Showing posts with label Jean Louis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jean Louis. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Skirts Ahoy

Ann Miller, c. 1940

Rita Hayworth in My Gal Sal (20th Century Fox, 1942)
Costume designer: Gwen Wakeling

Ginger Rogers in Lady In The Dark (Paramount, 1944)
Costume designer: Edith Head

Linda Darnell in Hangover Square (20th Century Fox, 1945)
Costume designer: RenĂ© Hubert

Jane Russell in The French Line (RKO, 1954)
Costume designer: Michael Woulfe

Marilyn Monroe in River Of No Return (20th Century Fox, 1954)
Costume designer: Travilla

Betty Grable in Three For The Show (Columbia, 1955)
Costume designer: Jean Louis


Saturday, April 12, 2014

June's A Bust All Over?

Claudette Colbert in It Happened One Night (Columbia, 1934)
 
June Allyson in You Can't Run Away From It [remake of It Happened One Night], (Columbia, 1956)

Carole Lombard in My Man Godfrey (Universal, 1936)
 
June Allyson in My Man Godfrey (Universal-International, 1957)
 

Norma Shearer in The Women (MGM, 1939)

June Allyson in The Opposite Sex [remake of The Women], (MGM, 1956)



Compare and contrast, darlings.

Monday, September 30, 2013

Over The Edge


"I'm a song and dance girl. I can act enough to get by. But that's the limit of my talents." -- Betty Grable, turning down the meaty role of the doomed, drunken Sophie in The Razor's Edge (1946), for which Anne Baxter eventually won an Oscar

Anne Baxter in The Razor's Edge (20th Century Fox, 1946)
"I'm an actress, not a personality. It's more successful to be a personality." -- Anne Baxter

Anne Baxter in Carnival Story (RKO, 1954)

"Are you kidding? Fans would expect me to rise up out of the water with lily pads in my hair, singing 'Hooray for Hollywood.'" -- Betty Grable, referring to Sophie's dipsomaniacal demise at the bottom of the Seine in The Razor's Edge


Betty Grable in Three for the Show (Columbia, 1955)

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Monday, April 8, 2013

That Boy John

Three of our favorite films when we were growing up were Imitation of Life (1959), Back Street (1961), and Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967) -- which, incidentally, explains a lot about us. There were several connecting threads to these movies: lavish Ross Hunter productions all, they also featured stunning Jean Louis costumes; more gay icons than you could shake a David Webb choker at; and all of them co-starred one of our first adolescent crushes, the impossibly handsome John Gavin.

With Lana Turner in Imitation of Life (Universal, 1959)
With Susan Hayward in Back Street (Universal, 1961)
With Mary Tyler Moore in Thoroughly Modern Millie (Universal, 1967)
 Although he never became a superstar, for a few short years, John Gavin was keeping some pretty impressive company: in 1960 alone, he appeared in two certified classics, Psycho and Spartacus. The common theme for these two, happily, was that our man Gavin spent a good deal of time shirtless in both.

With Janet Leigh in Psycho (Paramount, 1960)
With Laurence Olivier in Spartacus (Universal, 1960)

Often derided for being understated to the point of being wooden, Gavin could rise to the occasion when given proper direction and good material (surely, Hitchcock and Kubrick must have seen something in him, besides his flawless chest); and he proved that he had a healthy sense of humor about his square-jawed image, spoofing it with impressive comic timing in Millie. It's undeniable that he's not at his best in Imitation or Back Street; in all fairness, although he's ostensibly the male lead in both, they're really Enormous Star Vehicles for Lana Turner and Susan Hayward and their wardrobes -- you try to be 100% effective when sharing the screen with Susan Hayward's sable-trimmed cuffs, and see how well you make out. Personally, we think Gavin's best acting was in an episode of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour entitled "Run for Doom." Pitted against Britain's blowzy blonde bombshell, the splendiferously trashy Diana Dors, and playing against type as a naive cuckold, Gavin acquitted himself admirably with a tense, nervous performance.

So, here's to John Gavin: one of the handsomest men to ever grace the silver and small screens; former U.S. Ambassador to Mexico; a would-have-been James Bond; and an all around class act. We here at SSUWAT salute you!


JOHN GAVIN

April 8, 1931

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Face Off

Constance Bennett in Madame X (1966, Universal)

"Her face was her talent, and when it dropped, so did her career -- right out of sight!" - Bette Davis on Constance Bennett

Bette Davis in Dead Ringer (1964, Warner Bros.)

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

No Love Lost


"Miss Hayward was very unkind to me on the set of Where Love Has Gone [1964]...I didn't know until later that she had been called 'The Poor Man's Bette Davis.'" - Bette Davis

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Hold That Blonde


Kim Novak in 5 Against the House (1955, Columbia)

The deck does appear to be stacked.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Lolly Gagging


"I have known Joan Crawford for more than thirty-five years. I still don't know her at all..She is the only star I know who manufactured herself...She drew up a blueprint for herself and outlined a beautiful package of skin, bones and character and then set about to put life into the outline. She succeeded, and so Joan Crawford came into existence at the same time an overweight Charleston dancer, born Lucille LeSueur, disappeared from the world. It took me a long time to realize this. I believed, for some time, that Lucille existed under the skin." - Louella Parsons