Prom then and now.

bobcat

Well-known Member
Location
Northern Calif
In the 1960s, prom was a modest affair. Most students wore off-the-rack dresses or suits, did their own hair, and drove there in whatever vehicle they owned or borrowed. Today it's a modern extravagance that often includes professional styling, designer outfits, luxury transportation, and elaborate “promposals,” making it a multi-thousand-dollar event for some families. It has shifted from a simple school dance to a high-stakes social event, often influenced by social media and pop culture. Sadly, now many just can't afford to go, or may feel embarrassed if they can't meet the expectations. This must be difficult for parents.
 

I don't know about the 60s... but in the 70s, prom was huge.
That is why I couldn't go.... could not afford to.

In the 70s, homecoming was the modest affair - just a dance after the football game.
Now it is as big if not bigger than prom.
 
In the 70s our proms were pretty basic homely affairs where various class committees were formed to transform the gym or cafeteria into a ballroom, scrounge flowers from local gardens, prepare refreshments, etc…

There were no limousines or party buses, occasionally a parent with a classic car might play chauffeur but most kids carpooled with the kids that were fortunate enough to have access to a car.

Some boys rented a tux but many put together an outfit with the help of the other men in the family, most girls had a new dress.

There were no big pre-prom dinners, post-prom parties usually consisted of a keg in a corn field or at a local lake.

I was always part of the group that skipped prom and headed straight for the keg in the corn field with a couple bottles of Boones Farm strawberry wine. 😉🤭😂
 

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That pink one is almost exactly like the one I wore. My dad gave me 20.00 for a dress and that's exactly what it cost with tax, so I didn't have anything left for bus fair home. I walked the 12 miles home from Charleston. I did my own hair just like that.
 
I went three times from 19 69–19 72. The dresses were either bought or your mom made it if she could sew and copy the latest fashions. It Involved going out for dinner before prom.

The boy brought a corsage for the girl and she bought a boutonniere for him. he usually rented a tuxedo or wore a nice suit. If the boy had a car, it was old. By the time, my oldest son went 19 years later it was exactly the same. So the expense was not huge.
 
Dress for our proms were gowns and rented tuxes. The girls got corsages. Nobody came in limos, and nobody was driven to the prom by their parents-UGH!!!!

Whenever I think of proms, I remember what my mom told me as I closed the front door, in my tux.. "You get her pregnant, don't come crying to us about it".
Life ain't all about kittens, hearts and flowers.
 
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Today's proms have been blown way out of proportion—ridiculous. Parents shouldn't have to take out a loan so their children can attend. It's a school dance, not a wedding. :rolleyes:

I would have been just fine skipping prom altogether, but my best friend insisted I go. I didn't have a boyfriend and wasn't dating anyone at the time, so I went to the prom with her brother. We were friends and liked each other, so it was okay.

He rented a tux, brought me the requisite wrist corsage, and picked me up in his cool little yellow MG B. We had a good time. As far as my dress, well, I looked like a float. 🤣
 
The "promposals" of my day consisted of a guy muttering "Ya wanna go to the prom or somethin'?" and that was that. A few years ago, I heard a teen girl complaining that she broke up with her boyfriend because he "embarrassed her in front of her friends" by merely "inviting" her to the prom. No "will you go to the prom with me" spelled out in candles on her front yard, no plane flying by overhead pulling a banner, no message painted on the side of a hill. The utter horror! I don't know how the poor girl ever held her head up again.

I went to two proms in the 1960's. They were pretty big events, but affordable. The prom was held at a ballroom downtown. Most couples "double-dated" with another couple. Most everyone went out to eat afterward. If there were "after-prom parties" at the lake or somewhere, I didn't get invited to one or even hear of them. I had a steady boyfriend each year, so I don't think there was even any "asking" to go. It was just assumed. Boyfriend = prom date. You just had to let him know what color your dress was so that he could get the right color corsage.

My mother made both of my dresses. They were modest long dresses, worn with elbow-length white gloves. The guys wore white dinner jackets from the local discount tux rental shop. Wrist corsages were the thing back then, usually heavy on the carnations, but sometimes you got roses or...gasp...orchids. Most dresses were modest, strapless being about the most daring anyone got. There were no spangled, sequin-y, cut-down-to-here or up-to-there hoochie-mama dresses to be seen. Anybody showing up dressed like that would have probably been told to put on a sweater or go home.

Guys had to come into the girl's living room for the ceremonial pinning on of the flowers, the photos taken by the proud mother and the ritual glowering-at-the date by Dad. Then quite often, this had to be repeated at his house.


I'd get a "French-twist" done at the local beauty school, where you could get the thing done for $2 if you were adventurous enough to trust whatever student you got (only $1 if you washed your own hair at home and came in with it in curlers for a comb-out).

Of course, after spending that extravagant sum of money on hair, you had to make the "do" last for a few days, so that involved wrapping your head in toilet paper and sleeping gingerly. There was enough hairspray on your head to withstand the direct hit of a nuclear bomb. By the third or day, your head was itching like mad and looked like some burrowing animal had been nesting in it.....but dammit, that thing cost TWO DOLLARS and you were going to get your money's worth!

The wilting corsages were worn to school on Monday so that you could flaunt them at the unfortunate souls that didn't go. That and the dented french twist or beehive were considered badges of honor.

I still get almost teary-eyed at the smell of carnations (not that carnations have much smell these days) because that smell brings up proms, dances, weddings, special occasions....always happy...
 
