Wednesday, 29 March 2023

Valley of the Dolls (1967)

Costume Design by:

- Travilla ( notable efforts: Adventures of Don Juan (1948), Don't Bother to Knock (1952), Gentlemen Prefer Blonds (1953), The Seven Year Itch (1955), and several more of Marilyn Monroe's films )

A sordid story of how showbiz grinds its stars into the dirt, Valley of the Dolls is still renowned as a 'camp classic' even though I personally found it rather heavy in some ways! I can only be reminded of 1981's Mommie Dearest, another film with a reputation of being campy nonsense despite being a pretty grim film under the Hollywood glamour. Perhaps it is the wonderfully glitzy costume design that is to thank for Valley's reputation, as Hollywood costume designer Travilla was assigned to design the women's dresses, and given this is a film all about Hollywood, who better to design the fashions than a Hollywood costume designer?

The plot focuses on three unlucky (not that they know it at first...) girls who all get to taste fame, with most of the film's depressing events happening to the singer Neely O'Hara (Patty Duke), whose first dress upon reaching stardom is this golden mesh design.

Neely's next outfit is this sparkly white coat, worn with shiny stockings and boots as well.
Neely is next seen wearing another sparkly white dress made up of a diamond pattern material, though this one is obscured by the black furred coat she wears over it.
Neely seems to prefer wearing white, as the dress she wears when returning to Broadway is also white, this one being a fairly more simple design made of a ruffled material.
When about to be booted from Broadway yet again, Neely wears this rather more simple black and white top, the white section being a downward-pointing triangle - she also wears striped trousers and a polka-dot headscarf with it.
Neely's last dress bucks the trend of her wearing mostly white, as this is a very snazzy bottle-green striped top with a short brown vinyl skirt, though again mostly obscured thanks to being worn under a coat - you frankly see it better from it being held up on the wall!
It should also be worth noting the outfits of the dancers, one of whome has replaced Neely in her final Broadway appearance, these being dresses spoofing sailor uniforms, with shiny blue trim.
The second of the women to experience the evils of fame is Jennifer North (Sharon Tate, who also did some photoshoots wearing the film's costumes), who is first seen as a variety dancer, wearing a black leotard and wonderfully ornate headpiece with trailing blue feathers attached.
Jennifer then is seen wearing this chevron-patterned silvery dress, to the fateful musical performance where she meets her lover.
Jennifer is next seen wearing this lovely jacket, made of a shiny material and patterned in silver, copper and white in horizontal bands. This may be one of my personal favorites of Travilla's costume designs for the film.
Under the jacket, Jennifer wears a dress that is of the same material and pattern as the coat!
The luckiest of the three women (in comparison to the others, anyway) is Anne Welles (Barbara Parkins), a secretary who ends up in the showbiz world when she's made to star in adverts for a cosmetics company, and wears a good few lovely dresses in said adverts, none of which get much screentime sadly. The most notable of the dresses she wears as the 'Gillian Girl' is this beautiful sequined dress that feels like a precursor to Bob Mackie's flamboyant dress designs!
There are several other dresses worn in the 'Gillian Girl' adverts, all of them seen only far too briefly - one of them wasn't even seen in the adverts, instead being worn by an extra!
Another dress of Parkins', that is sadly barely seen on-screen, is this red and white design with a polka-dot patterned top segment and frilly-bottomed red skirt.
Acting as a sort of enemy towards Neely is Helen Lawson (Susan Hayward), a Broadway star and diva who gives O'Hara a good deal of grief at the film's start. Helen was originally meant to be played by Judy Garland, though she was fired after doing a few costume tests (which have been uploaded on Youtube) - the first notable outfits she wears is seen during her musical performance, and is a sequined number with a silvery belt, collar and cuffs, with a silver star badge near the collar. The character is usually seen with these star badges possibly as a joke that she's obsessed with how she's, well, a star! It should be worth noting that after Hayward replaced Garland, some of the costumes were altered - notice how the collar is different between how it looks in the Garland costume test versus when Hayward wears it in the actual film.
The second of Helen's notable outfits is this green gown with golden lining that itself has beaded tassles along the edges. In the Judy Garland costume test video though, this gown is the same design but is orange instead of green?
Now, I saved the best for the last - yep, it's the iconic glittery sequined copper pantsuit, worn by Helen in a particularly embarrassing encounter with Neely, and my goodness doesn't this just define the word 'glitz' on its own? Judy Garland was given the original pantsuit, which she then wore to one of her last New York concerts in 1967, and it still exists today thanks to Larry McQueen's Collection of Motion Picture Costume Design. To quote Larry McQueen about the redundancy of a star badge over such a shiny ensemble, 'You can never have too much bling!'.

