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Bohemian style

The Bohemian style, often termed 'Boho chic', is a fashion and lifestyle choice characterized by its unconventional and free-spirited essence. While its precise origins are debated, Bohemian style is believed to have been influenced by the nomadic lifestyle of the Romani people during the late 19th century to the early 20th century. The term 'Bohemian' itself derives from the French 'Bohémien,' originally associated with the Roma community due to a historical misconception that they originated from Bohemia, a region in the Czech Republic.[1]

Young Bohémienne: Natalie Clifford Barney (1875–1972) at the age of 10 (painting by Carolus-Duran)

Throughout history, Bohemian fashion has undergone significant transformations, reflecting the cultural shifts and influences of each era. Today, contemporary Bohemian fashion embraces flowing fabrics, vibrant colors, and natural, woven materials instead of knits. This style draws inspiration from various sources, including the counterculture movements of the 1960s and 1970s, reminiscent of the attire worn by attendees of the inaugural Woodstock music festival.[1]

The Bohemian style has achieved global popularity, appealing to individuals seeking a unique and individualistic approach to fashion and lifestyle. It encourages a sense of freedom and self-expression, often attracting those who prefer to live unconventionally, sometimes in a nomadic manner, and who may reside in colonies or communes, fostering a strong sense of community.

Early 19th century and the role of women edit

The Bohemian subculture has been closely affiliated with predominantly male artists and intellectuals. The female counterparts have been closely connected with the Grisettes, young women who combined part-time prostitution with various other occupations. In the first quarter of the 19th century, the term "grisette" also referred to independent young women. They often worked as seamstresses or milliner's assistants and frequented Bohemian artistic and cultural venues in Paris. Many grisettes worked as artist models, often providing sexual favors to the artists in addition to posing for them. During the time of King Louis-Philippe, they came to dominate the Bohemian modeling scene.

Due to the role and influence they had on 19th century French art, the grisette became a frequent character in French fiction. However, the grisettes have been mentioned as early as in 1730 by Jonathan Swift. The term "grisette" in poetry signified qualities of both flirtatiousness and intellectual aspiration. George du Maurier based large parts of Trilby on his experiences as a student in Parisian Bohemia during the 1850s. Poe's 1842 story was based on the unsolved murder of Mary Cecilia Rogers near New York City, subtitled "A Sequel to 'The Murders in the Rue Morgue'". It was the first fictional detective story to attempt to provide a real solution to a real crime. The most enduring grisette is Mimi in Henri Murger's novel (and subsequent play) Scènes de la vie de Bohème, the source for Puccini's famous opera La bohème.

Pre-Raphaelites edit

 
Jane Morris painted by Dante Gabriel Rossetti as Proserpine (1874)

In 1848 William Makepeace Thackeray used the word Bohemianism in his novel Vanity Fair. In 1862, the Westminster Review described a Bohemian as "simply an artist or littérateur who, consciously or unconsciously, secedes from conventionality in life and in art". During the 1860s the term was associated in particular with the Pre-Raphaelite movement, the group of artists and aesthetes of which Dante Gabriel Rossetti was the most prominent:[2]

As the 1860s progressed, Rossetti would become the grand prince of Bohemianism as his deviations from normal standards became more audacious. He then became this epitome of the unconventional, his egocentric demands necessarily required his close friends to remodel their own lives around him. His Bohemianism was like a web in which others became trapped – none more so than William and Jane Morris.[3]

Jane Morris, Edward Burne-Jones, and Pre-Raphaelite traits edit

Jane Morris, who was to become Rossetti's muse, epitomized, probably more than any of the women associated with the pre-Raphaelites, an unrestricted, flowing style of dress that, while unconventional at the time, would be highly influential at certain periods during the 20th century.[4] She and others, including the much less outlandish Georgiana Burne-Jones (wife of Edward Burne-Jones,[5] one of the later pre-Raphaelites), eschewed the corsets and crinolines of the mid-to-late Victorian era,[6] a feature that impressed the American writer Henry James when he wrote to his sister in 1869 of the bohemian atmosphere of the Morrises' house in the Bloomsbury district of London and, in particular, the "dark silent medieval" presence of its chatelaine:

It's hard to say whether she's a grand synthesis of all the pre-Raphaelite pictures ever made … whether she's an original or a copy. In either case, she's a wonder. Imagine a tall, lean woman in a long dress of some dead purple stuff, guiltless of hoops (or of anything else I should say) with a mass of crisp black hair heaped into great wavy projections on each of her temples … a long neck, without any collar, and in lieu thereof some dozen strings of outlandish beads.[7]

 
Effie Gray by Thomas Richmond

In his play Pygmalion (1912) Bernard Shaw unmistakably based the part of Mrs. Higgins on the then elderly Jane Morris. He described Mrs. Higgins' drawing room, he referred to a portrait of her "when she defied the fashion of her youth in one of the beautiful Rossettian costumes which, when caricatured by people who did not understand, led to the absurdities of popular estheticism [sic] in the eighteen-seventies".[8]

A biographer of Edward Burne-Jones, writing a century after Shaw (Fiona MacCarthy, 2011), has noted that, in 1964, when the influential Biba store was opened in London by Barbara Hulanicki, the "long drooping structureless clothes", though sexier than the dresses portrayed in such Burne-Jones paintings as The Golden Stairs or The Sirens, nevertheless resembled them.[9] The interior of Biba has been described by the biographer of British 20th century designer Laura Ashley as having an atmosphere that "reeked of sex … [It] was designed to look like a bordello with its scarlet, black and gold plush fitments, but, interestingly, it implied an old-fashioned, Edwardian style of forbidden sex with feathered boas, potted palms, bentwood coat racks and dark lighting"[10] MacCarthy observed also that "the androgynous appearance of Burne-Jones's male figures reflected the sexually ambivalent feeling" of the late 1960s.[11]

Early flower power: Effie Millais edit

Effie Gray, whose marriage to John Ruskin was annulled in 1854 before her marrying the pre-Raphaelite painter John Millais, is known to have used flowers as an adornment and probably also as an assertive "statement". While in Scotland with Ruskin (still her husband) and Millais, she gathered foxgloves to place in her hair. She wore them at breakfast, despite being asked by her husband not to do so, a gesture of defiance, at a time of growing crisis in their relationship, that came to the critical notice of Florence Nightingale[12] (who tended to regard others of her sex with "scarcely concealed scorn" and was generally unsympathetic towards "women's rights"[13]). A few weeks earlier, on Midsummer Day, Effie (possibly inspired by Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream) was said by her hostess, Pauline Trevelyan, to have "looked lovely" with stephanotis in her hair at an evening party in Northumberland,[14] while, the previous year, a male friend had brought a vase of flowers for her hair from Venice.[15] Ruskin's father was evidently shocked to learn that, when Effie herself was in Venice, she had removed her bonnet in public, ostensibly because of the heat.[15]

In 1853 Millais painted Effie with Foxgloves in her Hair which depicts her wearing the flowers while doing needlework. Other paintings of the mid-to-late 19th century, such as Frederick Sandys' Love's Shadow (1867) of a girl with a rose in her hair, sucking a sprig of blossom, which was described in 1970 as "a first rate PR job for the Flower People",[16] and Burne-Jones' The Heart of the Rose (1889),[17] have been cited as foreshadowing the "flower power" of the mid-to-late 1960s.

