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1%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1564691957055805200
2%% Please do not replace or remove without starting a new thread.
3%%
4[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/20sbobhaircollage_2019.png]]
5[[caption-width-right:350: Different styles, same cut.[[note]]Clockwise from top left: Creator/LouiseBrooks, Creator/ClaraBow, Creator/JosephineBaker, and Creator/JoanCrawford.[[/note]]]]
6
7->''"Cut off all of your hair\
8Did you flinch, did you care?\
9Did he look, did he stop and stare\
10At your brand new hair?"''
11-->-- '''The Lumineers''', "Flapper Girl"
12
13If you want the audience to quickly place the timeframe that a work takes place in, the easiest way is to sprinkle it with the aesthetic that the timeframe is famous for. In the case of TheRoaring20s, few things are as iconic as TheFlapper, and all flappers (at least, according to Hollywood) have bobbed hair, whether the Irene Castle windswept kind, the Creator/LouiseBrooks shingle kind, the Creator/JosephineBaker Eton crop kind, the Creator/ClaraBow QuirkyCurls kind, or the femme, wavy Creator/JoanCrawford kind.
14
15A character wearing such a hairstyle will more often than not also be TheFlapper, although she could alternatively represent another type of socially progressive woman. Because this was a time frame where women were expected to be subservient to men and StayInTheKitchen, defying LongHairIsFeminine was a powerful visual statement that the woman in question didn't subscribe to the then-accepted notions of a "woman's place." One side effect of this is that after the sexual revolution, the hairstyle has also become associated with {{dominatri|x}}ces because of its outward authoritativeness.
16
17In Japan, a short bob (usually paired with a kimono) is a nostalgic shorthand for the Taisho and pre-war Showa eras, when this haircut was massively popular with young girls.
18
19Bobbed hair continued to be a trend in [[TheGreatDepression the 1930s]], although the sleek shingles and Eton crops were pushed aside in favour of more feminine styles such as pin curls and Marcel/finger waves, which then be replaced by updos and pageboy bobs by the end of the decade. One simple way to distinguish 1920s from 1930s hairstyles is that the former focused on sleek and masculine, the latter on wavy and feminine.
20
21Compare its SisterTrope the SciFiBobHaircut.
22
23----
24!!Examples:
25
26[[foldercontrol]]
27
28[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
29* Fiore from ''Manga/ChronoCrusade'', a series set in TheRoaring20s. Flashbacks show that Rosette had a bob as a young teen too, before she grew her hair longer.
30* ''Literature/TaishoBaseballGirls'' takes place in 1925. The main lead Akiko has her hair in a bob.
31* A young Stayler Allman sports this haircut in the ''Manga/TheWitchAndTheBeast'', which is not surprising given the Art Deco-inspired setting.
32[[/folder]]
33
34[[folder:Comic Books]]
35* Being set in the [[ComicBook/DisneyDucksComicUniverse Duckburg]] of the twenties, the Italian series "Le Strabilianti Imprese di Fantomius-Ladro Gentiluomo" (The Amazing Feats of Fantomius-GentlemanThief) has this as a recurring haircut.
36* [[TheVamp LuLu Romanov]] of ''ComicBook/NikolaiDante'' sports this kind of haircut. This is likely deliberate given the strip's AnachronismStew setting.
37* In ''ComicBook/{{Chassis}}'', Caddie, Tommy Tropic's {{Fembot}} chauffeur, has RobotHair resembling a stylised shingle bob: very fitting for the book's Art Deco aesthetic.
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Comic Strips]]
41* ''ComicStrip/TheAdventuresOfPrudencePrim'': Prudence's hair is quite curly and cut on the shorter side when the comic began in 1925 -- she wears it either piled up atop her head or tucked under a stylish cloche -- but it isn't a proper bobbed haircut. She ''does'' get the bob several installments in, after visiting a beauty parlor at the boardwalk to get a makeover. Her old-fashioned aunties disapprove of the new look, and the bob gives way to Prudence's signature curls not long after.
