Showing posts with label Seven Year Itch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seven Year Itch. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Cinema Connection--Fashion's Fixation on the Little White Dress of SEVEN YEAR ITCH


As I recently discussed on GlamAmor, little in film has made a bigger impact on fashion than 1955's  The Seven Year Itch.  Marilyn Monroe flaunts her figure in several incredible dresses thanks to Twentieth Century-Fox costume designer William Travilla, but the movie is a Style Essential due to the one dress that exploded in our cultural consciousness.  Everyone knows the iconic white halter dress that flutters up around Marilyn's waist when the subway breeze blows beneath her.  

Since that moment, there has been a steady supply of options to help women channel their inner Marilyn.  This, of course, ranges from costume copies to contemporary clothing.  Its influence even in high fashion is hard to ignore.  The little white dress is a wardrobe staple and there are precious few that don't take at least some inspiration from Travilla's design for Marilyn.  The halter top, wide waist band, self tie belt, pleating, and swingy skirt are details that have continued to appear in dress after dress after dress.  Nearly every one of the fashion houses--whether more minimal like Calvin Klein and Donna Karan or more over-the-top like Betsy Johnson and Versace--have all done their own versions.  And now up and coming designers like Rafael Cemmano and David Jones continue to do beautiful interpretations, some of which you will see below.

This dress is so iconic that its moment on film has been immortalized in countless ways.  Almost 60 years since it first appeared in Seven Year Itch, it still appears everywhere...from cards, t-shirts, and posters to plays, television shows, and other movies.  There is even a 26 foot statue by artist Seward Johnson of Marilyn in all her glory standing in Chicago today.  But its influence truly lives on in fashion and here's where it all started...just a simple summery little white dress.



Victoria's Secret model Miranda Kerr shows she's a super fan of the Marilyn look
wearing it again and again, including on the runway for designer David Jones




Taylor Swift (above), Carrie Underwood, and Whitney Port
all wearing dresses from designer Rafael Cemmano that show the influence of Travilla




Fergie rocking the Marilyn while on American Idol
and retailer Sundayfrog revealing their own Marilyn look on the runway



My own Marilyn moment while modeling a 1950s silk dress from GlamAmor


Seward Johnson's 26 foot statue in Chicago capturing Marilyn's iconic moment

Monday, June 4, 2012

Cinema Connection--Hair and Makeup Mark "The Look" of Marilyn Monroe


Marilyn Monroe is definitely having another moment in popular culture.  The zeitgeist started somewhere around October when Michelle Williams played the legend in the Oscar-nominated My Week with Marilyn.  Then there was suddenly an entire series on television--Smash--about the creation of a Broadway play based on the life of Marilyn Monroe.  Additionally, Cannes recently showed Marilyn as their inspiration and poster girl for this year's film festival.  And now with her birthday at the top of June, magazines like Vanity Fair have celebrated by putting her on their covers and devoting pages to her story and style.  That style continues to influence as is evident by the rush of celebrities who are currently channeling "The Look" of Marilyn on the red carpet.  

All this said, Marilyn has never gone out of style.  She has always fascinated us and possessed a classic look that seems to be perpetually on trend.  Though her iconic moments in film came from the costumes, her hair and makeup have been equally influential.  Marilyn used many studio stylists like the great Sydney Guilaroff for subtle changes to her short blonde hair, but the look of her makeup was the result of friend Allan "Whitey" Snyder.  

During pre-production for Niagara (1953), Whitey and Marilyn experimented with many makeup looks in order to finally find the face that would become uniquely her own.  "We used that look for several pictures in a row," Whitey would later say. "'The Look' was established."  Of course the films that followed were the iconic Style Essentials Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) and The Seven Year Itch (1955), which was the subject of my own recent tribute to the bombshell and her style.  As I will continue to show, the ongoing impact of Seven Year Itch is unprecedented...both for the influence of Travilla's dresses as well as the perfection of her hair and makeup.  

"The Look" of Marilyn Monroe endures today and you can see here how to make it your own.


