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Saturday, September 28, 2013

Martha Raye's Hairstyle from the 1930s Travels Forward 50 Years

Have you seen Martha Raye's hair in the finale of College Swing (1938)? 

She has a hairstyle the name of which I do not know, but it is seen again in the 1980s.

It's a style that is usually shaved close along the sides and kept long on top, sometimes with masses of curls bunched up. On the ladies, it's usually an updo pulled taut so they don't have to commit to shaving off the sides.

Here's Martha Raye sporting it in the rhumba number from College Swing. The sides of her temple appear shaved, but they are not.



Now from the front. See the masses of curls piled atop her head?

The young man on the right is Harry Watson in A Damsel in Distress (1937). You can barely see it from this terrible screen shot, but his sides are shaved.


This hairstyle made a leap forward and became popular again fifty years later.

Here in the 1980s, Tricia O'Neil  sports a similar hairstyle in Season 2, Episode 11 of the TV show "MacGyver." Hers is a fuller version of it.  Closer to Watson's than Raye's. You can't really see the sides in this shot.


Here's another variation  from the 1980s without the curls and with the shaved sides sported by an anonymous young lady.


It's enjoyable to see great fashion recycled. However, I have no idea what this hairstyle is called. Do you? Please let me know in the comments.




Monday, September 23, 2013

9 More Autumn-Themed Classic Movies: Campus Edition


Summer is cooling off. It's time to sip a cup of cider and relax with one of these autumn-themed classic movies. Last time, we made a general list of classic movies for fall. This time, we're going back to school. Not much studying goes on in any of these films, but they are fun to watch. Enjoy!

The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer (1947) - Shirley Temple plays a high school student who becomes infatuated with an older man (Cary Grant)! They date at high school basketball games and soda fountains, upsetting her former boyfriend.
 
Best Foot Forward
Best Foot Forward (1943) - To boost her career, a movie star (Lucille Ball) agrees to attend a dance at Winsocki Military Academy. The cadets' girlfriends are not amused.

College Swing (1938) - To keep a university in the family, Gracie Alden (Gracie Allen) must pass an entrance exam. This Paramount musical showcases a great many of the studio's comedy stars while cashing in on the swing craze. Bob Hope is on hand with the one-liners and Betty Grable makes an appearance.


Girl Crazy (1943) -  A student (Mickey Rooney) is sent to an all-male college in the desert to dampen his insatiable appetite for females. Things do not go as planned with the dean's granddaughter (Judy Garland) around.


Daddy Long Legs - Leslie Caron as an American freshman
Daddy Long Legs (1955) - A wealthy patron (Fred Astaire) sends a French orphan (Leslie Caron) to college in the U.S. Based loosely on the Jean Webster novel, this musical is at turns funny and poignant.


Mr. Belvedere Goes to College (1949)- Clifton Webb returns as renaissance man Lynn Belvedere who decides to earn a four-year degree in one year. The uptight Belvedere is a fish-out-of-water as campus shenanigans try his patience. Shirley Temple and Tom Drake are on hand as well.

The Nutty Professor (1963) - Jerry Lewis' cinematic magnum opus. Socially-awkward professor Julius Kelp invents and drinks a liquid formula to help shy guys interact with people. What follows is a comedic Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

Take Her, She's Mine (1963) -  Legendary screenwriter Nora Ephron is supposedly the inspiration for this comedy written by her parents Phoebe and Henry Ephron, originally for a play. The film follows a college-age daughter (Sandra Dee) who constantly finds trouble. James Stewart stars as her anxious father bailing her out of protests, sit-ins, possible expulsion,etc.

Vivacious Lady (1938) - A university professor marries a vivacious nightclub performer. Will they fit into each other's world, or will the new wife's antics get him fired? James Stewart and Ginger Rogers star in this comedy.


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Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Gigi's Wardrobe in Gigi (1958)

Released 55 years ago last May, the movie Gigi is still visually arresting. With director Vincente Minnelli's trained artistic eye, each frame is a beautiful composition. And the clothing, designed by Cecil Beaton, moves well within these spaces. Sometimes the wardrobe even takes a secondary role to the scenery.

Or at least it does in Gigi's case from time to time.

Gigi (Leslie Caron) is a teenaged girl who is a courtesan in training. However, her mind is so far removed from the family business you know she's not going to be quite like her grandmother, Madame Alvarez, (Hermione Gingold) nor her Aunt Alicia (Isabel Jeans). The older women in the family each had great conquests in their youth and want the best "catch" for their young charge.


Gigi is first seen frolicking in the park with her young friends. She's wearing a red and green plaid bolero jacket and matching skirt. The white blouse spills out of the jacket in romantic poet's sleeves. This is her ensemble for school. A Breton hat completes the picture of innocence. She looks like a storybook illustration of a schoolgirl.

This is the outfit that she wears throughout most of the film. It's become such a trademark for the character that when she changes out of it for the last time, another character finds it incredulous that she's not wearing the plaid.


The green coat that she wears over the plaid swallows her, emphasizing her petite frame and youthful qualities.Since this is a coming-of-age film, Gigi will emerge from her juvenile costumes, making her later ensembles that much more remarkably mature.


When she's not rushing to and from school and is just lounging around the house, Gigi wears a royal blue dress. Knife pleats, Peter Pan collar, mutton chop sleeves, bright white lines running everywhere contrasting the blue... she's almost clown-like.


She's still a child, leaping around, running, cheating at cards,etc.


