Showing posts with label Joan Crawford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joan Crawford. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

The Style Essentials--Joan Crawford Struts Her Stuff in 1928's OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS


Not long ago, I spent an evening presenting The Style Essentials: History of Fashion in Film 1920s-1930s at the Annenberg Beach House.  The former beachfront estate of screen star Marion Davies, the venue could not have been more ideal to share my choices of the most iconic costume design in the movies that continues to influence fashion today. One of the films from this elite list is 1928's Our Dancing Daughters.

Our Dancing Daughters is one of those films that really reflected its moment in history.  The 1920s were one long celebration after the great sacrifice and hardships of World War I.  Women had won the right to vote at the beginning of the decade and with it came an empowerment and sense of newfound freedom.  These were also the days of Prohibition, so there was an additional rebellious spirit in the air as an entire generation sought to find its identity.  At the time Our Dancing Daughters was made, the Jazz Age was at the peak of prosperity and still more than a year before the financial crash that would cause the Great Depression.  People really were dancing on table tops and celebrating the ongoing economic boom in the United States.

One of those doing the dancing was Joan Crawford.  In fact, she was really good.  While still known as Lucille LeSueur, she started her career as a dancer and used those skills to create a new life for herself...far away from an impoverished childhood that included a father who abandoned her at birth.  She was discovered dancing in Detroit, which led to a show on Broadway and soon a screen test for MGM.  Though she was signed to a contract in 1925 and rechristened 'Joan Crawford,' she was disenchanted with the small parts that came her way those first few years.  As a result, this master of self-promotion decided to literally dance her way through every hot club in Hollywood to attract the attention of the studio bosses.  It worked.  That perseverance led to the role that would make her a star.

Our Dancing Daughters could not have been a better showcase for Joan and her talent.  Made in the days before the censorship of the Hays Code (1930-1967), producers continued to push the limit of what was shown on screen.  As a result, this silent movie feels anything but and its energy completely captures the zeitgeist of the times.  Joan was a huge part of that...her dancing was front and center, and her free spirit and journey through the loosening morals of the 1920s made her seem the quintessential flapper.  This included The Great Gatsby (1925) author F. Scott Fitzgerald who wrote,
Joan Crawford is doubtless the best example of the flapper, the girl you see in smart night clubs, gowned to the apex of sophistication, toying iced glasses with a remote, faintly bitter expression, dancing deliciously, laughing a great deal, with wide, hurt eyes. Young things with a talent for living.
Clearly, the costumes and overall style of Our Dancing Daughters was a huge part of its success.  The picture was produced by Hunt Stromberg, a man who knew something of the value of style and featured it prominently in movies such as The Thin Man (1934) and After the Thin Man (1936).  Dancing's wardrobe was credited to David Cox, one of MGM's earliest costume designers but relatively unknown today.  He studied, as many designers did, at the New York School of Fine & Applied Arts (now Parsons), and his career evolved from sketch artist to fashion designer on the East Coast.  MGM came calling in 1928, and Our Dancing Daughters was an early film and great success for their newfound costume designer.


Though Our Dancing Daughters was a hit, Cox's career at Metro would only last three years--coming to an end due to his tempermental attitude and clashes with some of the studio's biggest stars, such as Greta Garbo.  His talent was also somewhat limited compared to his contemporaries and completely overshadowed by Adrian, who arrived at MGM at the same time and quickly became the studio's Chief Costume Designer.  It was he who became virtually synonymous with MGM's glamorous look and style through the Golden Age of Hollywood.  Adrian may have even been involved in this film, especially because of Joan Crawford.  Theirs was one of the all time great relationships between designer and star.

Yet Our Dancing Daughters should be remembered as a great success for Cox.  Its style was the epitome of Art Deco glamour and immediately influenced fashion of the late 1920s.  Each of the actresses--Joan, Anita Page, and Dorothy Sebastian--wear dress after dress dripping in sequins, beading, and fringe.  Accessories like fur stoles and long necklaces are draped over the girls for their parties at night.  The production and costume design completely captured the decadence of the age, so it's no wonder that Our Dancing Daughters has become the reference point for any production today that is set in the 1920s, such as Oscar winners The Artist (2011) and Baz Luhrmann's The Great Gatsby (2013).

Our Dancing Daughters also included groundbreaking menswear on each of its leading ladies.  It's important to remember that this was still a time when women simply did not wear pants.  This film made it seem very modern and opened the door for more women to try it in their own wardrobes.  It helped start us on a path that would include Marlene Dietrich in Morocco (1930) and Katharine Hepburn in Woman of the Year (1942) through to Diane Keaton in Annie Hall (1977) and beyond.  As you can see, Our Dancing Daughters is a quintessential example of late 1920s flapper style and easily one of The Style Essentials for its ongoing influence in both costume design and fashion. 



