Film and television Mid-20th century Mid-20th century movies set in the Bronx portrayed densely settled, working-class, urban culture.
From This Day Forward (1946), set in
Highbridge, occasionally delved into Bronx life. The most notable examinations of working class Bronx life were
Paddy Chayefsky's
Academy Award-winning
Marty and his 1956 film
The Catered Affair. Other films that portrayed life in the Bronx are: the 1993
Robert De Niro/
Chazz Palminteri film,
A Bronx Tale,
Spike Lee's 1999 movie
Summer of Sam, which focused on an
Italian-American Bronx community in the 1970s, 1994's
I Like It Like That which takes place in the predominantly
Puerto Rican neighborhood of the South Bronx, and
Doughboys, the story of two Italian-American brothers in danger of losing their bakery thanks to one brother's gambling debts. The Bronx's gritty urban life had worked its way into the movies even earlier, with depictions of the "
Bronx cheer", a loud flatulent-like sound of disapproval, allegedly first made by
New York Yankees fans. The sound can be heard, for example, on the
Spike Jones and His City Slickers recording of "Der Fuehrer's Face" (from the 1942
Disney animated film of the
same name), repeatedly lambasting
Adolf Hitler with: "We'll Heil! (Bronx cheer) Heil! (Bronx cheer) Right in Der Fuehrer's Face!"
Symbolism Starting in the 1970s, the Bronx often symbolized violence, decay, and urban ruin. The wave of arson in the South Bronx in the 1960s and 1970s inspired the observation that "The Bronx is burning": in 1974 it was the title of both an editorial in
The New York Times and a
BBC documentary film. The line entered the pop-consciousness with Game Two of the
1977 World Series, when a fire broke out near
Yankee Stadium as the team was playing the
Los Angeles Dodgers. As the fire was captured on live television, announcer
Howard Cosell is wrongly remembered to have said something like, "There it is, ladies and gentlemen: the Bronx is burning". Historians of New York City often point to Cosell's remark as an acknowledgement of both the city and the borough's decline. A feature-length documentary film by Edwin Pagán called
Bronx Burning chronicled what led up to the many arson-for-insurance fraud fires of the 1970s in the borough. Bronx gang life was depicted in the 1974 novel
The Wanderers by Bronx native
Richard Price and the
1979 movie of the same name. They are set in the heart of the Bronx, showing apartment life and the then-landmark Krums ice cream parlor. In the 1979 film
The Warriors, the eponymous gang go to a meeting in
Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx, and have to fight their way out of the borough and get back to
Coney Island in
Brooklyn. The 2005 video game adaptation features levels called Pelham, Tremont, and "Gunhill" (a play off the name
Gun Hill Road).
A Bronx Tale (1993) depicts gang activities in the
Belmont "Little Italy" section of the Bronx. This theme lends itself to the title of
The Bronx Is Burning, an eight-part
ESPN TV mini-series (2007) about the
New York Yankees' drive to winning baseball's
1977 World Series. The TV series emphasizes the team's boisterous nature, led by manager
Billy Martin, catcher
Thurman Munson and outfielder
Reggie Jackson, as well as the malaise of the Bronx and New York City in general during that time, such as the blackout, the city's serious financial woes and near bankruptcy, the arson for insurance payments, and the election of
Ed Koch as mayor. The 1981 film
Fort Apache, The Bronx is another film that used the Bronx's gritty image for its storyline. The movie's title is from the nickname for the 41st Police Precinct in the South Bronx which was nicknamed "Fort Apache". Also from 1981 is the horror film
Wolfen making use of the rubble of the Bronx as a home for werewolf type creatures.
Knights of the South Bronx, a true story of a teacher who worked with disadvantaged children, is another film also set in the Bronx released in 2005. The Bronx was the setting for the 1983 film
Fuga dal Bronx, also known as
Bronx Warriors 2 and
Escape 2000, an Italian B-movie best known for its appearance on the television series
Mystery Science Theater 3000. The plot revolves around a sinister construction corporation's plans to depopulate, destroy and redevelop the Bronx, and a band of rebels who are out to expose the corporation's murderous ways and save their homes. The film is memorable for its almost incessant use of the phrase, "Leave the Bronx!" Many of the movie's scenes were filmed in
Queens, substituting as the Bronx.
Rumble in the Bronx, filmed in Vancouver, was a 1995
Jackie Chan kung-fu film, another which popularized the Bronx to international audiences.
Last Bronx, a 1996 Sega game played on the bad reputation of the Bronx to lend its name to an alternate version of post-Japanese bubble Tokyo, where crime and gang warfare is rampant. The 2016
Netflix series
The Get Down is based on the development of hip hop in 1977 in the South Bronx.
Literature Books The Bronx has been featured significantly in fiction literature. All of the characters in
Herman Wouk's
City Boy: The Adventures of Herbie Bookbinder (1948) live in the Bronx, and about half of the action is set there.
