Teen Life In the 1960s: From Conservative To Groovy by Decade’s End

Teen Life 1960s Collage
Adobe Stock; Everett Collection

High school life in 1960 was very different for teens that it was in 1969. At the decade’s start, things were still very similar to the conservative 1950s, with car culture and mom-and-pop fashions being the order of the day. Over the course of the decade, wholesome family TV shows that carried over from the 1950s, like The Donna Reed Show, gave way to the new TV families of the 1960s, like The Dick Van Dyke Show, and for teen girls, it included Gidget and The Patty Duke Show and the ever-popular American Bandstand. What teen couldn’t relate? Read on to relive more of those sweet ’60s memories.

Monster Mania

THE MUNSTERS, (clockwise from top right): Al Lewis, Yvonne De Carlo, Fred Gwynne, Butch Patrick, Pat Priest, 1964-66

Everett Collection

Early in the decade, three trends caught on with teens. First, there was monster mania, with many of the classic Universal monster films now on television, bubblegum wrappers and lunch boxes, with the radio playing novelty hits like “Monster Mash” by Bobby “Boris” Pickett (1962) and “My Son, the Vampire” by Allan Sherman (1964). Standing amid the horrors of the hit TV show The Munsters was ugly duckling niece Marilyn (originally played by Beverley Owen, then Pat Priest), a very normal-looking blond teenager who suffered outcast status amid her gruesome relatives.

Let’s go to the beach!

BEACH PARTY, from left: Annette Funicello, Frankie Avalon, 1963

Courtesy Everett Collection

As if to dispel those creatures of the popular night, beach music then rode a wave of jangly guitars and surfboards across America. The Beach Boys blasted from every beachside transistor radio, and teens flocked to drive-ins to catch Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in a gaggle of beach movies including Beach Party (1963) and Bikini Beach (1964). There were even monster/beach hybrids like The Horror of Party Beach (1964). But the ultimate beach movie was The Endless Summer (1966), a permanent escape from an increasingly turbulent decade. The theme song by the Sandals echoes surf dreams to this day.

Beatlemania hits in 1964!

Pop Culture auction collage

Courtesy Heritage Auctions, HA.com

Then came the tsunami of Beatlemania. The Beatles overtook America with a storm of No. 1 hits in 1964 including “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” “Can’t Buy Me Love,” “She Loves You” and “Love Me Do.” Hysteria, which Elvis and Frank Sinatra could once summon, fired screaming and fainting legions of fans of the Liverpool mop-tops. Teens erected bedroom shines to their favorite Beatle with posters, photographs and other ephemera.

1960s Style

British model and actress Twiggy (right) with American singing duo Sonny Bono (1934 - 1998) and Cher at an outdoor party given to welcome Twiggy to Los Angeles, Beverly Hills, April 30, 1967. Sonny and Cher are wearing matching saffron outfits of a thick patterned material.

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Meanwhile, things in the ’60s were changing fast, with the passing of the Civil Rights Act, growing sentiment against the Vietnam War and popular music becoming louder, harder and more belligerent. Hippie counterculture began influencing teen style, with bell-bottoms, hip-huggers, miniskirts and go-go boots appearing in school hallways. For some boys, hair crept over shirt collars, while others sported Afro haircuts. Bedrooms began to see day-glo posters, which glowed incandescent under black lights, and stereos blasting the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Jefferson Airplane and Cream.

Popular 1960s Dance Crazes

Popular dances of the early ’60s included the Twist, the Watusi and the Mashed Potato, but as the music got louder and wilder, dancing lost its formality and became an amorphous shimmy and shake. As the decade ended, no one knew where things were headed, but the quiet conservatism of the early ’60s was long gone.

 

1965
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1965

February 2025

Flashback to 1965 and celebrate the very best of TV, Movies, Music, Fashion & more!

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