- Café society
Café society was the collective description for the so-called "beautiful people" and "bright young things" who gathered in fashionable cafes and restaurants in
Paris ,London ,Rome or New York, beginning in the late 1800s.Lucius Beebe , noted Americanauthor ,journalist ,gourmand , andrailroad enthusiast is generally credited with creating the term "café society," which he chronicled in his weekly column, "This New York," for theNew York Herald Tribune during the 1920s and 1930s.Although members of café society were not necessarily members of
The Establishment or otherruling class groups, they were people who attended each other's private dinners and balls, took holidays in exotic locations or at elegant resorts, and whose children tended to marry the children of other café society members.In the United States, café society came to the fore with the end of
Prohibition in December 1933 and the rise ofphoto journalism , to describe the set of people who tended to do their entertaining semi-publicly, in restaurants andnight club s and who would include among themmovie star s and sports celebrities. Some of the Americannight club s and restaurants frequented by the denizens of café society includedEl Morocco , theStork Club , the21 Club , and the Pump Room.In the late 1950s the term "Jet Set" began to take the place of "café society", but "café society" may still be used informally in some countries to describe people who habitually visit
coffeehouse s and give their parties in restaurants rather than at home.References
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