Friend of the family, Gaston (Louis Jourdan), a wealthy sugar heir, has a friendly, platonic relationship with each of the ladies and invites Madame Alvarez and her granddaughter for a trip to Deauville for some sea air.

While at the beach resort, Gigi's wardrobe still plays up the contrast between her physical freedom and immaturity and the lack of both in the staid, adult females around her.
 

An anonymous woman at the resort is so heavily corseted she stands in one spot on the tennis court and waits for the ball to come to her, becoming visibly upset when her opponent lobs the ball a couple of inches out of reach. Gigi, on the other hand, with no corsets yet, leaps about while playing with Gaston, and lies on the ground in her tennis whites.


When in the surf, Gigi and Gaston yuk it up again. While sitting on his shoulders practically drowning the man, Gigi wears a blue bathing suit with white piping that looks a lot like her blue dress at home. Again, she's a juvenile.

Back home, Aunt Alicia smells a romance cooking and decides Gigi needs even more lessons than ever in being a courtesan. This means the young lady will have a new wardrobe.



During a montage of lessons and just afterwards, Gigi wears only blue ensembles. Three of these outfits are essentially the same: a light blouse and navy blue skirt. It's a more mature version of the royal blue "clown" dress earlier. She's growing up.
 

Gigi wears a lot of cool colors. She must; her grandmother has decorated the place in bordello red with rococo ornamentation on the walls. More fiery, saturated colors with patterns would just be too much to look at in that house.


Notice Gigi's hair is down throughout most of the lessons montage, as it has been throughout most of the film. But in her final blue skirt, when she's deciding whether to move her relationship with Gaston out of the friend zone, Gigi's bangs are still present (the last wisp of childhood)  but the rest of her hair is in a neat bow. She's maturing and reigning in her juvenile habits.

 

During a brief fashion show where Aunt Alicia chooses her niece's gowns, the only one that Gigi doesn't like is the very one that her aunt buys. It's a mauve dress and jacket which turns out to be too big for her; Gigi looks like she's playing dress up. This is played for laughs, but ultimately Aunt Alicia is right.

The gowns that Gigi likes (but her aunt will not buy) are too garish. No doubt Gigi's tendency towards loud color combinations and awkward frills is her grandmother's influence. Aunt Alicia wisely chooses simple lines for Gigi and subtle coloring.


Gigi now wants to show off her new gowns. She starts with a white lace dress with high banded collar. There is a tantalizing salmon, flesh tone underlay with this dress which completely changes the sensibility of this character. This is not a child any more. Note, also, that her hair is up. She will never wear it down again in this movie, outside of her bedroom.


Note also that Gigi is no longer enveloped by her grandmother's busy decorating; she stands out from it in simple elegance and poise.

This dress gives the audience and Gaston a glimpse of the butterfly before she fully emerges. Gaston especially needs this prelude to the grand finale evening gown to have time to absorb the shocking change in Gigi.


The grande finale dress is ivory satin with black feathered ornamentation at the shoulders which our heroine wears at Maxim's. Gigi's gorgeously simple gown makes the multicolored dresses on the other women at the restaurant seem overdone.
 

Just as it is at home, the busyness around her no longer consumes Gigi; it frames her.


In what could be called the epilogue dress, Gigi wears mauve again. This time the dress fits her frame and it's in her new signature fabric - lace.  (Aunt Alicia is ultimately right. She simply had to find a way to make the standard style suit her niece.)

 

Gigi fits in with the other women during her promenade, but her bangs are still prominent (and appropriate). This suggests that she knows how to wear fashion, but there will always be a bit of a rebel in her.





Monday, September 02, 2013

7 1/2 Labor Day Movies


Ah! The vacation day that celebrates work. Here is a list of job-centered classic movies for Labor Day. Enjoy!
  1. Bedtime Story (1941) - Loretta Young and Fredric March star as a married couple -an actress and playwright- who disagree about whether to retire from the theater or continue working. Tensions fly in this romantic comedy.
  2. Double Indemnity (1944) - An insurance salesman (Fred MacMurray) becomes involved in killing a woman's (Barbara Stanwyck) husband for cash. It's a story of murder, but also a story of a worker's ethics. 
  3. I Can Get it for You Wholesale (1951) - Susan Hayward is an ambitious worker in a fashion house who claws her way to the top of her profession. Now she must choose between labor and love.
  4. More than a Secretary (1936) - The owner of a secretarial school (Jean Arthur) pretends to be one of her own students to land a job and marry her new boss. It's all very Thoroughly Modern Millie-ish, except it's not.
  5. Neptune's Daughter (1949) - In this musical, Esther Williams plays a champion swimmer who starts her own swimsuit company. There is even a tour of her factory.
  6. On the Waterfront (1954) - A longshoreman, played by Marlon Brando, challenges his union bosses.
  7. The Pajama Game (1957) - An employee representative at a textile factory butts heads with the superintendent over a seven and one-half cent raise. They are also dating, which complicates things.This is one of the most famous union- themed musicals. Originally on Broadway, this film brings many of the stage cast with it and places box office draw, Doris Day, in the lead female role.

   7 1/2. The Admiral was a Lady (1950) -   Let's toss an extra one in here. This comedy follows a   group of guys who try everything not to do traditional work. The schemes they come up with take just as much time as a regular job. Edmond O'Brien stars as the ring leader of this over-grown boys club.

What are your favorite job-centered classic movies?