Early 20th century and inter-war years edit

Rational dress and the women's movement edit

 
Franziska Countess zu Reventlow, undated photo, the "Bohemian Countess" of Schwabing

By the turn of the 20th century, an increasing number of professional women, notably in the United States, were attempting to live outside the traditional parameters of society. Between 1870 and 1910, the marriage rate among educated women in the United States fell to 60% (30% lower than the national average). By 1893, in the state of Massachusetts alone, some 300,000 women were earning their own living in nearly 300 occupations. The invention of the typewriter in 1867 was a particular spur. For example, by the turn of the 20th century, 80% of stenographers were women.[18]

By this time, such movements as the Rational Dress Society (1881), with which the Morrises and Georgiana Burne-Jones were involved, were beginning to exercise some influence on women's dress, although the pre-Raphaelite look was still considered "advanced" in the late years of the 19th century.[19] Queen Victoria's precocious daughter Princess Louise, an accomplished painter and artist who mixed in bohemian circles, was sympathetic to rational dress and to the developing women's movement generally (although her rumoured pregnancy at the age of 18 was said to have been disguised by tight corsetry).[20]

However, it was not really until the First World War that "many working women" embarked on a revolution in a fashion that greatly reduced the weight and restrictions imposed on them by their clothing".[21] Some women working in factories wore trousers. The brassiere (invented in 1889 by the feminist Herminie Cadolle[22] and patented in America by Mary Phelps Jacob in 1914) began gradually to supersede the corset.[23] In shipyards "trouser suits" (the term, "pantsuit" was adopted in America in the 1920s) were virtually essential to enable women to shin up and down ladders.[24] Music hall artists also helped to push the boundaries of fashion; these included Vesta Tilley, whose daring adoption on the stage of a well-tailored male dress not only had an influence on men's attire but also foreshadowed to extent styles adopted by some women in the inter-war period. It was widely understood that Tilley sought additional authenticity by wearing male underclothing, although off stage, she was much more conventional in both her dress and general outlook.[25]

By the early 1920s, what had been a wartime expedient, the need to economise on material, had become a statement of freedom by young women. This was manifested by shorter hemlines (just above the knee by 1925–1926)[21] and boyish hairstyles, accompanied by what Robert Graves and Alan Hodge described as "the new fantastic development of Jazz music".[26] At the Antwerp Olympic Games in 1920, the French tennis player Suzanne Lenglen attracted attention with a knee-length skirt that revealed her suspender belt whenever she leaped to smash a ball. From then on, sportswear for women, as with day-to-day clothes, became more free,[27] although, after the Second World War, when the American player Gussie Moran appeared at the Wimbledon championships of 1949 in a short skirt that revealed lace-trimmed panties, the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club accused her of bringing "vulgarity and sin into tennis" and shunned the outfit's designer Teddy Tinling for many years.[28]

The impact of lingerie in the 1920s and 30s edit

The Penguin Social History of Britain noted that "by the 1920s newspapers were filled with advertisements for 'lingerie' and 'undies' which would have been classed as indecent a generation earlier".[29] Thus, in Ben Travers' comic novel Rookery Nook (1923), a young woman evicted from home in her nightwear and requiring day clothes remarked, "Combies. That's all right. But in the summer you know, we don't",[30] while in Agatha Christie's thriller, The Seven Dials Mystery (1929), the aristocratic heroine, Lady "Bundle" Brent, wore only "a negligible trifle" under her dress; like much real life "it girls" of her class, she had been freed from the "genteel expectations" of earlier generations.[31]

In Hollywood the actress Carole Lombard, who, in the 1930s, combined feistiness with sexual allure, never wore a brassière and "avoided panties".[32] However, she famously declared that though "I live by a man's code designed to fit a man's world, at the same time I never forget that a woman's first job is to choose the right shade of lipstick"[33] Coincidentally, sales of men's undershirts fell dramatically in the United States when Lombard's future husband, Clark Gable, was revealed not to be wearing one in a famous motel bedroom scene with Claudette Colbert in the film It Happened One Night (1934). According to Gable, "the idea was looking half-naked and scaring the brat into her own bed on the other side of the blanket [hanging from a clothesline to separate twin beds]". However, he "gave the impression that going without was a vital sign of a man's virility"[34]

More generally, the adoption by the American movie industry of the Hays Production Code in the early 1930s had a significant effect on how moral, and especially sexual, issues were depicted on film. This included a more conservative approach to matters of dress. Whereas the sort of scanty lingerie on show in some earlier productions (for example, Joan Blondell and Barbara Stanwyck in Night Nurse, 1931)[35] had tended to reflect trends that, in the 1920s, defied convention and were regarded by many young women as liberating, by the early years of the Depression such displays came to be regarded quite widely as undesirable. Developments in the late 1960s and 1970s, when the strictures of the code were abandoned, followed a similar pattern, although, by then, it was often women themselves who were in the vanguard of resistance to sexualized imagery.

Looking back at this period, Graves and Hodge noted the protracted course that "daring female fashions had always taken from brothel to stage, then on to Bohemia, to Society, to Society's maids, to the mill-girl and lastly to the suburban woman".[36]

The "Dorelia" look edit

Among female Bohemians in the early 20th century, the "gypsy look" was a recurring theme, popularized by, among others, Dorothy "Dorelia" McNeill (1881–1969), muse, lover, and second wife of the painter Augustus John (1878–1961), whose full skirts and bright colors gave rise to the so-called "Dorelia look".[37] Katherine Everett, née Olive, a former student of the Slade School of Art in London, has described McNeil's "tight fitting, hand-sewn, canary colored bodice above a dark gathered flowing skirt, and her hair very black and gleaming, emphasizing the long silver earrings which were her only adornment".[38]

Everett recalled also the Johns' woods "with wild cherry trees in blossom, and a model with flying red hair, clad in white, being chased in and out of the trees by nude children".[39] With similar lack of inhibition, as early as 1907 the American heiress Natalie Barney (1875–1972) was leading like-minded women in sapphic dances in her Parisian garden,[40] photographs of which look little different from scenes at Woodstock in 1969 and other "pop" festivals of the late 1960s and early 1970s.