Champagne and Joan in her showstopper of a quintessential 1920s flapper dress
complete with fringe and a deep draped back



This is the moment of a generation on film--
flapper Joan Crawford dancing on the tabletop




Diana has a rival for the affections of Ben in blonde Ann (Anita Page)...


...and a true friend in frequent confidant Beatrice (Dorothy Sebastian)



Besides the party attire, the casual side of the girls' clothes includes separates that are on trend today
as well as iconic menswear that would later influence others such as Annie Hall (1977)



Even accessories like their cloche hats are a huge inspiration from the time

Friday, January 13, 2012

Cinema Connection--1940s Film Noir Style...Then and Now


As you know, one of the missions of GlamAmor is to show how much in fashion today continues to be influenced by classic film.  This was never so true than on the Fall/Winter runways where most of the designers flocked to film noir of the 1930s and 1940s for inspiration.  Since I recently covered Blade Runner (1982), which took its neo noir style from the 30s and 40s and now considered classic, I wanted to show this progression of influence.  So let's look at the stunning costume design of the original films...to 30 years later in Blade Runner...to 30 years later on the runways today in 2012. 

This is part of a series in honor of the upcoming TCM Classic Film Festival in April--Style in the Movies.  I'll be looking at film noir style on GlamAmor throughout the month...from landmark Los Angeles locations to the costume design that still makes an impact today.  Take a peek at past posts you may have missed and stay tuned for much more!

ABOVE:  Black femme fatale suiting on Joan Crawford in Mildred Pierce (1945) and...


...Sean Young in Blade Runner
and today on the runway for Jean Paul Gaultier



Buttoned-up blouse under a blazer on Joan Crawford in Mildred Pierce
and Sean Young in Blade Runner and...


...today on the runway for Givenchy



Gray strong-shouldered suiting for Rita Hayworth in Gilda (1946)
and Sean Young in Blade Runner and...


...today on the runway for Christian Dior



1940s fluffy fur coats on Joan Crawford in Mildred Pierce
and Sean Young in Blade Runner and...


...today on the runway for Gucci



1930s fur-collared coats on Myrna Loy in The Thin Man (1934)
and Sean Young in Blade Runner and...


...today on the runway for Prada

Monday, August 22, 2011

Cinema Connection--1940s Polkadots on Trend for Fall


The 1940s are a huge trend for Fall 2011 and polkadots are already popping up everywhere.  For inspiration, one only need to turn to Joan Crawford in 1945's Mildred Pierce to see an encapsulation of the decade and its style.  In her Oscar-winning performance, Joan wears both polkadots and the strong-shouldered suits and dresses that she was famous for.  If you haven't seen the movie, be sure to check it out tonight on Turner Classic Movies along with many other films featuring Joan throughout the day dedicated to her in August's Summer Under the Stars.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Kate Winslet and Evan Rachel Wood at HBO's Mildred Pierce Premiere


The leading ladies of HBO's five-part miniseries Mildred Pierce stepped out in their retro best for the premiere last week.  Both Kate Winslet and Evan Rachel Wood chose body conscious dresses that were inspired by stars of Old Hollywood.  I thought Ms. Wood looked absolutely perfect from head to toe and put together a look that I would love to wear myself.  So polished, she looked classic and sexy all at once.


Kate Winslet's dress was a nod to one worn by Joan Crawford in the original Mildred Pierce


Kate wearing a black polkadot dress and vegan strappy stilettos by STELLA McCARTNEY 
paired with a sleek gold clutch by CALVIN KLEIN



Kate recently cropped her blonde locks and it looked amazing in this retro hairstyle for the premiere.  Want to try it on your own hair?  Renato Campora of Frederic Fekkai tells GlamAmor exactly how he achieved the look and how to recreate it for yourself.  

First, prep hair with Fekkai Full Blown Styling Whip mixed with a little Fekkai Ironless Smooth Finish Serum.  Then blow dry using your fingers and allow the ends of your hair to curl a bit.  When completely dry, wrap your hair using heated metal sticks--which can be bought at any beauty supply store--and let it set for 15 minutes.  Shake the curls loose once the sticks are cool and gently iron out the hair section by section.  Updos are always easiest with a little volume and texture to the hair, so apply some Fekkai Au Naturel Dry Shampoo and use bobby pins to secure each section.  Finally, finish with with a spritz of Fekkai Coiff Sheer Hold Hair Spray all over the hair to hold the style in place.



