Very large hoop skirts
In the big number near the end, I like how large and wide the skirts were of the girls lined up in the back row on stage while Judy sang. Those types of very big wide skirts were common at classy fancy parties, events, or shows of or for the elite back in the early 1900s. Those types of skirts were a sign of elegance, romantic beauty, and gentle old fashioned grace. I've also noticed that the women wearing those types of fancy large wide skirts in these old films often also sang in a soft beautiful operatic way. The two things went together like silver and gold. They did that here in "Everybody sing", they did that in the show musical section of the Marx's "A day at the races", and they did that in several other 30s and early 40s films. I personally love it.
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