Bobbed hair and cross-gender styles edit

By contrast, short bobbed hair was often a Bohemian trait,[29] having originated in Paris c.1909 and been adopted by students at the Slade[41] several years before American film actresses such as Colleen Moore and Louise Brooks ("the girl in the black helmet") became associated with it in the mid-1920s. This style was plainly discernible on a woodblock self-portrait of 1916 by Dora Carrington, who had entered the Slade in 1910,[42] and, indeed, the journalist and historian Sir Max Hastings has referred to "poling punts occupied by reclining girls with bobbed hair" as an enduring, if misleading, the popular image of the "idyll before the storm" of the First World War.[43]

In F. Scott Fitzgerald's short story, Bernice Bobs Her Hair (1920), a young woman who wishes to become a 'society vamp' regards the adoption of a bob as a necessary prelude,[44] while Louise Brooks' sexually charged performance as Lulu in G. W. Pabst's film, Pandora's Box (1929), left an enduring image of the style, which has been replicated on screen over the years, most vividly by Cyd Charisse in Singin' in the Rain (1952), Isabelle de Funès as Valentina in Baba Yaga (1973)[45] and Melanie Griffith in Something Wild (1986).

Bobbed hair was associated also with many popular singers and actresses in the 1960s and has frequently been evoked by writers and directors, as well as fashion designers, seeking to recapture the hedonistic or free spirit of the 1920s. For example, Kerry Greenwood's Cocaine Blues (1989) and succeeding novels about Phryne Fisher, a glamorous, but unconventional aristocratic investigator in late twenties Melbourne, Australia, conveyed an image – "five feet two [157.5 centimeters] with eyes of green and black hair cut into a cap"[46] – that was later cultivated stylishly on television by Essie Davis in ABC's Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries (2012).[47]

Around 1926 an even shorter style, known as the 'Eton crop', became popular:[21] on her arrival in Tilling (Rye) in E. F. Benson's comic novel Mapp and Lucia (1931), Lucia described "Quaint" Irene as "a girl with no hat and an Eton crop. She was dressed in a fisherman's jersey and knickerbockers". For many years trite assumptions were often made about the sexuality of women with cropped hairstyles; a historian of the 1980s wrote of the Greenham Common "peace camp" in England that it "brought public awareness to feminist separation and even to lesbianism, hitherto seen in the mass media – when acknowledged at all – either in terms of Eton-cropped androgyny or of pornographic fantasy".[48] Even so, others have drawn a stark contrast between the bohemian demeanor of the Greenham women and the "bold make-up and power-dressing" that tended to define women's fashion more generally in the 1980s[49] (the so-called 'designer decade').

One social historian has observed that "the innocuous woolen jersey, now known [in Britain] as the jumper or the pullover, was the first item of clothing to become interchangeable between men and women and, as such, was seen as a dangerous symptom of gender confusion".[21] Trousers for women, sometimes worn mannishly as an expression of sexuality (as by Marlene Dietrich as a cabaret singer in the 1930 film, Morocco, in which she dressed in a white tie suit and kissed a girl in the audience)[50] also became popular in the 1920s and 1930s, as did aspects of what many years later would sometimes be referred to as "shabby chic".[51] Winston Churchill's niece Clarissa was among those who wore a tailored suit in the late 1930s.[52]

Post-Liberation Paris edit

 
Café de Flore, Saint-Germain-des-Près, Paris: the haunt of post-war bohemians

The 'New Look' edit

After the Second World War Christian Dior's 'New Look', launched in Paris in 1947, though drawing on styles that had begun to emerge in 1938–1939,[53] set the pattern for women's fashion generally until the 1960s. Harking back in some ways to the Belle Epoque of the late 19th and early 20th centuries – and thus not a 'new' look as such – it was criticized by some as excessively feminine and, with its accompanying corsets and rustle of frilled petticoats, as setting back the "work of emancipation won through participation in two world wars".[54] It also, for a while, bucked the trend towards boyish fashion that, after the First World War, tended to follow major conflicts.[55]

Rive Gauche edit

American influences had been discouraged during the Nazi occupation of France, but, notably in the form of be-bop and other types of jazz, were strong among intellectual café society in the mid-to-late 1940s.[56] In 1947, Samedi-Soir lifted the lid on what it called the "troglodytes of Saint-Germain",[57] namely bohemians of the Parisian Left Bank (Rive Gauche) district of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, who appeared to cluster around existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre. These included Roger Vadim (who married and launched the career of actress Brigitte Bardot in the 1950s), novelist Boris Vian (since described as "the epitome of Left Bank Bohemia, standing at the center of its postwar rehabilitation")[58] and singer Juliette Gréco.

 
Juliette Gréco in 1963

Juliette Gréco edit

At the liberation of Paris in 1944, the American journalist Ernie Pyle observed that the women were all "brightly dressed in white or red blouses and colorful peasant skirts, with flowers in their hair and big flashy earrings."[59] while Lady Diana Cooper, whose husband, Duff Cooper, became British Ambassador to Paris that year, wrote that, during the occupation, Parisienne women had worn "grotesquely large hats hung with flowers and fruits and feathers and ribbons" as well as high carved wooden shoes.[60] However, in contrast to such striking bohemian adornments and subsequently the "New Look" (which itself scandalised some Parisennes), the clothes of the post-war bohemians were predominantly black: when Gréco first performed outside Saint-Germain she affronted some of her audience by wearing "black trousers, her bare feet slipped into golden sandals".[61] In old age she claimed that this style of dress arose from poverty:

When I was a teenager in Paris, I only had one dress and one pair of shoes, so the boys in the house started dressing me in their old black coats and trousers. A fashion was shaped out of misery. When people copied me, I found it a little ridiculous, but I didn't mind. It made me smile.[62]

Performing in London over fifty years later, Gréco was described as "still oozing bohemian style".[63]

Saint-Germain in retrospect edit

Capturing the spirit of the time, David Profumo has written of how his mother, the actress Valerie Hobson, was entranced by Roger Vadim's flatmate, the director Marc Allégret, while she was filming Blanche Fury in 1947:

