From hidden discotheques to winning soccer teams, photos show what life was like in the Soviet Union before the Berlin Wall fell.
Children admire a painting on a sunny beach day in Russia.
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Before the end of the Cold War, the Iron Curtain cut off the Soviet Union from the rest of Europe.
Life there was restricted, but as its leaders changed, Western influence began to reach residents.
Still, some older generations held on to the communist structure and devotion to the state.
The Iron Curtain was a figurative and ideological wall — and eventually a physical one — that separated the Soviet Union from western Europe after World War II.
The name, widely attributed to Winston Churchill, hinted that life in the USSR was secretive and very different from other western, capitalist countries.
But vintage photos provide a peek behind the curtain and show that, while members of the Soviet Union worked tirelessly to prove its power to the rest of the world, there was also time for music, shopping, and vacations in the sun.
Here's what life was like behind the Iron Curtain.
The Iron Curtain was a figurative and political barrier that divided Europe.Gorky Street in Moscow.
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It sealed off the Soviet Union from Western countries between the end of World War II and the end of the Cold War in 1991.Tour buses in front of the Winter Palace in what was then called Leningrad in 1970.
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The Soviet Union was believed to be brutally restrictive, but after Joseph Stalin died in 1953, there were changes to everyday life.Colleagues congratulate the best seamstress of the sewing shop.
In 1961, the Berlin Wall was built, and a combination of curiosity and fascination with American culture began to build throughout the '60s, '70s, and '80s.Women drinking at a bar in Moscow in 1974.
Some of this fascination was fueled by the US State Department, which sent popular American music to Eastern Europe.A jazz band of college students inspired by American jazz.
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Music like jazz gave people a chance to experiment with a new version of entertainment they were otherwise unfamiliar with.Young men play jazz on the street.
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But Soviet leaders continued to ban rock 'n' roll music.Punks rocking out in St. Petersburg.
"Style hunters" were basically the Soviet version of today's hipsters. They would listen to smuggled music and dance in hidden discotheques before the police busted them.A group of style hunters rocking the wildest outfits they can come up with.
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Fascination with punk style took the youth by storm, and punks would do anything to get their hands on even just a few seconds of rock 'n' roll.This group of punks is probably everything the Soviet leaders feared.
In the 1950s, "bone records" were old X-rays printed on flimsy vinyl sheets that were used to share American rock music. The sound quality was awful, but it provided the taste of rebellion they were after.A punk messes around in 1987.
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Sports, and particularly soccer, were popular in the Soviet Union. When the soccer team won the European Championship in 1960, there were huge celebrations.The Soviet Union played Yugoslavia in the 1960 final.
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In the earlier years of the Soviet Union, Stalin's leadership had organized teams as a way for the state to maintain control.A soccer team in Moscow, Russia in 1960.
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While the government was no longer in complete control by the 1960s, they still used victories as a propaganda tool and claimed success whenever there was a big win.
But as younger citizens stirred up trouble, members of the older generation continued to represent Soviet culture and abide by the communist lifestyle.Commuters in Moscow in 1967.
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Public transport was a crucial tool to keep the republics connected. The Moscow Metro system was known to be the best kept to flaunt socialist success.The Moscow Metro pulling into the station.
But public buses were the predominant means of transportation.A bus pulls around Central Square.
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On a normal day, adults would head off to work and occasionally browse a store.Men and women head off to work on a sunny day.
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Photographer David Hlynsky told Fast Company that "very few products were branded with anything like the legendary trademarks of the West."A group of women admire a display of plain clothing in Moscow, 1977.
Rather," he said, "these were generic products devoid of any accompanying mythology."A sales assistant shows clothing to shoppers in the GUM department store in Moscow in 1961.
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Pictured, a sales assistant shows shirts to customers at the GUM department store, known as the State Department store, in Red Square, Moscow.
Nikita Khrushchev, a former Soviet statesman, visited the US in the 1960s and tried to bring the concept of the Western supermarket to the Soviet Union, but it didn't catch on.A group of people stock up on their fruits and vegetables.
The production and distribution systems just couldn't keep up, and most Soviet citizens continued to shop at small mom-and-pop stores.Shoppers at a store in Moscow in 1967.
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Winter in Eastern Europe is known for its extremely cold temperatures, making daily commutes and grocery runs even harder.A woman stands bundled up in central Moscow.
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But come the summertime, the sunshine and trips to the beach united everyone.Children admire a painting on a sunny beach day in Russia.
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Extreme weather didn't stop military parades.Crowds cheer alongside the parade as military tanks roll by on November 7, 1977.
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Every November, thousands would gather in below-freezing weather to celebrate the Soviet Union's anniversary in front of the Red Square.Tanks roll past a huge Lenin portrait in front of the Red Square on November 7, 1977.
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Missiles were displayed to show the Soviet Union's military power and capabilities.Intercontinental ballistic missiles parade through Red Square in 1969.