Showing posts with label Rutgers University Press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rutgers University Press. Show all posts

Sunday, July 2, 2023

The Classic Film Collective: All for Beauty

 This was originally published in the former The Classic Film Collective Patreon.

 


All for Beauty
Makeup and Hairdressing in Hollywood's Studio Era
by Adrienne L. McLean
Rutgers University Press
Paperback ISBN: 9780813563589
326 pages


Ever since I started following makeup artist and historian Erin Parsons on TikTok (watch her full-length vintage makeup collection tour on YouTube, it’s amazing!), I’ve been interested in learning more about makeup in old Hollywood. So when I saw that Rutgers University Press was publishing Adrienne L. McLean’s new book on studio era makeup and hairdressing, it was a no brainer that this book would find its way into my research library. 

All for Beauty: Makeup and Hairdressing in Hollywood’s Studio Era by Adrienne L. McLean is a scholarly text that examines the business of makeup and hairdressing within Hollywood (silent film era to the late 1960s), the emergence of artists within the industry and the techniques implemented. McLean primarily focuses on “straight makeup” which is to say it excludes costume makeup that is made to exaggerate, depict a historical period or to transform an actor into a fantastical creature. We’re talking foundation, blush, lipstick, eyeliner, mascara, false eyelashes, some contouring, body makeup. Hairdressing is less of a focus but the author does examine the use of wigs in film and how some of the top makeup artists began as wigmakers.

McLean’s book is heady stuff and not a light read. If you're interested in the subject matter, I recommend reading the book a little differently. The final chapter Cosmetics, Coiffures, Characterization is the one you should start with first. This is where movie star makeup is examined at length in terms of intent, method and end result. Then if you find yourself wanting more information on the business side of things or want to learn about the individual artists, then read the introduction and first two chapters.

The author’s intent with the book was to examine, in her words, “why people in studio-era Hollywood movies, usually but not always stars, look so unnaturally perfect on the screen.” Starting in the silent era, there was a pushback against exaggerated makeup on screen. There was a shift towards a more natural look but one that depicted an actress (and actors too) as perfectly flawless. McLean also discusses at length how patriarchy, capitalism, sexism and racism were the strongest forces behind makeup and hairdressing as a business and as a science in the industry. Key figures include: Max Factor, the Westmores, Sydney Guilaroff, Vic Meadows, William Tuttle, Robert Stephanoff, Dot Ponedel, Jack Dawn, Ben Nye, etc.

There are a numerous color and black and white photographs throughout as well as some makeup charts from specific movie productions. It’s a relatively short book at around 300 pages (229 pages of actual reading material before you get to the backmatter). But it's quite dense as its packed with lots of information.


Here are some interesting quotes from the book:


“Motion pictures are often invoked as major factors in turning ordinary women’s cosmetic use into normative, indeed indispensable, components of public femininity rather than signs of moral looseness or depravity.” 

“any application of color or shading was likely to read as a dark blotch or a stark line. Filmmakers working with orthochromatic were therefore unable to employ either foundation or rouge to represent basic states like robust health, a tan, youth, or a bloom on the cheeks. (As Kevin Brownlow remarks, silent actors are ‘strangely pale; there are no olive skins or tanned complexions’ because of the amount of greasepaint and powder used.)” 

Robert Stack wrote in his autobiography “of the efforts studio head Jack Pierce and the ‘makeup boys’ at Universal made to turn him into a ‘young Robert Taylor’ for his first starring role, opposite Deanna Durbin, in 1939, which included darkening and straightening Stack’s hair and giving him a hair lace widow’s peak.”

Lauren Bacall, a former model, had to elicit Howard Hawks’s help to keep Perc Westmore from straightening her teeth, plucking her eyebrows, shaving her hairline and in general ‘redesign[ing her] face’ for her first test in 1943 for To Have and Have Not.” [Hawks wanted her exactly as she was.]

“It was the first stop of the day for most if not all Hollywood actors and makeup artists and hairdressers became some stars’ trusted, and often influential, friends and companions. This was certainly the case with Rita Hayworth and Robert Schiffer and hairdresser Helen Hunt; Barbara Stanwyck and her hairdresser Hollis Barnes; and Marlene Dietrich, Joan Blondell, and Judy Garland and Dot Ponedel.”