Allégret's apparently bohemian lifestyle appealed sharply to her romantic side and she revelled in the Left Bank milieu to which he introduced her during script discussions in Paris. There were meals with André Gide, Jean Cocteau and the long-legged Zizi Jeanmaire. For an attractive British woman who felt deprived of attention ... this was an ideal situation for some sort of reawakening.[64]

The previous year a perfume created for Hobson had been marketed as "Great Expectations" to coincide with her role as Estella Havisham in David Lean's film of that name, based on Charles Dickens' 1861 novel. In England, this attracted the custom of then-University of Oxford undergraduate Margaret Roberts, later British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who, a little daringly for the time, also shopped for "push-up" pink brassieres.[65] In 1953, when Hobson starred in the musical The King and I in London, it was apparent that she had retained a Parisienne mix of chic and Bohemianism. A Daily Mirror journalist described her "pale, ladylike looks, her well-bred clothes ... she likes embroidery and painting", while a young Etonian who visited her dressing room recalled that "it had been freshly painted pink and white for her, and was like entering a risqué French apartment".[66] Ten years later, when Hobson's husband, the politician John Profumo, was involved in a sex scandal that threatened to destabilize the British government, Prime Minister Harold Macmillan wrote that "his [Profumo's] wife is very nice and sensible. Of course, these people live in a raffish, theatrical, bohemian society where no one really knows anyone, and everyone is "darling"".[67]

Post-war Paris was recalled fondly in 2007 when France introduced a ban on smoking in public places. The aroma of Gauloises and Gitanes was, for many years, thought to be an inseparable feature of Parisian café society, but the owner of Les Deux Magots, once frequented by Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus and other writers, observed that "things have changed. The writers of today are not so addicted to cigarettes".[68] A British journalist who interviewed Juliette Gréco in 2010 described Les Deux Magots and the Café de Flore as "now overpriced tourist hotspots" and noted that "chain stores and expensive restaurants have replaced the bookshops, cafés and revolutionary ideas of Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir's Rive Gauche".[69] As measures of changing attitudes to cuisine and fashion, by the early 21st century 80% of French croissants were being made in food plants, while, by 2014, only one factory continued to manufacture the traditional male beret associated with printers, artists, political activists and, during the inter-war years, the tennis player Jean Borotra.[70]

New influences in 1960s edit

The bohemian traits of post-war Paris spread to other urban parts of the French-speaking world, notably to Algiers, where an underground culture of "jazz clubs, girls and drugs" grew up – in the words of punk rock producer Marc Zermati, who was in the city at the height of the Algerian war in the late 1950s, "all very French".[71] However, that war marked a turning point which, in the view of some, was so traumatic that "ordinary French people" looked instead to America as "a new model for pleasure and happiness".[72] This, in turn, led to the ye-ye music of the early to mid 1960s (named after the British band, the Beatles' use of "yeah, yeah" in some their early songs[73]) and the rise of such singers as Johnny Hallyday and Françoise Hardy.

The French also adopted a number of British singers (Petula Clark, Gillian Hills, Jane Birkin) who performed successfully in French, Birkin forming a long-term relationship with singer-songwriter Serge Gainsbourg, who was a seminal figure in French popular music in the 1960s and 1970s. In 1968 major industrial and student unrest in Paris and other parts of France came close to ousting the government of President Charles de Gaulle, who, after leading the Free French during the Second World War, had returned to power at the time of the Algerian emergency. The events of 1968 represented a further significant landmark in post-war France,[74] although their longer term impact was probably more on cultural, social and academic life than on the political system, which, through the constitution of the Fifth Republic (1958), has remained broadly intact.[75] Indeed, one paradox of 1968 was that the first student demonstrations broke out at Nanterre, whose catchment area included the affluent and "chic" 16th and 17th arrondissements of Paris. Its students were more modish and "trendy" than those of the Sorbonne in the city's Latin Quarter, being described at the time in terms that typify more generally the styles and attitudes of young people in the late 1960s:

It is the girls that give the show away – culottes, glossy leather, mini-skirts, boots – driving up in Mini-Coopers ... Rebellious sentiment is more obvious among the boys: long hair, square spectacles, Che Guevara [Cuban revolutionary, died 1967] beards. The picture in Nanterre in May was lots and lots of painted dollies cohabiting with unkempt revolutionaries.[76]

America: the beat generation and flower power edit

 
Snejana Onopka on the runway for Anna Sui in November 2011.

In the United States adherents of the "beat" counter-culture (probably best defined by Jack Kerouac's novel, On the Road, set in the late 1940s, written in 1952 and published in 1957) were associated with black polo-neck (or turtle neck) sweaters, blue denim jeans and sandals. The influence of this movement could be seen in the persona and songs of Bob Dylan in the early- to mid-1960s, "road" films like Easy Rider (1969) and the punk-oriented "New Wave" of the mid-1970s, which, among other things, produced a boho style icon in Deborah Harry of the New York band Blondie. (However, as with some American musicians of the mid-1960s, such as Sonny and Cher, Blondie came to international prominence only after a tour of Britain in 1978.)[77]

Greenwich Village and West Coast edit

New York's Greenwich Village, which, since the late 19th century, had attracted many women with feminist or "free love" ideals,[78] was a particular magnet for bohemians in the early 1960s. Bob Dylan's girl-friend Suze Rotolo, who appeared with him on the cover of his second album The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan (1963), recalled that the Village was "where people like me went – people who didn't belong where they came from ... where the writers I was reading and the artists I was looking at had lived or passed through".[79] These "beatniks" (as they came to be known by the late 1950s) were, in many ways, the antecedents of the hippie movement that formed on the West Coast of the US in the mid-1960s[80] and came to the fore as the first post-war baby-boomers reached the age of majority in the "Summer of Love" of 1967. The Monterey Pop Festival was a major landmark of that year, which was associated with "flowerpower", psychedelia, opposition to the Vietnam war and the inventive music and flowing, colorful fashions of, among others, Jimi Hendrix, the Mamas & the Papas, Jefferson Airplane and the British group, The Beatles, whose album, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, is said to have caused the guru of psychedelia, Timothy Leary, to remark that "my work is finished".[81]

