. • In
Lured (1947),
Lucille Ball stars as a New York taxi dancer in London who works undercover to solve a string of murders. • In
Tomorrow Is Another Day (1951),
Steve Cochran stars in a film noir as a released murderer who falls hard for
Ruth Roman's taxi dancer, Cathy Higgins. •
Love Me or Leave Me (1955), the fictionalized
MGM biopic of singer
Ruth Etting, opens in a taxi-dance hall where Ruth (played by
Doris Day) works. She also sings her signature song "
Ten Cents a Dance" later in the film. • In ''
Killer's Kiss'' (1955), a film by
Stanley Kubrick, various scenes take place in a taxi-dance hall. • In
The Rat Race (1960),
Debbie Reynolds stars as a struggling taxi dancer; based on a play by
Garson Kanin. •
Sweet Charity (1969), musical comedy starring
Shirley MacLaine; directed and choreographed by
Bob Fosse. • In
Heavy Traffic (1973), the protagonist imagines his girlfriend and his mother working as taxi dancers at a dance hall. When the scene ends the dance hall is revealed to be an abandoned ruin. • In
A League of Their Own (1992), the character played by
Madonna, "All the Way" Mae Mordabito, mentions that if the league folds, she won't go back to taxi dancing and have guys sweat gin on her for ten cents a dance. • In
The Quiet American (2002), starring
Michael Caine and
Brendan Fraser, various scenes take place in a taxi-dance hall during
Indochina War-era
Saigon . •
The White Countess (2005), directed by
James Ivory, tells the story of a Russian countess (
Natasha Richardson) who works as a taxi dancer in Shanghai in the 1930s to support her family of
White émigrés.
Books •
The Taxi Dancer by Robert Terry Shannon (1931). •
The Confessions of a Taxi Dancer by Anonymous (booklet, 1938). •
The Adventures of Sally by
P. G. Wodehouse (1939). •
Crosstown by John Held, Jr. (1951), "Showgirl Mazie's rise from Taxi-Dancer to Broadway star". •
Taxi Dancers by Eve Linkletter (1959) (adult paperback). •
Ten Cents a Dance by Christine Fletcher (2010). • ''The Bartender's Tale'' by
Ivan Doig (2012), features a character who was formerly a taxi dancer. •
A Girl Like You: A Henrietta and Inspector Howard Novel by Michelle Cox (2016). •
The Night Tiger by
Yangsze Choo (2019) - main character Ji Lin works as a dance hall hostess in 1930s British Malaya.
Songs and music videos • "
Ten Cents a Dance" (1930), music by
Richard Rodgers, lyrics by
Lorenz Hart. • "Taxi War Dance" (1939), jazz instrumental by
Count Basie featuring
Lester Young. • "
Big Spender" (1966), from the musical
Sweet Charity with music by
Cy Coleman and lyrics by
Dorothy Fields, is sung from the point of view of the dance hostesses. • "Dime a Dance" (1972), recorded by
Vicki Lawrence; the flip-side of "
The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia", from the album of the same name. • "Aja" (1977), music and lyrics by
Steely Dan (refers to "dime dancing") . • "Taxi Dancer" (1979), music and lyrics by
John Mellencamp. • The music video for the 1983
Pat Benatar song "
Love Is a Battlefield" follows the experience of a young woman who runs away from home and becomes a taxi dancer. • "Taxi Dancing" (1984), "Hard to Hold" movie soundtrack, by
Rick Springfield, featuring
Randy Crawford. • "Taxi Dancer" (2013) by the band
Dengue Fever. • "
Private Dancer" (1983), music and lyrics by
Mark Knopfler, recorded by
Tina Turner on the
album of the same name. • "
Eggs and Sausage (In a Cadillac with Susan Michelson)" (1975) by
Tom Waits contains the lyric "dime for a dance".
Musical theatre •
Simple Simon (1930), music by
Richard Rodgers, lyrics by
Lorenz Hart, book by
Guy Bolton; the song "Ten Cents a Dance" was introduced in this show, sung by
Ruth Etting. •
Sweet Charity (1966), music by
Cy Coleman, lyrics by
Dorothy Fields and book by
Neil Simon.
Television • In
Big Sky, the character Ronald reveals he is a taxi dancer. • In
Cold Case, the murder victim in "World's End" (Season 5, Episode 7) was a taxi dancer in 1938 Philadelphia during the
Great Depression. •
L.A. Law features an episode (Season 5, Episode 7) in which two of the characters (Benny and Murray) visit a taxi dance hall in Los Angeles during 1990. •
Laverne & Shirley has an episode ("Call Me a Taxi", 1977) in which the two are laid off and take jobs as taxi dancers. •
Psych season 6 episode "Autopsy Turvy" features a taxi dance hall and dancers who provide clues regarding a murder. • In
The Waltons episode "The Achievement" (Season 5, Episode 25), John-Boy travels to New York to check on his book manuscript and finds his friend Daisy working as a taxi dancer. ==See also==