"The Look" of Marilyn on the red carpet as seen in Glamour magazine (above)
and on Katherine McPhee and Megan Hilty in NBC's hit series Smash



Michelle Williams on the cover and feature for Vogue
and getting her makeup done in a perfect modern version of Marilyn



 Actresses Rachel McAdams (above) and Miley Cyrus both take on "The Look"



Singers like Adele and Gwen Stefani are both famous for their Marilyn faces



Scarlett Johansson doing her best Marilyn in her ad for Dolce & Gabanna (above)
and her moment of inspiration in The Seven Year Itch




In this video, British makeup artist Lisa Eldridge discusses Whitey's techniques and products he used on Marilyn along with her own tutorial.  To try "The Look" yourself, the classic Marilyn Monroe face includes:
  • strong arched eyebrows
  • winged dark brown pencil eyeliner
  • white eyeshadow with a contrasting pale peach or taupe color in the crease 
  • several coats of black mascara (and a half row of false lashes)
  • several layers of deep red or pink glossy lipstick
  • dewy perfected complexion with highlights on cheek and brow bones
  • pink blush
  • beauty mark (optional)
Though the deep colored lip is a strong part of her look here, both the eyeshadow and lipstick choices would get more pale as she entered the 1960s.



The very start of "The Look" during Niagara 




Accessorizing "The Look" with gold drop hoop earrings in both Niagara (above) 
and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes that she made popular and then became classic



Marilyn took gowns to another level in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes--including iconic pink by Travilla--
always pairing them with an evening version of "The Look"



Marilyn also did advertisements for cosmetic companies including one for Westmore in 1953 (above)
and MAC Cosmetics today who did an entire Marilyn Monroe capsule collection 


Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Cinema Style File--Marilyn Monroe in 1955's Style Essential THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH


As we have just celebrated Memorial Day, I could think of no one hotter to kick off our Summer than Marilyn Monroe in the 1955 Style Essential The Seven Year Itch.  The Style Essentials represent iconic costumes and style in the movies, and this is perhaps the best known of them all.  It is Marilyn at her blonde bombshell best...two years after she made both Niagara and the nearly equally iconic Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.  In Seven Year Itch, she wears a dress so famous it has become a part of popular culture.  Everyone knows the "subway dress," the white halter whose pleated skirt blows up around her waist from the breeze of the subway below.  Both the dress and moment are transcendent...known by men and women, young and old, film fanatics as well as those who have never even seen the movie.  And its design continues to inspire dress after dress after dress--including flat out copies--in fashion today.

The subway scene was a sensation even while it was being filmed.  Such a crowd gathered on location that they ultimately had to move production back to the Twentieth Century-Fox lot to finish.  One of those in the crowd was Marilyn's husband--Joe DiMaggio--who apparently hated the dress, the scene, and the attention on his wife so much it was rumored to have sparked the end of their marriage.  Interestingly, Marilyn's provocative moment got its inspiration from a much earlier time in cinema's history--a 1901 short film called What Happened on 23rd Street, which depicted a girl having her skirt blown up while walking over a subway grate (below).


Everyone may know the image of Marilyn in her "subway dress," but few know the man behind the design--William Travilla.  Since 1952, Travilla--as he was credited--was a friend and frequent collaborator with Marilyn.  He was celebrated for his body conscious cuts, though this is perhaps an understatement when it comes to his dresses, especially for Marilyn.  He was responsible for the pink strapless gown she wore when singing "Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend" in 1953's Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, which is a Style Essential as well.  But even that cannot surpass the impact of the halter dress and all the other outfits Marilyn wears in Seven Year Itch...a wardrobe of mostly angelic white, but one that reveals so much of her fantastic figure you can't help but feel a little bit the devil.

But even those who appreciate the talent of Travilla may not know he was not alone in creating costumes for Seven Year Itch, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, or any of the other Oscar-nominated hits for Twentieth Century-Fox like How to Marry a Millionaire (1953).  Though the lead actress' costumes were often assigned to one designer like Travilla, the Executive Designer and Director of Wardrobe at Fox was Charles LeMaire.  LeMaire was involved in supervising costumes for Niagara as well, where Dorothy Jeakins designed for Marilyn rather than Travilla.  LeMaire was a talented designer in his own right, too...his solo efforts include Desk Set and Love is a Many-Splendored Thing, costume design that beat out Edith Head's self-professed "best work" in To Catch a Thief  for the Academy Award.

