2024S_2014-26_042103_066
- Description
Gang Shows are revue style perfomances put on by Scouts and Girl Guides and involved singing, dancing, and skits. There have been annual performances in New Zealand from the 1950s
This image depicts Three scouts in black face and sombreros are at the front of the assembly singing to the crowd. The combined cast of scouts, most of whom are in scout uniform with the distinctive red scarves, are gathered together singing at a performance of the Gang Show 1963.
'Black face' or performing as 'Black and White Minstrels' was once a popular form of entertainment in western nations across the globe. With origins rooted in systemic racism, these performances of racial impersonation were usually conducted by Caucasian actors and tended to depict commonly held stereotypes of non-Caucasians as backward or unsophisticated for 'comic' effect.
Keith Roland Hamblyn was a photographer with the Palmerston North Hospital Board for many years. In a private capacity, he documented a wide variety of public events between 1958 and the early 1970s.
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