Hippiedom and the Pre-Raphaelites edit

The documentary film, Festival (Murray Lerner, 1967), recorded how the "clean-cut college kids" who attended the Newport (Rhode Island) Folk Festival in 1963–1964 had, by 1965 (when Bob Dylan caused a sensation at that year's festival by playing an electric guitar), become "considerably scruffier": "the hippies were waiting to be born".[82] Among other things, the wearing of male neckties, which, in the mid-1960s, had often drawn on 19th century paisley patterns,[10] declined as muttonchop whiskers and teashades (sunglasses) came in: by the time of the Chicago 7 trial (late 1969), hair over the collars had become so commonplace that it was beginning to transcend Bohemian style, taking on mass popularity in the 1970s. The London art dealer Jeremy Maas reflected in the mid-1980s that:

there [was] no question that the Hippy [sic] movement and its repercussive influence in England owed much of its imagery, its manner, dress and personal appearance to the Pre-Raphaelite ideal ... It was observed by all of us who were involved with these exhibitions [of pre-Raphaelite paintings] that visitors included increasing numbers of the younger generation, who had begun to resemble the figures in the pictures they had come to see.[83]

Jimmy Page of the British band Led Zeppelin, who collected Pre-Raphaelite paintings, observed of Edward Burne-Jones that "the romance of the Arthurian legends [captured in his paintings] and the bohemian life of the artists who were reworking these stories seemed very attuned to our time",[84] while the author David Waller noted in 2011 that Burne-Jones' subjects "have much in common with the sixties rock chicks and their pop-star paladins".[85]

London in the 1950s edit

Although the annual Saturday Book recorded in 1956 a view that "London's now nothing but flash coffee bars, with teddies and little bits of girls in jeans",[86] the "Edwardian" ("teddy boy") look of the times did not coincide with Bohemian tastes. For women, the legacy of the "New Look" was still apparent, although hemlines had generally risen as, as one journalist put it in 1963, "photographs of those first bold bearers of the New Look make them seem strangely lost and bewildered, as though they had mistaken their cue and come on stage fifty years late".[87] The Bohemian foci during this period were the jazz clubs and espresso bars of Soho and Fitzrovia. Their habitués usually wore polo necks; in the words of one social historian, "thousands of pale, duffel-coat-clad students were hunched in coffee bars over their copies of Jean-Paul Sartre and Jack Kerouac".[88] Various public houses and clubs also catered for Bohemian tastes, notably the Colony Room Club in Soho, opened in 1948 by Muriel Belcher, a lesbian from Birmingham.[89] As with the literary phenomenon of the so-called "Angry Young Men" from 1956 onwards, the image was more a male, than a female, one. However, when the singer Alma Cogan wished to mark her success by buying mink coats for her mother and sister, the actress Sandra Caron, the latter asked for a duffel-coat instead because she wanted to be regarded as a serious actress and "a sort of a beatnik".[90] In 1960 the future author Jacqueline Wilson, who, as a teenager, lived in Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, captured this look after spotting two acquaintances in a record shop "in turquoise duffle coats, extremely tight jeans and cha-cha shoes being cuddled by a group of horrible spotty teddy boys".[91]

Continental influences edit

In Iris Murdoch's novel The Bell (1958), an art student named Dora Greenfield bought "big multi-colored skirts and jazz records and sandals". However, as Britain emerged from post-war austerity, some Bohemian women found influences from continental Europe, adopting, for example, the "gamine look", with its black jerseys and short, almost boyish hairstyles associated with film actresses Audrey Hepburn (Sabrina, 1954, and as a "Gréco beatnik"[92] in Funny Face, 1957) and Jean Seberg (Bonjour Tristesse, 1958 and A bout de souffle, 1960), as well as the French novelist Françoise Sagan, who, as one critic put it, "was celebrated for the variety of her partners and for driving fast sports cars in bare feet as an example of the free life".[93] In 1961 Fenella Fielding played "a mascara-clad Gréco-alike" in The Rebel with comedian Tony Hancock,[92] while, more recently, Talulah Riley replicated the look for scenes in ITV's 2006 adaptation of Agatha Christie's The Moving Finger,[94] set in 1951.

Others favored the lower-cut, tighter styles of continental stars such as Bardot or Gina Lollobrigida. Valerie Hobson was among those whose wardrobe drew on Italian couture; in addition to a large collection of stiletto heeled shoes, she possessed a skirt made from python skin.[95] More generally, European tastes – including the Lambretta motor scooter and Italian and French cuisine, which the widely traveled cookery writer Elizabeth David, herself a bit of a Bohemian, did much to promote[96] – not only began to pervade Bohemian circles, but offered a contrast, from 1955 onwards, with the brasher Americanism of rock 'n' roll, with its predominantly teenage associations.

Hamburg and Beatlemania edit

 
Bobbed hair revival: Barbara Feldon with Don Adams in Get Smart (1965)

In 1960, when the Beatles (then an obscure Liverpudlian combo with five members, as opposed to their eventual "fab" four) were working in Hamburg, West Germany, they were influenced by a Bohemian "art school" set known as Exis (for "existentialists"). The Exis were roughly equivalent to what in France became known as les beats and included photographer Astrid Kirchherr (for whom the "fifth Beatle" Stuart Sutcliffe left the group) and artist and musician Klaus Voormann (who designed the cover for the Beatles' album Revolver in 1966).

John Lennon's wife Cynthia recalled that Kirchherr was fascinated by the Beatles' "teddy-boy style", but that they, in turn, were "bowled over by her hip black clothes, her avant garde way of life, her photography and her sense of style".[97] As a result the group acquired black leather jackets, as well as fringed hairstyles that were the prototype of the "mop-top" cuts associated with "Beatlemania" in 1963–1964.[98] The latter coincided with the revival of the bobbed style for women, promoted in London by hairdresser Vidal Sassoon,[99] initially for actress Nancy Kwan, and adopted by, among others, singers Cilla Black,[100] Billie Davis and, in America, Bev Bivens of We Five and Tammi Terrell, fashion designers Mary Quant and Jean Muir, American actress Barbara Feldon in the TV series Get Smart, and, in the form of a longer bob, Cathy McGowan, who presented the influential British TV pop music show, Ready Steady Go! (1963–1966).[101] However, when longer blonde hair (associated with, among many others, Julie Christie, Samantha Juste, Judy Geeson and fashion model Lorna McDonald, who, at the end of each edition of the BBC's Dee Time, jumped into Simon Dee's open E-type Jaguar[102]) came to typify the "sixties" look, advertisers turned to the Bohemian world for inspiration: through its use of herbs, Sunsilk shampoo was said to have "stolen something from the gypsies".[103]