There was no such things as Proms in the uk school system when I was a kid... there might have been in the fee paying schools but not in State schools, .. the first of it came around the time my daughter was 18 and she was attending her first Prom...this was 30 years ago.. now...

We got her a beautiful satin dress, and had her hair done.. but really that was the extent of it..

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I remember my prom as a dress up event (wearing a dress that was nice but didn't cost a lot). My boyfriend wore a sport coat and nice pants, not a tux that I remember. We had pictures taken and he gave me a corsage. He drove his car, not an expensive one. We would dance and drink punch and go out afterward for hamburgers or pizza. Not exactly an expensive affair.
 
The "promposals" of my day consisted of a guy muttering "Ya wanna go to the prom or somethin'?" and that was that. A few years ago, I heard a teen girl complaining that she broke up with her boyfriend because he "embarrassed her in front of her friends" by merely "inviting" her to the prom. No "will you go to the prom with me" spelled out in candles on her front yard, no plane flying by overhead pulling a banner, no message painted on the side of a hill. The utter horror! I don't know how the poor girl ever held her head up again.

I went to two proms in the 1960's. They were pretty big events, but affordable. The prom was held at a ballroom downtown. Most couples "double-dated" with another couple. Most everyone went out to eat afterward. If there were "after-prom parties" at the lake or somewhere, I didn't get invited to one or even hear of them. I had a steady boyfriend each year, so I don't think there was even any "asking" to go. It was just assumed. Boyfriend = prom date. You just had to let him know what color your dress was so that he could get the right color corsage.

My mother made both of my dresses. They were modest long dresses, worn with elbow-length white gloves. The guys wore white dinner jackets from the local discount tux rental shop. Wrist corsages were the thing back then, usually heavy on the carnations, but sometimes you got roses or...gasp...orchids. Most dresses were modest, strapless being about the most daring anyone got. There were no spangled, sequin-y, cut-down-to-here or up-to-there hoochie-mama dresses to be seen. Anybody showing up dressed like that would have probably been told to put on a sweater or go home.

Guys had to come into the girl's living room for the ceremonial pinning on of the flowers, the photos taken by the proud mother and the ritual glowering-at-the date by Dad. Then quite often, this had to be repeated at his house.


I'd get a "French-twist" done at the local beauty school, where you could get the thing done for $2 if you were adventurous enough to trust whatever student you got (only $1 if you washed your own hair at home and came in with it in curlers for a comb-out).

Of course, after spending that extravagant sum of money on hair, you had to make the "do" last for a few days, so that involved wrapping your head in toilet paper and sleeping gingerly. There was enough hairspray on your head to withstand the direct hit of a nuclear bomb. By the third or day, your head was itching like mad and looked like some burrowing animal had been nesting in it.....but dammit, that thing cost TWO DOLLARS and you were going to get your money's worth!

The wilting corsages were worn to school on Monday so that you could flaunt them at the unfortunate souls that didn't go. That and the dented french twist or beehive were considered badges of honor.

I still get almost teary-eyed at the smell of carnations (not that carnations have much smell these days) because that smell brings up proms, dances, weddings, special occasions....always happy...
My two late 60s prom experiences mirrored yours, except that I bought my prom dresses. Same gloves, wrist corsage, boys in rented white dinner jackets, photos in the living room, repeated at his house, beauty school updo. (I did wash it out that night though - couldn't stand all that hairspray in my hair and pitched the corsage.)

Proms are out of control, but I pin that blame squarely on parents. They're the ones funding and encouraging limos, extravagant invitations, and so forth.

When our kids were of prom age, we reminded them that this was a party, not a wedding. Same with MS & HS graduations and our daughter's Sweet 16. Modest parties for rite-of-passage events.

By our standards, graduation from HS was an expectation, not a massive accomplishment. University graduation, however, was worthy of a big celebration, mostly with their friends, and included expensive gifts from us.
 
Bought only gown for prom that was left in dress shop. My very FIRST gown! 🌹Turned out to be just right for me. I went to prom with self-confident nice guy who bought me a corsage. First mistake he made was to chuckle and respond to my laughingly, happily bringing up how my grown puffed up on our drive to the school's gymnasium was, "Yeah, my last date's gown puffed up like that too." And my joy was deflated. Second BIGGER mistake he made, he refused to dance at the prom. I hear music and I immediately desire, very strongly, to dance. Nothing, boring prom.
After dating a few more times, he wanted to know if I was serious about him. Confused, I blurted out, "I'm not in love with anyone!" (stupid) Last I heard after was he joined the Marines. Then became a firefighter.
 
Even though it was the 60s, prom was an expensive, extravagant thing where I grew up; it was an area of mostly old and new money, so most of the kids I went to school with had the world handed to 'em on a silver platter including their clothing, limos for prom, etc.
 
I went to my boyfriend's senior prom in 1967. I was 16, I think. My parents gave me permission to spend the night at his house (with his family being there). We went to a dinner in a restaurant with all the other kids. Then went to the prom. After that the local movie theater had a special showing of the Sonny & Cher movie for us. It was after midnight. He had his own car so we did not need a ride there and back.

I had very long hair and it took the hairdresser hours to put it up in French curls......which is what I wanted. When I took it down my hair was full of snarls! I remember it as being a fun night. It was at a different school than the one I went to. In a nearby town.

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