Together LeMaire and particularly Travilla accomplished something extraordinary in Seven Year ItchDebbie Reynolds, famed collector of movie memorabilia since the earliest studio auctions in the 1970s, owned the "subway dress" and had it originally appraised at $1-2 million before going to auction in 2011.  This was remarkable enough.  But there was such a buying frenzy that the dress ended up selling for $4.6 million.  This truly shows the value, significance, and impact of great costume design.  And as I will show in upcoming posts, the influence of the style from this movie continues to be perennially popular in fashion.


Seven Year Itch is a Style Essential from the very beginning...the opening credits are done by the great Saul Bass.  Saul did the graphic design and iconic opening title sequences for many of Hollywood's greatest directors, including Otto Preminger and Stanley Kubrick.  He also changed graphic design by evolving from static credits to kinetic ones such as those he created for Alfred Hitchcock in Vertigo (1958), North by Northwest (1959), and Psycho (1960).  Martin Scorcese grew up admiring Saul's work so much that he asked him (and wife Elaine) to create the most innovative of Scorcese's opening credits, from Good Fellas (1990) to Casino (1995).  Sadly, Seven Year Itch is the only time that Bass worked with director Billy Wilder.

I frequently discuss the importance of costume design and style to the longevity of classic film and The Seven Year Itch is a prime example.  It is not the screenplay or directing that keep people watching this film; even screenwriter-director Billy Wilder was not a fan of the final script since it had to be altered so significantly from George Axelrod's original play to suit the censors.  The appeal of The Seven Year Itch is not entirely about Marilyn either since there are other movies of hers that are not as memorable.  Instead, it is the iconic costume design--custom made for her and her character--and overall style of the film that attracts audiences and prompts them to watch it again and again.  I speak from experience.

And now, I give you Marilyn Monroe's sexy summer style in The Seven Year Itch.



At Grand Central Station to say goodbye to the family for the summer
and hello to the seven year itch





At the office as a publishing executive,
Richard often sensationalizes the covers of literary classics to sell in paperback




At home alone, Richard's summer starts out with a surprise...
the doorbell rings and he is introduced to his new neighbor




Travilla is famous for his body-hugging dresses, and this seemingly innocent polkadot halter
really shows off Marilyn at her peak and the extraordinary figure she was famous for






Boom!  A tomato plant falls onto Richard's patio and almost kills him,
but his anger is abolished when he sees who is responsible




After inviting The Girl downstairs for a drink, Richard fantasizes that she's a femme fatale
complete with predatory tiger-stripe strapless gown and gloves






Instead, she arrives in innocent pale pink silk pants and matching belted blouse



The main attractions of Richard's apartment are cool cocktails and air conditioning




While grabbing her birthday champagne upstairs, The Girl makes a quick change
into another halter dress...this time in white sequin that requires help with the straps



This cocktail dress is so modern, it continues to inspire designers today



In addition to the iconic costumes in this movie, it's important to note
Marilyn's hair and makeup here that also continue be copied



Reality does not bear out Richard's piano fantasy,
and he and The Girl simply tumble to the floor



Guilt-ridden, Richard ends their evening together



Due to his failed attempt at romance, Richard (wrongfully) fears that
The Girl uses her toothpaste commercial as an opportunity to warn other women about him



Instead, The Girl is eagerly looking forward to their upcoming evening out




The dress that everyone in the world seems to know--Travilla's off-white halter dress for Marilyn
with a fabric belt criss-crossed over a wide cinched waist and accordion pleated skirt




Perhaps the most iconic moment in movie history





Once again, air conditioning lures The Girl into Richard's apartment and extends the evening




Though The Girl is also thinking of ways for her to spend the night,
it is only for sleeping in the comfort of air conditioning



A late night surprise visit from the building's janitor 



"What a living doll!"



Richard asks The Girl to leave for appearance sake,
but she figures out a way to open the door on the stairs that connect their apartments




In the morning, Richard is finally resolved to end any affair and visit his family in Maine




Marilyn looking perfect even as she says goodbye

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