Swinging London edit

Beatlemania did not of itself create the apparent iconoclasm of the 1960s; however, as one writer put it, "just as Noël Coward and Cole Porter reflected the louche, carefree attitude of the [Nineteen] Twenties, so did the Beatles' music capture the rhythm of breaking free experienced by an entire generation of people growing up in the Sixties".[10] By the middle of the decade, British pop music had stimulated the fashion boom of what Time called "swinging London".[104] Associated initially with such "mod" designs as Quant's mini-skirt, this soon embraced a range of essentially Bohemian styles. These included the military and Victorian fashions popularized by stars who frequented boutiques such as Granny Takes a Trip, the "fusion of fashion, art and lifestyle" opened by Nigel Waymouth in the King's Road, Chelsea in January 1966,[105] and, by 1967, the hippie look largely imported from America (although, as noted, London stores such as Biba had, for some time, displayed dresses that drew on Pre-Raphaelite imagery).[106] The Rolling Stones' Keith Richards, whose early girlfriend, Linda Keith, had, in her late teens, been a bohemian force in West Hampstead, noted on the Stones' return from an American tour in 1967 how quickly hippiedom had transformed the London scene.[107]

Victorian imagery edit

 
Lewis Carroll's Alice (John Tenniel)

This fusion of influences was discernible in two black-and-white productions for BBC television in 1966: the series Adam Adamant Lives!, starring Gerald Harper as an Edwardian adventurer who had been cryopreserved in time and Juliet Harmer as Georgina Jones, a stylish "mod" who befriended him, and Jonathan Miller's dreamy, rather Gothic production of Lewis Carroll's mid-Victorian children's fantasy Alice in Wonderland (1865).[108] (Confirming the aspiration, Sydney Newman, the BBC's Head of Television Drama in the 1960s, reflected of Adam Adamant that "[they] could never quite get [the] Victorian mentality to contrast with the '60s".)[109]

On the face of it, Carroll (a pseudonym for Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) had been a rather conventional and repressed Oxford University don, but he was a keen and artistic photographer in the early days of that medium (taking, among other things, rather bohemian looking pictures of Alice Liddell and other young girls)[110] and he developed an empathy and friendship with several of the Pre-Raphaelites;[111] the sculptor Thomas Woolner and possibly even Rossetti dissuaded him from illustrating Alice himself,[112] a task that was undertaken instead by John Tenniel. The imagery of Alice, both textually and graphically, lent itself well to the psychedelia of the late 1960s.[113] In America, this was apparent in, among other ways, the "Alice happening" in Central Park, New York (1968) when naked participants covered themselves in polka dots[114] and the lyrics to Grace Slick's song "White Rabbit" (1966) – "One pill makes you larger/And one pill makes you small" – that she performed with both the Great Society and Jefferson Airplane, including with the latter at Woodstock in 1969.

Women in the late 1960s and early 1970s edit

 
Mid 1970s dresses by Laura Ashley exhibited at the Fashion Museum, Bath, England in 2013

By the late 1960s shops such as Laura Ashley (whose first London outlet opened in 1968)[115] were routinely promoting the "peasant look" and selling a range of "uniquely eccentric clothes ... The magic was being able to step into a 'Laura Ashley' dress and imagine you had found something out of a dressing-up box".[116] At around the same time too, and into the 1970s, the brassière (or bra), which, as noted, had been seen as a liberating innovation in the early part of the century, came to be regarded by some women, such as the Australian academic Germaine Greer (The Female Eunuch, 1969), as an unduly restrictive symbol of traditional womanhood. However, the much-publicised incidence of "bra burning" in the 1970s tended to be overstated and came to be satirised: for example, in the 1973 film, Carry On Girls, and a poster by Young & Rubicam,[117] one of a mildly subversive series for Smirnoff vodka: "I never thought of burning my bra until I discovered Smirnoff". It was also seen by many, including Greer herself, as a distraction from the cause of women's "liberation".[118] A Vermont lawyer later observed wryly that "like every good feminist-in-training in the sixties, I burned my bra", but that "now it's the nineties ... I realize Playtex [underwear manufacturer] had supported me better than any man I know."[119] Claire Perry, who became a Conservative Member of Parliament in 2010 and later a government minister, reflected that, as a "women's officer" at Oxford University in the early 1980s, she was "a bra-burning feminist with a hideous new-romantic haircut", but that her feminism had, in her view, matured.[120]

"Girl power" edit

By the mid-1980s, the American singer Madonna had turned the bra into a positive, even provocative, fashion statement. Madonna's flamboyant and gritty style (notably seen to bohemian effect alongside Rosanna Arquette in the 1985 film, Desperately Seeking Susan) was, in turn, a precursor of so-called "girl power" that was associated in the 1990s with various prominent young women (such as singers Courtney Love, who played the 1999 Glastonbury Festival in a headline-grabbing pink bra,[121] and the more commercially oriented Spice Girls) and offbeat or quirky American television series (Xena: Warrior Princess, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Caroline in the City, Sex and the City).

Since the 1960s: hippie/boho-chic edit

 
Zooey Deschanel (left) performing with M. Ward as She & Him, Newport Folk Festival, 2008

Journalist Bob Stanley remarked that "the late 1960s are never entirely out of fashion, they just need a fresh angle to make them de jour".[122] Thus, the features of hippie fashion re-emerged at various stages during the ensuing forty years.

In the mid-to-late 1980s, variants of the short and fundamentally un-Bohemian rah-rah skirt (which originated with cheerleaders) were combined with leather or denim to create a look with some Bohemian or even gothic features (for example, by the singing duo Strawberry Switchblade who took inspiration from 1970s punk fashion).[123] In the 1990s the term, "hippie chic", was applied to Tom Ford's collections for the Italian house of Gucci. These drew on, among other influences, the style, popular in retrospect, of Talitha Getty (died 1971), actress wife of John Paul Getty and step-granddaughter of Dorelia McNeil, who was represented most famously in a photograph of her and her husband taken by Patrick Lichfield in Marrakesh, Morocco in 1969.[124] Recalling the influx of hippies into Marrakesh in 1968, Richard Neville, then editor of Oz, wrote that "the dapper drifters in embroidered skirts and cowboy boots were so delighted by the bright satin '50s underwear favored by the matrons of Marrakesh that they wore them outside their denims à la Madonna [the singer] twenty-five years later".[125]

In the early 21st century, "boho-chic" was associated initially with supermodel Kate Moss and then, as a highly popular style in 2004–2005, with actress Sienna Miller. In America, similar styles were sometimes referred to as "bobo-", "ashcan chic", or "luxe grunge", their leading proponents including actresses Mary-Kate Olsen and Zooey Deschanel. As if to illustrate the cyclical nature of fashion, by the end of the noughties strong pre-Raphaelite traits were notable in, among others, singer Florence Welch, model Karen Elson and designer Anna Sui.[126]

