Monday, May 30, 2011

Ingrid Bergman, style inspiration.

In Casablanca, Ingrid Bergman looks flawless in her classic skirt suits, luxurious hats and majestic gowns. Her look is simple, elegant and perfect for the Moroccan heat.
A white flowey dress, finished off with a brooch and a chifon scarf. The more creative amongst you could  put this together with some white chifon and a few stitches.
A classic skirt suit and hat. Check charity shops, your grannies wardrobe and for the hat Pennys and Dunnes, cheap and cheerful.
To recreate this look, wear a simple white dress with a nautical top underneath and top of with a sun hat. Anything white with a nautical scarf would look just as lovely.
For the full on 1940s look, search second hand and vintage shops for dresses with a full skirt that goes below the knee,with  a cinched waist, short sleeves and only a hint of cleevage.
One of the simplest outfits to re-create is also one of the most  elegant. Pair a white chiffon blouse with a pencil skirt. Add heels to go from secretary to chic.

How to wear a hat

fedora.jpg
What better excuse for dressing up and working on your swagger  than emulating Bogey at Saturdays screening of Casablanca.  The outfit of choice for private detectives, gangsters, or other "tough guy" roles in 1940s films was a mac and a fedora and Rick Blaine's ensemeble in Casablanca is by far the most famous. Mac's can be found in charity shops or by asking lovely grandads, beige jackets are far better for dancing but the most important part of the look is the fedora so here's a few tips on how to wear a hat like the worlds most famous fedora wearer, Frank Sinatra. 


Hats are both functional and stylish. They can cover a bad hair day, keep your head warm, and shade your eyes from the sun. They can also be worn to cover a receding hairline. They give you touch of class and sophistication, impart personality, and add an interesting and unique accent to your outfits. And hats are a sure-fire way to boost your confidence. A cool hat can quickly become your signature piece and give you extra swagger.

How to wear a hat
.
 
Hats can give you a feeling of effortless cool and manly confidence. Few people loved hats more, or wore them better than Frank Sinatra. He was constantly playing with the idea of angling and tilting his hat to convey different attitudes. Here’s how Frank wore his hat to reflect his mood:
  • Wear your hat pushed back to seem more open and accessible
  • Tilt your hat over your eyes to seem mysterious and intimidating
  • Tilt your hat up 1 inch from completely straight to project an all-business attitude

Hat Etiquette 

In adopting the hat as your signature piece, you must also accept the responsibility of hat etiquette. Often ignored, hat etiquette will show that your uniqueness extends not only to you choice of headwear, but to your manners as well.


  • Promptly remove your hat upon entering an elevator, restaurant, or someone’s home. Never wear your hat during a meal.
  • Touch the brim of your hat lightly when greeting a friend.
  • Raise the hat by the crown when meeting a female friend in public.
  • Remove your hat during the national anthem and place it over your heart.
http://artofmanliness.com/ 


Need a cheap Fedora: Pennys €5

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

1940s Makeup

The defined style for makeup in the 1940's was glamour! A full luscious mouth and more prominent eyebrows, getting away from the pencil thin look of the 1930's. Eye makeup was kept to the minimum with very little shadow. Mascara was the main accessory. Topped off with long hair,either let down or in a stylish Updo.



1. 1940's makeup - Foundation

Usually a slightly darker tone to your natural color.
But if you're trying to recreate the 1940's look, just use your
normal foundation and get a flawless base to begin with.


2. 1940's Makeup - Face Powder

A light rose / pinkish tinted color

Rouge
Red with pink undertones,
Pink with fuchsia undertones .
Apply to the top of the cheekbone and brush towards the temples.
A trangle effect !


3. Eye makeup of the 1940's

Starting with full but well plucked eyebrows to give a pronounced arch!
Brush with a matte shadow in a colour near to your own and finish
with a touch of vaseline or petroleum jelly for that glistening Hollywood sheen.
Define the arch to a sharp point with a pencil.

Soft Cream base for the eyelids [ MAC makeup is just perfect to recreate the
classic 1940's eye].
Shadow the socket but but avoid the browbone.
Finish off with brown liquid eyeliner on the upper lid,sweeping up in an arch for that
glam effect and then oodles of Black mascara on the top lashes..

