, January 1945. On January 19, 1945, 30 teenage members of a local Sinatra fan club attended the premiere of
Step Lively at the
Empire Theatre in
Sydney, Australia. They were met by an unruly mob of at least 300 people who were incited to anger by weeks of anti-Sinatra and anti-
bobby soxer rhetoric in the media. The mob kicked, punched and twisted the arms of the young fans, derided them as "swooners", booed throughout the screening and stalked the fans through the streets on their way home. Subsequent media coverage of this incident led to a national debate on the merit of Sinatra's music, his talent relative to that of
Bing Crosby and the legitimacy of his young fans' appreciation for his work. An "Anti-Sinatra Club" was founded in Melbourne. In March 1945, a feature article on the Sinatra Club ran in
Pix magazine featuring photos of the teenage members taken by Ivan Ives. The article intended to demonstrate to the public that these were honest, intelligent young people with a genuine appreciation of Sinatra's music, not the hysterical "swooners" they had been made out to be. One photo depicted the club members attending the Empire Theatre for another screening of
Step Lively in a calm manner. Others showed them on a variety of social outings, often while listening to Sinatra's music on portable gramophones. The complete photo shoot is publicly available on the
State Library of New South Wales online catalogue. ==References==