In Germany, terms like Bionade-Bourgeoisie, Bionade-Biedermeier or Biohème refer to former Bohemians that gained a sort of Cultural hegemony with their LOHA lifestyle;[127] the phenomenon of such former (young) bohemians becoming established during the years is a typical aspect of gentrification processes. A bon mot of Michael Rutschky claimed that at the end of the 20th century, "not the Proletariat, but the Bohème became the ruling class".[128] The group in question uses especially food as a means of distinction[129][130][131] and separation.[130] Among others, the lemonade trademark Bionade has been connected with the phenomenon.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Howarth, Alice (26 July 2022). "The history of Boho chic and why it's back for 2022". harpersbazaar.com. Harper's Bazaar. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  2. ^ The original Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood had been formed in 1848 by William Holman Hunt, Rossetti and John Everett Millais, who aspired to a style of painting that they felt had been lost since the time of Raphael (1483–1520).
  3. ^ Franny Moyle (2009) Desperate Romantics
  4. ^ See, for example, Virginia Nicholson (2002) Among The Bohemians
  5. ^ Though more conventional in many ways than Jane Morris, Georgie Burne-Jones was becoming "a bit of a bohemian" even in the early days of her marriage; for example, she would ask her maid to model for sketches in mid-morning, whereas a typical bourgeois wife would have given priority to the housework: Fiona MacCarthy (2011) The Last Pre-Raphaelite.
  6. ^ Judith Flanders (2001) A Circle of Sisters
  7. ^ Henry James, letter to Alice James, 10 March 1869
  8. ^ Pygmalion, introduction to Act III
  9. ^ Fiona MacCarthy (2011) The Last Pre-Raphaelite
  10. ^ a b c Anne Sebba (1990) Laura Ashley: a Life By Design
  11. ^ MacCarthy, op. cit.
  12. ^ Suzanne Fagence Cooper (2010) The Model Wife: The Passionate Lives of Effie Gray, Ruskin and Millais. Florence Nightingale's observations regarding the foxgloves are noted in correspondence of her friend, the novelist Elizabeth Gaskell, whose acquaintance with Effie Ruskin dated back to their schooldays. However, it is unclear when Nightingale herself met Effie: Cooper, op.cit, footnote 85. (Gaskell was especially well connected. In 1861, for example, she was part of a house party at Fryston Hall, Yorkshire given by Richard Monckton Milnes – a persistent suitor of Florence Nightingale – that included also the MP William Forster, Austen Layard, who excavated the biblical city of Ninevah, and the American (Union) Minister in London, Charles Francis Adams. Gaskell was among a group visiting nearby Pomfret Castle when Adam received news of the Trent incident that, in the early stages of the American Civil War almost brought Britain and the Union to war: see Amanda Foreman (2010) A World on Fire.)
  13. ^ David Cannadine (1998) History in Our Time
  14. ^ Diary of Pauline, Lady Trevelyan, 24 June 1853, quoted in Robert Brownwell (2013) Marriage of Inconvenience
  15. ^ a b Brownwell, op.cit.
  16. ^ Robert Melville in New Statesman, 20 November 1970
  17. ^ See MacCarthy, op.cit.;
  18. ^ Eleanor Mills in Sunday Times Culture, 19 July 2015 (reviewing Kate Bolick, Spinster)
  19. ^ Virginia Nicholson (2002) Among The Bohemians
  20. ^ John Sutherland in The Times, 21 December 2013, reviewing Lucinda Hawksley, Princess Louise: Queen Victoria's Rebellious Daughter
  21. ^ a b c d Martin Pugh (2008) We Danced All Night
  22. ^ The Times Luxx, 26 November 2011
  23. ^ Andrew Marr (2009) The Making of Modern Britain.
  24. ^ Henrietta Heald, 'For England's Sake', History Today, October 2014, p. 33
  25. ^ Kate Adie (2013) Fighting on the Home Front: The Legacy of Women in World War One. Tilley was actively involved in recruitment for war service and was happily married to her songwriter, Walter de Frece, who was later knighted and became a Member of Parliament.
  26. ^ Robert Graves & Alan Hodge (1940) The Long Weekend: A Social History of Great Britain 1918–1939
  27. ^ Edward Fawcett in Royal Academy of Arts Magazine, June 2012
  28. ^ Times obituary of Gussie Moran, 19 January 2013
  29. ^ a b John Stevenson (1984) British Society 1914–45
  30. ^ Rhoda Marley to Clive FitzWatters and Harold Twine in Travers, Rookery Nook, chapter XII. Offering to assist her, Clive had suggested to Twine that "it will be more or less guess-work on my part – in the bag put one pair of thin com – er – lady's summer underwear". Rhoda asked if Twine "could just manage a pair of cami-knickers and a Princess petticoat". As early as 1920, in Travers' début novel The Dippers, Pauline Dipper's "black silk petticoat [did not] extend unduly, and it was possible to esteem the shapely outline of calf and instep, compressed in stockings of the same material" (chapter III). Also in The Dippers, a young woman tried to start a conversation about "hygienic underclothing for ladies" with a man she mistakenly believed to have written articles on the subject: "I wanted to speak to you about something delicate ... this is not a subject one can discuss in public. People have such conventional ideas" (Helen Monk to Henry Talboyes, chapter VIII).
  31. ^ Glamour's Golden Age, BBC4, 26 October 2009
  32. ^ Jane Ellen Wayne (1993) Clark Gable: Portrait of a Misfit
  33. ^ Quoted in Halliwell's Filmgoer's Companion (10th ed. 1993) edited by John Walker. Almost 70 years after Lombard's death, the Sunday Times described red lipstick as the "ne plus ultra [not further beyond] of make up ... We respect red lipstick as a badge of loveliness and youth (Georgia May), bold style (Florence Welch), sexual confidence (Scarlett Johansson) and old-school glamour (Rosie Huntington-Whiteley) – and, above all, we appreciate that it doesn't work for everyone": Shane Watson in Style, 4 December 2011.
  34. ^ Wayne, op.cit.
  35. ^ Tim Stanley, 'Speaking in Code', History Today, October 2014
  36. ^ Graves & Hodge, op.cit.