4. Vintage Lipstick Colours of the 1940's


The 1940s was the golden age for lip makeup.
and the emphasis was to create a larger fuller look.


The 1940's Lipstick colour Plan


The Mono Tone

Light Reds
Fuchsia
Pink Red
Orange Red






The Contrast Tone
Deep Red
Brick Red
Mahogany
Crimson
Cherry Red

 
5. Vintage Nail Polish Colours of the 1940's

Just about any colour goes - as long as it matched your clothing.
So you could apply Navy Blue / Green/Yellow/Black - an endless choice here.


Copyright - http://glamourdaze.blogspot.com/

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Roger Ebert on Casablanca


If we identify strongly with the characters in some movies, then it is no mystery that ``Casablanca'' is one of the most popular films ever made. It is about a man and a woman who are in love, and who sacrifice love for a higher purpose. This is immensely appealing; the viewer is not only able to imagine winning the love of Humphrey Bogart or Ingrid Bergman, but unselfishly renouncing it, as a contribution to the great cause of defeating the Nazis.

No one making ``Casablanca'' thought they were making a great movie. It was simply another Warner Bros. release. It was an ``A list'' picture, to be sure (Bogart, Bergman and Paul Henreid were stars, and no better cast of supporting actors could have been assembled on the Warners lot than Peter Lorre, Sidney Greenstreet, Claude Rains and Dooley Wilson). But it was made on a tight budget and released with small expectations. Everyone involved in the film had been, and would be, in dozens of other films made under similar circumstances, and the greatness of ``Casablanca'' was largely the result of happy chance.
The screenplay was adapted from a play of no great consequence; memoirs tell of scraps of dialogue jotted down and rushed over to the set. What must have helped is that the characters were firmly established in the minds of the writers, and they were characters so close to the screen personas of the actors that it was hard to write dialogue in the wrong tone.
Humphrey Bogart played strong heroic leads in his career, but he was usually better as the disappointed, wounded, resentful hero. Remember him in ``The Treasure of the Sierra Madre,'' convinced the others were plotting to steal his gold. In ``Casablanca,'' he plays Rick Blaine, the hard-drinking American running a nightclub in Casablanca when Morocco was a crossroads for spies, traitors, Nazis and the French Resistance.
The opening scenes dance with comedy; the dialogue combines the cynical with the weary; wisecracks with epigrams. We see that Rick moves easily in a corrupt world. ``What is your nationality?'' the German Strasser asks him, and he replies, ``I'm a drunkard.'' His personal code: ``I stick my neck out for nobody.''
Then ``of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine.'' It is Ilsa Lund (Bergman), the woman Rick loved years earlier in Paris. Under the shadow of the German occupation, he arranged their escape, and believes she abandoned him--left him waiting in the rain at a train station with their tickets to freedom. Now she is with Victor Laszlo (Henreid), a legendary hero of the French Resistance.
All this is handled with great economy in a handful of shots that still, after many viewings, have the power to move me emotionally as few scenes ever have. The bar's piano player, Sam (Wilson), a friend of theirs in Paris, is startled to see her. She asks him to play the song that she and Rick made their own, ``As Time Goes By.'' He is reluctant, but he does, and Rick comes striding angrily out of the back room (``I thought I told you never to play that song!''). Then he sees Ilsa, a dramatic musical chord marks their closeups, and the scene plays out in resentment, regret and the memory of a love that was real. (This scene is not as strong on a first viewing as on subsequent viewings, because the first time you see the movie you don't yet know the story of Rick and Ilsa in Paris; indeed, the more you see it the more the whole film gains resonance.)
The plot, a trifle to hang the emotions on, involves letters of passage that will allow two people to leave Casablanca for Portugal and freedom. Rick obtained the letters from the wheedling little black-marketeer Ugarte (Peter Lorre). The sudden reappearance of Ilsa reopens all of his old wounds, and breaks his carefully cultivated veneer of neutrality and indifference. When he hears her story, he realizes she has always loved him. But now she is with Laszlo. Rick wants to use the letters to escape with Ilsa, but then, in a sustained sequence that combines suspense, romance and comedy as they have rarely been brought together on the screen, he contrives a situation in which Ilsa and Laszlo escape together, while he and his friend the police chief (Claude Rains) get away with murder. (``Round up the usual suspects.'')
What is intriguing is that none of the major characters is bad. Some are cynical, some lie, some kill, but all are redeemed. If you think it was easy for Rick to renounce his love for Ilsa--to place a higher value on Laszlo's fight against Nazism--remember Forster's famous comment, ``If I were forced to choose between my country and my friend, I hope I would be brave enough to choose my friend.''
From a modern perspective, the film reveals interesting assumptions. Ilsa Lund's role is basically that of a lover and helpmate to a great man; the movie's real question is, which great man should she be sleeping with? There is actually no reason why Laszlo cannot get on the plane alone, leaving Ilsa in Casablanca with Rick, and indeed that is one of the endings that was briefly considered. But that would be all wrong; the ``happy'' ending would be tarnished by self-interest, while the ending we have allows Rick to be larger, to approach nobility (``it doesn't take much to see that the problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world''). And it allows us, vicariously experiencing all of these things in the theater, to warm in the glow of his heroism.
In her closeups during this scene, Bergman's face reflects confusing emotions. And well she might have been confused, since neither she nor anyone else on the film knew for sure until the final day who would get on the plane. Bergman played the whole movie without knowing how it would end, and this had the subtle effect of making all of her scenes more emotionally convincing; she could not tilt in the direction she knew the wind was blowing.
Stylistically, the film is not so much brilliant as absolutely sound, rock-solid in its use of Hollywood studio craftsmanship. The director, Michael Curtiz, and the writers (Julius J. Epstein, Philip G. Epstein and Howard Koch) all won Oscars. One of their key contributions was to show us that Rick, Ilsa and the others lived in a complex time and place. The richness of the supporting characters (Greenstreet as the corrupt club owner, Lorre as the sniveling cheat, Rains as the subtly homosexual police chief and minor characters like the young girl who will do anything to help her husband) set the moral stage for the decisions of the major characters. When this plot was remade in 1990 as ``Havana,'' Hollywood practices required all the big scenes to feature the big stars (Robert Redford and Lena Olin) and the film suffered as a result; out of context, they were more lovers than heroes.
Seeing the film over and over again, year after year, I find it never grows over-familiar. It plays like a favorite musical album; the more I know it, the more I like it. The black-and-white cinematography has not aged as color would. The dialogue is so spare and cynical it has not grown old-fashioned. Much of the emotional effect of ``Casablanca'' is achieved by indirection; as we leave the theater, we are absolutely convinced that the only thing keeping the world from going crazy is that the problems of three little people do after all amount to more than a hill of beans. 
Roger Ebert / September 15, 1996

