Old Time
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Old Time" and "Old Timey" (often not capitalized) are terms often used to describe somewhat stereotyped images and representations of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, generally not more than a generation before or after the turn of the century. The term "Old Timeyness" is used more rarely. All these terms may also be used in a more general sense, in which case they are synonymous with "old fashioned" or "antique".
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[edit] Connotation
Old Timeyness is often campy and put forth as a sort of "ultra-corniness". At other times, it is used to invoke an era of integrity and quality that stands in opposition to inferior "newfangled" ways of doing things.
While they refer to the same era, "Old Time" has a different connotation than the term fin de siècle. The latter evokes images of sophistication to the point of decadence, a connotation opposite to that suggested by "Old Timeyness".
[edit] Distinctions
Old Timeyness overlaps somewhat with pop culture words and images intended to evoke Victoriana or Old West flavor but it can usually be easily distinguished.
Even more so than anything specific to the exact dates involved, evocations of Victoriana usually highlight class differences, featuring (for example) aristocrats and gentry who are dandified or eccentric, and poor folk who are Dickensian in their costume and manner.
While Old Time and Old West fashions are sometimes depicted similarly in popular culture, the Old West usually involves firearms and often horses, drawled speech and a menacing attitude, which "Old time" themes lack.
[edit] Clothing
The archetypical Old Timey costume (as seen in the Disneyworld illustration above) includes vertically-striped fabric, straw hats in the style shown, a vest, and sleeve garters of the type worn in the later half of the 19th century and still worn by poker dealers today.[1]
This clothing, often accessorized by a handlebar mustache and/or a certain style of dainty cane of bamboo or rattan with a curved handle, appears with some frequency in pop culture, especially in the cartoons and advertising mentioned below.
Clothing with upper class associations, such as top hats, monocles and (to a lesser extent) spats, while entirely appropriate to the time period represented by Old Timeyness, are mostly excluded from the Old Timeyness discussed here. This highlights the distinction between the Wiktionary:folksy associations of Old Timeyness and the sophisticated associations of fin de siècle.
[edit] Examples
Examples of references made to things which are Old Timey include the following:
[edit] Television
- The Simpsons has made many references to things that are Old Timey, such as patent medicine, barbershop quartet and antique bicycles. Box socials have been mentioned more than once. Grandpa Simpson often includes Old Timey concepts in his rants. Mr. Burns often makes Old Timey references as well.
- Several episodes of Family Guy featured a stereotypical Old Time duo known as Vern and Johnny. Their last appearance was in the episode "Saving Private Brian" in which they are shot to death by Stewie Griffin.[2]
- Conan O'Brien sometimes references Old Timeyness on his show, saying that he feels like he should be twirling his handlebar mustache, holding an over-sized mug of root beer, etc. He has also joked about wearing an Old Timey horizontally-striped bathing suit that covers everything above his shins and forearms. O'Brien's "Old Timey baseball sketch" has been talked about by other comedians.[3]
[edit] Theater
- The Music Man (a play produced in the 1950s but taking place in 1912) is filled with Old Timeyness, including the main plot involving a marching band. For example, the song Ya Got Trouble contains such Old Timey references as medicinal wine, Dan Patch, knickerbockers, "tailor-mades" (i.e. factory-produced cigarettes), Sen-Sen, ragtime, Captain Billy's Whiz Bang (a magazine that actually began publication 1919) and the Spanish-American War slogan "Remember the Maine."[4]
[edit] Music
- The Beatles used Old Timey imagery during at least two periods in their career. They wore Edwardian jackets during their early period, such as when they appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964. Three years later, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band presented a flood of Old Timeyness ranging from vintage marching band uniforms to music hall-style song introductions.
- Paul McCartney has often returned to Old Timeyness in his post-Beatles career. One example is the music video for Say Say Say in which he and Michael Jackson pose as snake oil salesmen.
[edit] Restaurants
- Wendy's used Old Timeyness in its early brand marketing. Their logo still features turn of the century-style graphics and the phrase "Old Fashioned Hamburgers". The tables in most Wendy's restaurants are decorated with a pattern replicating advertisements from late 19th century newspapers.[5][6][7]
- A&W Root Beer used a similar ad branding strategy in the 1970s, including the phrase "A&W old time root beer, yes sir!" Advertisements featured a man with a straw porkpie hat, handlebar mustache, and suspenders holding an over-sized mug. More recently, A&W has begun marketing cream soda in Old Timey bottles.[8]
- Ground Round also used Old Timeyness in advertising during the 1970s and 1980s, decorating its restaurants accordingly and providing free bowls of dry roasted peanuts for customers. Some locations had booths where patrons could view silent movies.
[edit] References
- ^ [1] Gentleman's emporium, "sleeve garter"
- ^ [2] Family Guy characters: Vern and Johnny
- ^ "Old Timey baseball sketch" Note that although the footage is of an American Civil War-era baseball game, O'Brian adopts his standard "Old Timey" persona. It can be further noted that O'Brien's Old Timey turn-of-the-century personal sometimes blends with his 1930s persona, especially in regards to ending many sentences with the phrase "ya see?"
- ^ Quote: "Old Time America of the Music Man"
- ^ Antique ads
- ^ Old Timey aesthetics
- ^ Wendy's First Restaurant
- ^ A&W cream soda