Yahoo Web Search

Search results

      • The film was inspired by a 1976 New York magazine article entitled "Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night" by British writer Nik Cohn. The article centers on working class Italian-Americans in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, and on the lives of young men who work dead-end jobs but live for their nights dancing at the local discotheque.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturday_Night_Fever
  1. People also ask

  2. Dec 14, 2017 · It was based on a 'true story' that wasn't true — and they weren't dancing to the Bee Gees.

  3. Jun 28, 2016 · The 1977 movie that helped turn disco into a phenomenon and John Travolta into a mega-star was actually based on a New York magazine article by British rock critic Nik Cohn after a visit to a New...

  4. The story is based on "Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night", a mostly fictional 1976 article by music writer Nik Cohn. A major critical and commercial success, Saturday Night Fever had a tremendous impact on the popular culture of the late 1970s.

  5. Thir­ty-five years ago today, New York mag­a­zine pub­lished “ Trib­al Rights of Sat­ur­day Night,” a beau­ti­ful­ly-writ­ten paean to the danc­ing teens of the city’s bor­oughs. And the sto­ry focused on a work­ing-class dis­co dancer named Vin­cent: Vin­cent was the very best dancer in Bay Ridge—the ulti­mate Face.

  6. Aug 15, 2013 · Saturday Night Fever, believes Travolta, gave the decade its cultural identity. Pape felt that it was just Travolta’s fate: “Sometimes it’s time for you to have the brass ring.

  7. May 1, 2017 · Saturday Night Fever was based on a New York magazine article called “Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night,” written by a British journalist named Nik Cohn; he later admitted to not...

  8. Dec 16, 2017 · Still, 40 years on, Saturday Night Fever is remembered if not revered as a seminal film of the Baby Boomer 1970s that spoke to a young person’s longing for identity and a search for a better...

  1. People also search for