42* ''ComicStrip/Blondie1930'': Blondie, who was a flapper before marrying Dagwood, is known for her early 30s-style curly bob, which she still wears to this day.
43* The title character of Chic Young's earlier strip ''Dumb Dora'' sported a hairstyle that blended the styles of Josephine Baker and Louise Brooks.
44* ''ComicStrip/BuckRogers'' has femme fatale Ardala. Even the short-lived 1970's revival of the comic strip, which generally tried [[TotallyRadical waaaaaay too hard to be contemporary,]] still let her keep her iconic haircut. The [[{{Series/BuckRogersInThe25thCentury}} TV series]] [[SeventiesHair did not,]] though.
45* The title character of the 1920s-era comic [[http://www.barnaclepress.com/comic/Ella%20Cinders/ Ella Cinders]] was well-known for her straight bob.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Fan Works]]
49* ''Fanfic/OverTheRainbow'' takes place in the 1920s. Princess Ozma has recently cut her hair into a bob. She likes it because it reminds her of [[RaisedAsTheOppositeGender when she lived as a boy]].
50[[/folder]]
51
52[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
53* ''WesternAnimation/ThePrincessAndTheFrog'':
54** Tiana gets this hairstyle during her IWantSong and is used to set the timeframe of the film as the twenties.
55** Her rich friend Lottie has a bob too, though hers appears long enough to tie into an updo.
56[[/folder]]
57
58[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
59* 1921 comedy ''Film/{{Leap Year|1921}}'' has female lead Mary Thurman wearing the bob several years before it was popularized by the likes of Colleen Moore and Louise Brooks.
60* In the film ''Film/{{The Roaring Twenties|1939}}'' a montage features a woman getting a bob haircut to help establish the setting.
61* ''Film/CuttingItShort'', a Czech film from The80s directed by Jiří Menzel, [[FilmOfTheBook based on a novella of the same name]] by Creator/BohumilHrabal. Maryshka is a young wife of a local brewery manager. She's extremely lively and spirited, completely unashamed to publicly do things which others only think or do in private. She has gorgeous long honey blond hair, wavy and thick. Her hair is admired by the whole town and they compare it to its memorable sights. At the end of the movie, she decides to have her hair cut like Josephine Baker. [[note]] It's an anachronism as the film is explicitly set in 1918 when Ms Baker was only 13 years old.[[/note]] This is the last straw for her husband who [[KinkySpanking spanks her]] in front of a board of directors of the brewery.
62* ''Film/ThoroughlyModernMillie''
63** Most women Millie sees in the street at the beginning of the film wear bob haircuts. It's one of the fashion things that Millie gets obsessed with.
64** Millie bobs her hair as part of her MakeoverMontage. Other things she does include getting a new shorter dress and a cloche hat, and trying to invoke PetitePride as her silhouette is not perfect for the year 1922.
65** Subverted with her friend Miss Dorothy who has cute curly hair. She's a very feminine girly girl character and not overly lively. Millie convinces her to bob her hair at one point; however, she then meets Millie's boss who falls in love with her and tells her that cutting such gorgeous hair would be a sin.
66* ''Film/{{Chicago}}''
67** Lots of the characters wear this hair style. Not surprising since it's set in The Roaring Twenties.
68** Velma Kelly, a Vaudeville star, has beautiful raven black hair and she wears the slick version. The producers initially wanted Creator/CatherineZetaJones to keep her usual long hair but she insisted on the bob so her hair wouldn't obscure her face while dancing and make people think she used a TalentDouble.
69** Roxie Hart has a curly blond bob cut. When she becomes famous during her trial people start copying her hairstyle, including prison guard Mama Morton to Velma's dismay.