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Film Fatale presents a 1940s night of cinema nostalgia with “Casablanca”


 Movie lovers, put on your glad rags and step back in time for a nostalgic Saturday night at the movies where you will immerse yourself in the world of your favourite classic films. On Saturday the 4th of June,  The Sugar Club will be transformed into Rick's Café Américain for a screening of one of the world’s all-time favourite films Casablanca.

A screening of Casablanca will be followed by a Moroccan-themed 1940s after-party with “As Time Goes By’ on the piano and DJs, the Andrews Sisters’ Brothers, playing music from the era. The audience is invited to help set the scene by dressing in their vintage finest, playing homage to 1940s Hollywood or going all out with a military or Moroccan theme.

Ilsa (Ingrid Bergman) must find safe transport out of  WWII Morocco for herself and her resistance leader husband Victor Laszlo (Paul Henreid). With the Nazis hot on their trail, her only hope is old love, Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart), an American expatriate and war profiteer who runs Rick’s Cafe. 

Join in with the battle of the National anthems, quote along with some of the finest dialogue in movie history, and get swept up by the greatest romance of all time. An ageless film that gets better with every viewing, there is no better way to watch Casablanca than with a cocktail in our own version of Rick’s Bar.


Dublin’s bi-monthly film event Film Fatale is all about glamorous movies and old-fashioned fun, transporting audiences back to the golden age of cinema. Screening the crème de la crème of classic films in the sumptuous surroundings of the Sugar Club, this night of cinema nostalgia and old-style Hollywood glamour mirrors the style of the films being screened.


Saturday the 4th of June at 8pm, The Sugar Club, 8 Lower Lesson Street, Dublin 2.  Tickets €15 are available at www.tickets.ie.  After-party from 11pm with tickets at the door (€5).