“According to [Donald] Bogle, actor Herb Jeffries, who ‘had experimented with makeup for Black Americans,’ also had a substantial impact on the looks of [Lena] Horne and Dorothy Dandridge in their films and personal appearances, although white makeup artists worked on both.”

Cary Grant made himself very tan so he could avoid the use of cosmetics for his films. For North by Northwest (1959), “Eva Marie Saint had to wear foundation, according to [makeup artist William] Tuttle, ‘probably two or three shades darker than we’d put on the average man to get a closer relationship between the two.’”

"[Esther Williams] had to look perfectly groomed underwater as well as on dry land… The body makeup that WIlliam Tuttle eventually settled upon for Williams, a mica-laced powder with the salubrious name of Texas Dirt… Ultimately simple Vaseline mixed with baby oil (Sydney Guilaroff later claimed it was olive oil) was used for the maintenance of her hair in studio tanks and pools."

One of the most famous of Lena Horne’s stories about her early days at MGM in the 1940s has to do with the Max Factor company’s development of a ‘Light Egyptian’ Pan-Cake especially for her (there were other shades of ‘Egyptian’ as well), which Horne claims was instead used on white actors (like Ava Gardner as Julie LaVerne in Show Boat) who were taking roles that Horne herself was not allowed to play."

“The long scar on her left cheek that Carole Lombard suffered as the result of a 1926 automobile accident was acknowledged in interviews and fan magazines at the time, but disguised by makeup as well as careful framing in her films and publicity photos.”

In Mary Astor’s book A Life on Film she wrote “There was eyebrow shadow, brown, and mascara, black and then something that was called ‘cosmetique,’ a black cake of guck that was melted over a spirit lamp and then applied to the ends of the eyelashes with a match or a toothpick. This was ‘beading’: It accomplished what false eyelashes do today…”

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

New & Upcoming Classic Film Books (12)

New year, new books! I'm excited to present to you another classic film book round-up. There are so many new releases that I had to be a tad more selective this time. I didn't include some of the higher priced scholarly books and kept mostly to trade and books that I thought you all would be interested in. If you think I overlooked an important title, let me know and I'm happy to add it in!

Are you new to my list? Here are the details. Links lead to Goodreads or buy pages where you can order or pre-order the title. Books include biographies, memoirs, scholary texts, coffee table books and more from a variety of publishers. Publication dates range from January to July and these are subject to change. Using my buy links helps support this site. Thank you!

If you want to hear me chatting about classic film books (and why wouldn't you?) I was a special guest on two episodes of The Movie Palace Podcast including one recorded with the host Carl Sweeney, Classic Film Books episode, and one recorded with Carl and my good friend Vanessa, Gift Ideas episode.

Now on to the books...


A Kid’s History of the Movie Image From Dawn of Time to About 1939
by Jennifer Churchill
CreateSpace
33 pages – Available Now
AmazonOfficial Website




by Murray Pomerance
SUNY Press
274 pages – January 2019




The Man Behind Creepy, Vampirella, And Famous Monsters
by Bill Schelly
Fantagraphics
272 pages – January 2019



Fighting Words, Moving Pictures
by Adina Hoffman
Yale University Press
264 pages – February 2019




A Biography of Vivien Leigh
by Alan Strachan
I.B.Tauris
336 pages – February 2019




by Ralph Hancock and Letitia Fairbanks
Lyons Press
296 pages – February 2019



A Hollywood Memoir
by Victoria Riskin
Pantheon Books
416 pages – February 2019



by Jan Wahl and Morgana Wallace
Penny Candy Books
36 pages – February 2019




edited by Martin F. Norden
University Press of Mississippi
272 pages – February 2019




American Silent Cinema and the Utopian Imagination
by Ryan Jay Friedman
Rutgers University Press
232 pages – February 2019


Creating Marilyn Monroe
by Amanda Konkle
Rutgers University Press
280 pages – February 2019




Sam Peckinpah, a Revolution in Hollywood, and the Making of a Legendary Film
by W. K. Stratton
Bloomsbury Publishing
352 pages – February 2019


A Century of Screen Sex Scandals
by Nigel Blundell
Pen and Sword History
176 pages – February 2019



by Patrick McGilligan
Harper
640 pages – March 2019



The Hidden Environmental Costs of the Movies
by Hunter Vaughn
Columbia University Press
265 pages – March 2019



All That's Left to Know About the Provocateur of Bad Taste
by Dale Sherman
Applause Theatre & Cinema Books
400 pages – March 2019