70* Daisy Buchanan and Jordan Baker both wear shingles in the [[Film/TheGreatGatsby2013 2013 film adaptation]] of ''Literature/TheGreatGatsby''; shingles popped out in 1923, a year after Gatsby was set.
71* ''Film/WhyBeGood'' is a film from 1929 about a flapper, so the bob haircut is a must.
72* ''Film/GosfordPark'' is set in 19'''3'''2 but most of the upper class ladies sport bobs, since the earlier parts of a decade usually have fashion holdovers from the previous one.
73%% * Louise Brooks made this look iconic. See the photo on this page, as well as her films ''Film/PandorasBox'' and ''Film/DiaryOfALostGirl''. She was so associated with this hairdo that when she abandoned it, a few years later when her career had gone down the tubes and she was playing in [[BMovie B-movies]], she was [[http://41.media.tumblr.com/acbc8d4acd8dcc00790bd7ddc50c62cd/tumblr_n7wci93Tdc1qzh3cjo1_1280.png unrecognizeable]].
74%% list concrete examples
75* ''Film/FantasticBeastsAndWhereToFindThem'', as befitting its setting in 1920's New York City, features the Goldstein sisters, who have two different takes on this hairstyle. The straight-laced brunette Tina wears her hair in a straight bob, while bubbly blonde Queenie has a bob full of curls.
76* ''{{Film/Sirens|1994}}'' uses this trope in an odd way. The protagonist Estella wears her hair like this in contrast to the long hair of Norman Lindsey's models. As she's quite repressed, the haircut serves as an indicator that she wants to break out of that.
77* In ''Film/EasyVirtue'' which has a GenteelInterbellumSetting, both Larita and Sarah sport bobs. It's used to show how more modern they are in their thinking, compared to the rest of the area still grieving World War I.
78* In the film version of ''Theatre/NineMusical'', Judi Dench sports this haircut as the costume designer Lily. The film is set in the 60s, so Lily would have been the right age to be a flapper in her youth. It shows that she's a CoolOldLady who Guido can rely on.
79* Surprisingly uncommon in ''Film/TheCatsMeow'' (given its setting of 1924 Hollywood), though Didi--who is probably the most stereotypically flapper amongst the cast--does sport one.
80* ''{{Film/Sappho}}'': Sappho and Helene sport bobs as a sign the film is set in 1926. Sappho got more of an inverted bob, while Helene has the shingle. For Sappho, it also signifies realization of her bisexuality, as she has an affair with Helene in the wake of getting this.
81[[/folder]]
82
83[[folder:Literature]]
84* The first chapter of the ''Literature/AnnoDracula'' novella "Vampire Romance", set in 1923, is called "Genevieve Bobs Her Hair", in imitation of Fitzgerald. Genevieve gets a bob as part of fitting in to the new era.
85* Creator/FScottFitzgerald's short story [[http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Bernice_Bobs_Her_Hair "Bernice Bobs Her Hair"]], from 1920. The idea of a girl wanting to bob her hair makes her very attractive to the boys in town.
86* ''Literature/OldKingdom'': Sabriel, who grew up in Ancelstierre, a FantasyCounterpartCulture of early 20[-[[superscript:th]]-]-century Britain, is described as having this hairstyle in her first appearance, although the original cover art doesn't reflect this.
87* In ''Pop!: The Invention of Bubble Gum'' by author/illustrator [=Meghan McCarthy=], a mother and daughter with 1920s bobbed haircuts are shown on one page [[BubblegumPopping blowing bubble gum bubbles]]. Justified since bubble gum was invented in 1928 and the scene is [[ShownTheirWork intended as a historical depiction]].
88* ''Literature/PartnersInCrime'': A plot point in "The Sunningdale Mystery" - Tuppence points out that a woman with bobbed hair is unlikely to have [[CombatHaircomb stabbed a man with a hatpin]] [[spoiler: and later extends this to concluding that the murderer was a man trying to frame her]].