Kate Simon's
Bronx Primitive: Portraits of a Childhood (1982) is directly autobiographical, a warm account of a Polish-Jewish girl in an immigrant family growing up before World War II, and living near
Arthur Avenue and
Tremont Avenue. In Jacob M. Appel's short story, "The Grand Concourse" (2007), a woman who grew up in the iconic
Lewis Morris Building returns to the
Morrisania neighborhood with her adult daughter. Similarly, in
Avery Corman's book
The Old Neighborhood (1980), an upper-middle class white protagonist returns to his birth neighborhood (
Fordham Road and the
Grand Concourse), and learns that even though the folks are poor, Hispanic and African-American, they are good people. By contrast,
Tom Wolfe's
Bonfire of the Vanities (1987) portrays a wealthy, white protagonist, Sherman McCoy, getting lost off the
Bruckner Expressway in the
South Bronx and having an altercation with locals. A substantial piece of the last part of the book is set in the resulting riotous trial at the Bronx County Courthouse. However, times change, and in 2007,
The New York Times reported that "the Bronx neighborhoods near the site of Sherman's accident are now dotted with townhouses and apartments." In the same article, the Reverend
Al Sharpton (whose fictional analogue in the novel is "Reverend Bacon") asserts that "twenty years later, the cynicism of
The Bonfire of the Vanities is as out of style as
Tom Wolfe's wardrobe."
Don DeLillo's
Underworld (1997) is also set in the Bronx and offers a perspective on the area from the 1950s onward.
Poetry In poetry, the Bronx has been immortalized by one of the world's shortest
couplets: The Bronx? No Thonx :
Ogden Nash,
The New Yorker, 1931 Nash repented 33 years after his
calumny, penning the following poem to the dean of faculty at
Bronx Community College in 1964: I wrote those lines, "The Bronx? No thonx"; I shudder to confess them. Now I'm an older, wiser man I cry, "The Bronx? God bless them!" Nash's couplet "The Bronx? No Thonx" and his subsequent blessing are mentioned in
Bronx Accent: A Literary and Pictorial History of the Borough, edited by Lloyd Ultan and Barbara Unger and published in 2000. The book, which includes the work of Yiddish poets, offers a selection from
Allen Ginsberg's
Kaddish, as his Aunt Elanor and his mother, Naomi, lived near Woodlawn Cemetery. Also featured is Ruth Lisa Schecther's poem, "Bronx", which is described as a celebration of the borough's landmarks. There is a selection of works from poets such as
Sandra María Esteves,
Milton Kessler, Joan Murray, W. R. Rodriguez, Myra Shapiro, Gayl Teller, and
Terence Wynch. "Bronx Migrations" by Michelle M. Tokarczyk is a collection that spans five decades of Tokarczyk's life in the Bronx, from her exodus in 1962 to her return in search of her childhood tenement.
Bronx Memoir Project Bronx Memoir Project: Vol. 1 is a published
anthology by the Bronx Council on the Arts and brought forth through a series of workshops meant to empower Bronx residents and shed the stigma on the Bronx's burning past. The Bronx Memoir Project was created as an ongoing collaboration between the
Bronx Council on the Arts and other
cultural institutions, including the Bronx
Documentary Center, the
Bronx Library Center, the (Edgar Allan)
Poe Park Visitor Center, Mindbuilders, and other institutions and funded through a grant from the
National Endowment for the Arts. The goal was to develop and refine memoir fragments written by people of all walks of life that share a common bond residing within the Bronx. from the album
This is me...Then is about the South Bronx, where Lopez grew up. • In Marc Ferris's 5-page, 15-column list of "Songs and Compositions Inspired by New York City" in
The Encyclopedia of New York City (1995), only a handful refer to the Bronx; most refer to New York City proper, especially Manhattan and Brooklyn. Ferris's extensive but selective 1995 list mentions only four songs referring specifically to the Bronx: "On the Banks of the Bronx" (1919), by
William LeBaron &
Victor Jacobi; "Bronx Express" (1922), by
Henry Creamer, Ossip Dymow &
Turner Layton; "The
Tremont Avenue Cruisewear Fashion Show" (1973), by
Jerry Livingston & Mark David; and "I Love the
New York Yankees" (1987), by Paula Lindstrom.
Theater Clifford Odets's play
Awake and Sing! is set in 1933 in the Bronx. The play, first produced at the
Belasco Theater in 1935, concerns a poor family living in small quarters, the struggles of the controlling parents and the aspirations of their children.
René Marqués'
The Oxcart (1959) concerns a rural Puerto Rican family who immigrate to the Bronx for a better life.
A Bronx Tale is an autobiographical
one-man show written and performed by
Chazz Palminteri. It is a coming-of-age story set in the Bronx. It premiered in Los Angeles in the 1980s and then played on Off-Broadway. After a film version involving Palminteri and Robert De Niro, Palminteri performed his one-man show on Broadway and on tour in 2007. ==See also==