Quick Takes
Dahlia Schweitzer
Rutger University Press
188 pages – March 2019




The Influence on Costume and Set Design
by Lora Ann Sigler
McFarland
162 pages – March 2019



Iconoclastic Writer and Militant Zionist
by Julien Gorbach
Purdue University Press
484 pages – March 2019




Shooting a Masterpiece
by Christopher Frayling and Angleo Novi
Reel Art Press
336 pages – March 2019



Sinatra of the Seine, My Dad Eddie Constantine
by Tanya Constantine
Feral House
202 pages – March 2019


More than a Scarecrow
by Holly Van Leuven
Oxford University Press
256 pages – March 2019
AmazonBarnes and Noble 



Smile
How Young Charlie Chaplin Taught the World to Laugh (and Cry)
by Gary Golio and Ed Young
Candlewick Press
48 pages – March 2019
Amazon – Barnes and Noble – Powells




The Phenomenology of Spectacle
by James Phillips
Oxford University Press
136 pages – March 2019



Betty Comden & Adolph Green’s Musicals and Movies
by Andy Propst
Oxford University Press
288 pages – March 2019



Quick Takes
by Rebecca Bell-Metereau
Rutgers University Press
130 pages – March 2019




Performing the Modern
by Shirley Jennifer Limv Temple University Press
262 pages – April 2019


Audrey Hepburn and World War II
by Robert Matzen
GoodKnight Books
400 pages – April 2019




The Pre-Code Era (1930-1934): When Sin Rules the Movies
by Mark A. Vieira
Turner Classic Movies and Running Press
256 pages – April 2019



An Illustrated History of Women and the Movies
by Jill Tietjen and Barbara Bridges
Lyons Press
400 pages– April 2019





by Caroline Jones
Carlton Publishing Group
160 pages – April 2019


Lady Triumphant
by Victoria Amador
University Press of Kentucky
406 pages – April 2019


An Animal Rights Memoir
by Brigitte Bardot with Anne Cecile Huprelle
Arcade
200 pages – April 2019


Every Film, Every Role
by Ellen Cheshire
Sonicbond Publishing
144 pages – May 2019


25 Movies to Make You Film Literate
by Vincent Lobrutto
Praeger
299 pages – May 2019




Life, Death, Love, Art, and Scandal at Hollywood’s Chateau Marmont
by Shawn Levy
Doubleday
384 pages – May 2019



Duke's Solutions to Life's Challenges
by the editors of the Official John Wayne Magazine
Media Lab Books
224 pages – May 2019



The Films of a Hollywood Giant
by Neil Sinyard
McFarland
238 pages – May 2019



The Corleone Family Cookbook
by Liliana Battle and Stacey Tyzzer
Insight Editions
208 pages – May 2019



by John Billheimer
University Press of Kentucky
360 pages – May 2019
AmazonBarnes and Noble




The Stars, the Films, the Filmmakers
by Donald Bogle
Turner Classic Movies and Running Press
264 pages – May 2019



by James L. Neibaur
McFarland
134 pages – May 2019



Actress and Humanitarian, from The 39 Steps to the Red Cross
by John Pascoe
McFarland
208 pages – May 2019



Every Movie, Every Star
by Sam Proctor
Sonicbond Publishing
144 pages – May 2019



A Life of John Buchan
by Ursual Buchan
Bloomsbury Publishing
496 pages – June 2019


Exquisite Ironies and Magnificent Obsessions
by Tom Ryan
University Press of Mississippi
320 pages – June 2019



A Contrarian History of American Screen Comedy from Silent Slapstick to Screwball
by David Kalat
McFarland
247 pages – June 2019


50 Leading Ladies Who Made History
by Sloan De Forest
Turner Classic Movies and Running Press
248 pages – July 2019


The Gabors Behind the Legend
by Sam Staggs
Kensington
352 pages – July 2019



A Remarkable Woman
by Anne Edwards
Lyons Press
448 pages – July 2019


Inspiration from the Goddess of Glam
by Michelle Morgan
Running Press
208 pages – July 2019


Movie Culture in the Age of Reagan
by J. Hoberman
The New Press
400 pages – July 2019


Displaying the Moving Image, 1926-1942
by Ariel Rogers
Columbia University Press
288 pages – July 2019


Male Beauty, Masculinity, and Stardom in Hollywood
by Gillian Kelly
University Press of Mississippi
224 pages – July 2019


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