89* Literature/PhryneFisher, being a thoroughly modern miss and part of the fast set, naturally sports one. She attempts to persuade her companion Dot to get one as well, but Dot, who is suspicious all things modern, steadfastly refuses and keeps her long braid.
90* In "Literature/TheGiftOfTheMagi," Della frets at her new "Coney Island chorus girl" look after selling her hair and tries to put it in curls to look more feminine.
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
94* ''Series/BabylonBerlin'': Charlotte and many other female characters have this hairstyle, as it's set in 1929, the tail end of the Roaring 20s.
95* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' - in Willow's dream in "Restless", a play is being held. Buffy is dressed and coiffed like she's starring in ''Theatre/{{Chicago}}'', while Riley is dressed like a singing cowboy, and Harmony is dressed as an alpine milkmaid - all playing in ''Theatre/DeathOfASalesman''.
96* In ''Series/{{Charmed|1998}}'', the episode "Pardon My Past" had Phoebe returning to the Roaring Twenties to relive her past life as a witch who was tempted to use her powers for evil by [[AllGirlsWantBadBoys a demon she fell in love with]]. In her past life, Prue was a popular photographer with a sleek bob. The other two sported another hit of the era -- the finger curls.
97* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
98** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E7TheUnicornAndTheWasp "The Unicorn and the Wasp"]]: Robina Redmond[[spoiler:, aka "The Unicorn"]] and Creator/AgathaChristie sport these. Donna, having changed into period-appropriate dress, instead puts her hair up.
99** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS34E8MummyOnTheOrientExpress "Mummy in the Orient Express"]]: Clara averts the ChangedMyJumper trope by dressing in TheFlapper bob cut and a GorgeousPeriodDress. All this for a guy she's supposedly breaking up with. (This also crosses over with SciFiBobHaircut because she's on a replica of the '20s Orient Express built in the far future.)
100* ''Series/DowntonAbbey'':
101** In series 2, at the end of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI, Lady Mary Crawley idly threatens to bob her hair. However, she is quite conservative and keeps her gorgeous raven hair long.
102** In series 3, Lady Sybil bobs her hair. She is the most progressive of the Crawley sisters. She is interested in politics, supports women having the vote, wears trousers, consorts with servants, trains as a nurse to volunteer in the war and marries a socialist Irish chauffeur.
103** Lady Rose wears a fashionable curly bob with headbands. She represents the new breed of "Bright Young Things", who delighted in shocking society with their antics. Rose carries out her most shocking antics in Series 4, she loses the radical haircut for a wavy, halfway-to-shoulder-length look halfway between a bob and a more traditional cut.
104** Lady Mary gets a racy new bob in series 5. Her very campy hairdresser kept flattering her and the new look in general through and through, but as soon as she is out, he shares his true sentiments.
105--->'''Hairdresser:''' At least ''she'' can carry it off — most of them look like bald monkeys.
106** Daisy the kitchen maid attempts to give herself a bob in the series finale. Emphasis on [[GagHaircut attempt]]. Luckily for her, the rest of the staff are able to fix it.
107%% * There were several young flapper girls in the ''Series/JeevesAndWooster'' TV series with bobs.
108* ''Series/JupitersLegacy'': Grace sports an inverted bob in the past, starting during 1929.
109* ''Series/MissFishersMurderMysteries'':
110** Phryne Fisher wears her hair in a sleek shingle bob, befitting the late-1920s setting of the series and Phryne's own status as TheFlapper.
111** Dr. Elizabeth "Mac" [=McMillan=] has a wavy bob and is a notably progressive woman, a medical doctor who normally dresses in three-piece suits.
112* It's a wig, but Haley in ''Series/ModernFamily'' dons a platinum-blonde one in this style for her grandpa Frank (Phil's dad)'s wedding, themed on TheRoaring20s.