Inspiration for Evan Rachel Wood's look courtesy of Veronica Lake


Evan looking stunning in a slinky plum jersey dress and matching peeptoe pumps 
from ELIE SAAB's Fall 2011 collection



Flawless retro hair and makeup combined with jewelry that could easily be vintage

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

The Style Essentials--Joan Crawford Works Hard in 1945's Film Noir MILDRED PIERCE


Once HBO launched its five-part miniseries Mildred Pierce, I knew it was important to bring attention to the original 1945 movie of the same name. Mildred Pierce has actually become one of my favorite films over the years...a Warner Brothers film noir classic.  It's based on the 1941 novel by noir master James M. Cain, who was also responsible for writing the great Double Indemnity and The Postman Always Rings Twice.  Yet there's something deeper in this particular work of his.  The story is set in the midst of the Great Depression and its topics are eerily on point today.  The strain on a family during that extreme economic crisis, a working single mother, an entitled and rebellious teenager, and a woman with an entrepreneurial spirit and vision.  It's for these reasons that HBO thought it was perfect to remaster today.

But nothing can come close to the edge of the original movie.  For one, Michael Curtiz was at the helm as director.  If you don't know the name, you do know his films and one happens to be widely regarded as the best of all time--Casablanca (1942).  What's key is the way that Curtiz allows the story of Mildred Pierce to unfold in pure film noir fashion--we meet Mildred dressed in fur ready to jump off the Malibu Pier, a mystery right from the start and told in flashback complete with main character voiceover.  Now add the look of the film from cinematographer Ernest Haller, who won an Oscar for his color cinematography on Gone with the Wind but bathes Mildred Pierce in rich black and white.

We also have many actors at their peak here and most were nominated for Oscars, including Ann Blyth (Mildred's spoiled daughter, Veda) and the wonderful character actress Eve Arden (Mildred's best friend, Ida).  But it was Joan Crawford who won the Oscar for Best Actress...and what a win it was.  After decades at glamorous MGM, Louis B. Mayer unceremoniously cast her from the studio.  Joan felt as though she had lost everything.  Surprisingly, it was the gritty Warner Brothers studio who picked up her contract and gave her a home.

Mildred Pierce was Joan's one shot to prove herself to them.  She literally had to fight for the role from director Curtiz.  He hated Joan and hated her style, particularly the strong shoulders that were her trademark at MGM.  He even allegedly ripped a sleeve off her dress during one early heated exchange.  Joan, in an attempt to delve into character, had bought a simple housedress from Sears for the audition...one without any such padding.  With the sleeve dangling from the dress, she flashed Curtiz a bare shoulder and said, "I'm afraid they're all mine."  This is exactly the type of challenging life experience that made her empathize so strongly with this character and allowed us to see her best performance.  She was strong yet vulnerable in the role, and she's so good that there are actually moments you may forget you're watching Joan Crawford.

But it is Joan Crawford and part of the pleasure of her pictures is the glamour she will always bring.  Because Mildred moves from poor to professional woman, Warner Brothers' costume designer Milo Anderson provided a slightly more subtle glamour for their leading lady.  Much of the costumes are suits for the career-oriented character, and they are so influential that fashion designers still make ones just like these for working women today.  Over the protests of Curtiz, we can see that Anderson still managed to sneak in those strong shoulders; this was a style that Joan's beloved friend and costume designer Adrian began in order to balance her proportions and create the illusion of height for her petite frame (reported as being anywhere from 5' to 5'4").  That design continued its magic here since Joan always seems 6 feet tall when standing against any of her adversaries. 

What impresses me most, though, are her close ups--the perfect bone structure of her face and the emotion that she's able to bring to her big blue eyes.  See if they don't draw you into all the drama of the 1940s classic Mildred Pierce.



Trouble in the marriage right from the start, 
and husband Bert (Bruce Bennett) moves out to be with another woman



Faced with life as a single mother in the midst of the Depression, Mildred fights to find employment
and boldly asks for a job at a downtown restaurant in a classic trenchcoat



Mildred's eldest daughter, Veda (Ann Blyth), is so spoiled that Mildred works to open her own restaurant 
just to give her daughter the kind of high life she wants



Together with her best friend, Ida (Eve Arden), Mildred's restaurant is a success from the start



Perfectly professional in pin-stripes, white silk blouse, and diamond broach...
even when deciding to dump her gold-digging boyfriend, Monte Beragon (Zachary Scott)



Admiring Mildred's birthday gift to Veda parked outside--a 1940 Buick Special convertible



Polkadots were a very popular pattern of both the 1930s and 1940s
and Mildred's polkadot dress has become a classic



Both ladies wearing black suiting when Mildred discovers Veda is involved in blackmail
and finally sees just how wicked her daughter has become



Ever defiant and devious Veda with her frequent floral flourish



Though doing whatever she can to fight for her family,
Mildred will find she's faced with betrayal on all sides and seems appropriately dressed in black



Publicity shots released led the audience to believe what Mildred would do,
but instead... SPOILER ALERT!



Driving out to Monte's Malibu beachhouse, Mildred finds Veda in her husband's arms




But when Veda finds out that Monte was just using her, too, it is...


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