Saturday, 18 March 2023

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)

Costume Design by:

- Deborah Everton ( notable efforts: The Abyss (1989), Highlander II: The Quickening (1991), The Osiris Chronicles (1998), Dick (1999), Spy Kids (2001) )

- Robert Blackman ( notable efforts: The Running Man (1987), Star Trek: The Next Generation (Seasons 3 to 7), Deep Space Nine (1993 - 1999), Voyager (1995 - 2001), Enterprise (2001 - 2005), Pushing Daisies (2007 - 2009), Mockingbird Lane (2012) )

Note: Blackman was the designer for the new Starfleet uniforms, whilst Everton was assigned to the rest of the characters. However, Everton enlisted costume illustrator Gina DeDomenico to help realize her ideas for the costumes, and these designs do all feel indebted to Blackman's various costume designs for the then-ongoing television series Deep Space Nine and Voyager.

This more particularly 'gritty' film entry of the Star Trek saga did a way with the more colourful costume design sense of the main shows and previous films, with a new Starfleet uniform being designed by Bob Blackman to help set the tone - this new uniforms is the same general design as the rather simplistic one he had designed for Deep Space 9 and Voyager, but this time has ribbed grey panelling over the shoulders, with the gold/red/green ranking style being on the undershirt instead. This feels more militaristic than previous Starfleet uniform designs, setting the tone for this more gung-ho movie as well as the more military scifi tone of Deep Space 9, which reused these uniforms plenty.
This new Starfleet uniform design comes with a new style of officer uniform (again, designed by Blackman) that would be seen in the follow-up films Star Trek: Insurrection and Star Trek: Nemesis, as well as Deep Space 9 - this design is a buttonless officer's jacket with gold lining down the middle, and the same grey ribbed panelling on the shoulders, with gold-lined bands on the cuffs.
Lastly for the redesigned Starfleet uniforms (that would also see plenty of reuse in Deep Space Nine) is this vest with the same ribbed grey padding over the shoulders, worn by Picard in this film and Sisko in DS9 - once again, I feel this was probably Blackman's design work.
The actual plot of First Contact involves time travelling to the 21st century after it had been decimated by nuclear war, so most of the humans are just in tatty contemporary garb though the Enterprise's crew adopt the local fashion to fit in. Designed by DeDomenico and Everton, the latter bringing her rather more muted and utilitarian design sense, these are still definitely indebted to Bob Blackman's design sense, with more unusual fabric textures, short sharp cuts, high waists and asymmetrical patterns to be seen here. The most striking outfit among the 'contemporary' disguises that looks a bit futuristic is worn by LaForge, whose wears trousers with a large brown waist strip and a red vest with circular patterns around one sleeve.
The rest of the Enterprises crew wear a variety of jackets and vests that have little futuristic touches, such as Reginald Barclay's (Dwight Schultz) having straps over his vest, Troi having a patterned vest under a rather short waistcoat, and Data and Riker's jackets having epaulette-like strips on the shoulders. These costume display photos in particular came from the Star Trek: Auctions, Props and Wardrobe facebook page, which I hope they do not mind being reposted here. This also counts for the outfit worn by the less than hopeful inventor Zefram Cochrane (James Cromwell), who wears a vest over his overalls, the vest covered in a patterned fabric that feels like Native American textile designs. Notice that his hat has metal studs around the sides as well.
Another notable 21st century outfit (though this isn't quite AS dreary enough as actual modern fashion, so who knows) is the brown shirt and green-lined vest worn by Lily Sloane (Alfre Woodard). I could mention the 1930s dress she wears in the holodeck sequence, but I won't partly as it's never seen in full, partly because I think it's kind of ugly, sorry.
Lastly for the futuristic outfits are the robes worn by the Vulcans that arrive making the 'first contact' of the film's title - these are also inspired by Blackman's design sense, with the curved segment of ridged material going over one side.