113* In a HalloweenEpisode of ''Series/SabrinaTheTeenageWitch'' the gang are forced to live out an Agatha Christie style murder mystery. Morgan sports this type of haircut, complete with flapper dress - placing the illusion in the 1920s. Sabrina, Hilda and Zelda in their costumes all sport variations of this hairstyle too. Roxie meanwhile as Morgan's character's maid, does not have this.
114* ''Series/{{Schmigadoon}}'': Jenny wears her hair in a sleek black bob. She's a cabaret singer based on Sally from ''Theatre/{{Cabaret}}'', a show set in 1920s Berlin.
115* In ''Series/TheSupersizersEat... The Twenties'', Sue Perkins, the host, gets a bob haircut during her makeover (she usually wears somewhat sloppy short hair). When she first sees herself in the mirror, she cries: "I look like an evil doll!" The truth is that twenties flapper look of "the young and beautiful elite" suits her perfectly, even though she's not a classic beauty.
116* ''Series/ZTheBeginningOfEverything'' depicts Zelda Fitzgerald getting hers as part of an ImportantHaircut. After an exhausting lunch with the Bankheads, and Scott trying to make her fit in with them by picking out new clothes, she gets a bob and starts wearing a flapper dress.
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder: Tabletop Games]]
120* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'': ''Streets Of New Capenna'' takes place in a {{Magitek}} city heavily based on 1920's noir and gangster films, so naturally nearly every Creature Card depicting a female character has this, ''especially'' if they're part of the Cabaretti Family.
121[[/folder]]
122
123[[folder:Video Games]]
124* ''VideoGame/BioShock'':
125** One of the Splicer models in ''WesternAnimation/BioShock1'', [[http://bioshock.wikia.com/wiki/Baby_Jane Baby Jane]], has a pageboy haircut. That along with her outfit is an indication that she's a flapper.
126** Elizabeth in ''Videogame/BioShockInfinite'' sports one of these later in the game. This is appropriate given the game takes place in 1912.
127* Journalist Tae Asakura from ''VideoGame/RaidouKuzunohaVsTheSoullessArmy'' and ''VideoGame/RaidouKuzunohaVsKingAbaddon'' has bobbed hair. The game is set in Japan in TheRoaring20s and she considers herself a "modern woman", to the point where her pen name "Kichou Asakura" is an in-universe tribute to pioneering feminist [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raicho_Hiratsuka Raicho Hiratsuka]].
128[[/folder]]
129
130[[folder:Web Comics]]
131* ''Webcomic/{{Lackadaisy}}'': Ivy's shingle haircut is supposed to be visual shorthand for her post-secondary, pro-feminist education and behavior. And she's definitely [[TheFlapper a flapper.]]
132* ''Webcomic/ProblemSleuth'' exists in a indistict time filled with an assortment of period cliches aimed largely at parodying the FilmNoir genre. That Hysterical Dame and Nervous Broad both have flapper bobs (and jaunty hats) should come as no surprise.
133* Flannery from ''Webcomic/TemplarArizona'': her hair and 1920's outfits are used to indicate the alternate history setting where people who casually dress in the fashions of prior decades are a visable subculture.
134* Jenny Nowhere in ''Webcomic/JennyAndTheMultiverse'' dresses in a distinctly 1920s style (though she is very much ''not'' TheFlapper in personality), complete with a blonde bob.
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:Western Animation]]
138* In ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'', the bob is featured on some female characters as part of the FarEast meets TheRoaring20s setting. One of Tahno's {{Fangirl}}s [[http://images5.fanpop.com/image/photos/30700000/Tahno-avatar-the-legend-of-korra-30737137-340-340.png wears the style]], while young Jinora [[CultureChopSuey combines]] it with a PrimAndProperBun. Korra cuts her hair into a messy bob in the final season. Opal has a bob as well.
139* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'', episode "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS4E8RarityTakesManehattan Rarity Takes Manehattan]]" has Coco Pommel, the Manehattan stylist. Justified in that she's a reference to Coco Chanel.
140[[/folder]]

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