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Making Up the Star: Makeup, Femininity, Race and Ageing in Hollywood: British Film Institute

Autor Cathy Lomax
en Limba Engleză Hardback – iul 2027
This book examines the integral role that makeup plays in the construction and promotion of female stardom, focusing on the transitional Hollywood period, between 1950 and 1970, a time of great change in Hollywood with the advent of television, the break-up of the studios and the break-down of the production code. Cathy Lomax's compelling study features in-depth case studies of stars Vivien Leigh, Marilyn Monroe, Natalie Wood, Dorothy Dandridge and Joan Crawford alongside archival images of make-up promotional material and the make up used by stars and their fans to interrogate the role of makeup in defining and adjusting the appearance of race, beauty, ageing, naturalness, and sexual appeal in the star image. Makeup is a vital technical material in film and photography; correcting skin-tones for different film stocks and making features visible under bright lights. But it is also a component of a film's mise-en-scene, intrinsically linked to the visual allure of cinema and helps to shape and refine the female star image, both on- and off-screen. Lomax's case studies show how makeup was used to create female figures such as the femme fatale played by Marilyn Monroe in Niagara (1953); how in various roles Natalie Wood's makeup was used to suggest a youthful, natural and openly sexual young woman, or, when as a white actress she was cast in 'ethnic' roles, to create an impression of a Hispanic, Native American or Black identity; how Dorothy Dandridge's light skin challenged codes around inter-racial relationships, with the result that her skin was darkened for love scenes with Black actors, and how the transition to colour impacted Joan Crawford's star persona as she aged, and how ideas about the grotesque nature of female ageing were represented in the 1960s cycle of 'hag horror' movies such as 1962's Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?
Drawing on film studies, feminist debates on masquerade theory, celebrity studies and fashion and cultural studies, alongside information from biographies, fan magazines, archives, and practical experience from her own work as a makeup artist, Lomax reveals the vital and under-examined role that makeup plays in the display of femininity on film, and how this is exemplified through the construction of individuated stardom. By making visible a material, that because of its connection with feminine adornment has been overlooked or disregarded, this book highlights undervalued labour, and foregrounds the female agency that was articulated by the design and application of makeup.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781839028762
ISBN-10: 1839028769
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 60 colour illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția British Film Institute
Seria British Film Institute

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Introduction: Makeup and Stardom
Chapter 1: The Industrial History of Screen Makeup

Chapter 2: Screen Beauty
Part 1: Beauty and the Shifting Face of Stardom
Part 2: Vivien Leigh - Right and Good

Chapter 3: Disguise and Transformation
Part 1: The Masquerade of Femininity
Part 2: Marilyn Monroe - Lacquered Lips and Makeup Tricks

Chapter 4: Natural Vs Artificial
Part 1: Changing Attitudes and Changing Styles
Part 2: Natalie Wood - Style and Substance


Chapter 5: Ascribing, Performing and Ignoring Race
Part 1: Making-Up Racial Identity
Part 2: Dorothy Dandridge - Flawless, Exotic and Invisible

Chapter 6: The Ageing Star Face
Part 1: Continuing a Career in a Youthquake
Part 2: Joan Crawford - From Silent Star to Super Phenomenal Woman

Concluding Thoughts
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index