  37. ^ Virginia Nicholson (2002) Among the Bohemians
  38. ^ Katherine Everett (1949) Bricks and Flowers. See also Juliet Nicholson (2006) The Perfect Summer
  39. ^ Katherine Everett (1949) Bricks and Flowers
  40. ^ See Diana Souhami (2004) Wild Girls
  41. ^ Gilbert Cannan (1916) Mendel
  42. ^ Gretchen Gerzine (1989) Carrington
  43. ^ Max Hastings (2013) Catastrophe: Europe Goes to War 1914. Hastings himself rejected the notion that the years immediately before the war represented some sort of golden age.
  44. ^ See Ellie Pithers in Telegraph Magazine, 26 January 2013. The term, "vamp" (after "vampire"), was associated in particular with the silent film actress Theda Bara (1885–1955).
  45. ^ Valentina was originally a comic book creation by Italian artist Guido Crepax, inspired by Louise Brooks in Pandora's Box: see Roland Jaccard (ed. 1986) Louise Brooks: Portrait of an Anti-Star.
  46. ^ Greenwood (2012) Unnatural Habits
  47. ^ Tasmanian-born Davis was in her early 40s when she played Phryne Fisher, though the heroine of the books was only as old as the century (28 in 1928). Other recent examples of the 1920s style bob have included Gemma Arterton in St. Trinian's (2007) and Michelle Dockery as Lady Mary Crawley in the 5th series of ITV's Downton Abbey (2014), the latter set in 1924.
  48. ^ Alwyn W. Turner (2010) Rejoice! Rejoice!: Britain in the 1980s
  49. ^ Graham Stewart (2013) Bang! A History of Britain in the 1980s
  50. ^ Tim Stanley, 'Speaking in Code' in History Today, October 2014 at page 21. Dietrich made clear her personal preference for such clothes: "I do not wear them to be sensational. I think I am much more alluring ..." (quoted, ibid.).
  51. ^ "Achieving Laid-Back Minimalism With Shabby Chic Style". 4 April 2020.
  52. ^ Clarissa Eden (2007) A Memoir: From Churchill to Eden
  53. ^ Pearson Phillips in Age of Austerity 1945–1951 (ed. Michael Sissons & Philip French, 1963)
  54. ^ Phillips, loc.cit.
  55. ^ With reference to the colourless "utility" garments that became commonplace in Britain during the war, Phillips (loc.cit.) quotes an expert of the time at London's Victoria and Albert Museum as asserting that "men will feel oppressed and frightened by excessive femininity when they return from war".
  56. ^ See Dan Halpern in The New Yorker, 25 December 2006
  57. ^ Samedi-Soir, 3 May 1947
  58. ^ Dan Halpern, The New Yorker, 25 December 2006
  59. ^ Quoted in Nicholas Rankin (2011) Ian Fleming's Commandos: The Story of 30 Assault Unit in WWII
  60. ^ Letter, 23 September 1944: Darling Monster: The Letters of Lady Diana Cooper to her Son John Julius Norwich 1939–1952 (ed. John Julius Norwich, 2013)
  61. ^ Antony Beevor & Artemis Cooper (1994) Paris After the Liberation
  62. ^ Interview with Will Hodgkinson, Times Saturday Review, 6 November 2010
  63. ^ The Times, 27 June 2000
  64. ^ David Profumo (2006) Bringing the House Down. In contrast to Vadim, who had not turned twenty, Allégret (1900–1973) was in middle age when he directed Hobson. He had been married to the daughter of the editor of French Vogue, who left him after the war for a theatrical agent, André Bernham, taking their daughter with her (ibid). Jeanmaire is probably best remembered through the second line – "And you dance like Zizi Jeanmaire" – of Peter Sarstedt's song "Where Do You Go To (My Lovely)?" (1969) which captured the spirit of Parisian high life in the late 1960s.
  65. ^ Charles Moore (2013) Margaret Thatcher: The Authorized Biography – Volume One: Not for Turning
  66. ^ Eve Champman and Hugo Williams quoted in David Kynaston (2009) Family Britain 1951–57
  67. ^ Harold Macmillan, diary, 22 March 1963, quoted in Alistair Horne (1989) Harold Macmillan 1957–1986; Charles Williams (2009) Harold Macmillan
  68. ^ "BBC NEWS – World – Europe – Bidding goodbye to the Gauloises". news.bbc.co.uk. February 2007.
  69. ^ Will Hodgkinson, Times Saturday Review, 6 November 2010. Simone de Beauvoir was an existentialist companion of Sartre. See Bruno Waterfield in The Times Saturday Review, 25 July 2015, regarding the "sanitised" Europe of the early 21st century and its effect on French culture.
  70. ^ Bruno Waterfield in The Times Saturday Review, 25 July 2015 (reviewing Jonathan Fenby (2015) The History of Modern France)
  71. ^ Andrew Hussey, History Today, March 2015, p. 64 (reviewing Barnett Singer, The Americanization of France).
  72. ^ Hussey, loc.cit.
  73. ^ Notably She Loves You (John Lennon/Paul McCartney, 1963)
  74. ^ Patrick Seale & Maureen McConville (1968) French Revolution 1968
  75. ^ At the time, Seale & McConville (op. cit.) described de Gaulle's survival in 1968 as "an amazing demonstration of political virility in a man of 77". He resigned the following year and died in 1970. A later historian contrasted the stature of de Gaulle with "the soap opera lives" of Presidents Sarkozy (2007–2012) and Hollande (2012–): Jonathan Fenby (2015) The History of Modern France: From Revolution to Present Day
  76. ^ Seale & McConville, op. cit.
  77. ^ When the British band the Rolling Stones arrived in Los Angeles in 1964 they were met by Sonny Bono, who was then doing promotional work for producer Phil Spector. A year later, he and Cher were "feted" at the Dorchester Hotel in London and "presented to the world" by Ahmet Ertegun: see Keith Richards (2010) Life.
  78. ^ Eleanor Mills in Sunday Times Culture, 19 July 2015 (reviewing Kate Bolick (2015) Spinster)
  79. ^ Suze Rotolo (2009) A Freewheelin' Time
  80. ^ Suze Rotolo observed that "the Beats had already cracked the façade [of constricted and rigid morality] and we, the next generation, broke through it": A Freewheelin' Time, op. cit.
  81. ^ See The New Yorker, 26 June 2006
  82. ^ Jason Anderson, "This Land is Your Land" in Uncut, September 2015, p. 60
  83. ^ Quoted in Des Cars, Laurence (2000). The Pre-Raphaelites: Romance and Realism. ‘New Horizons’ series. Translated by Garvie, Francisca. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-30100-5. See also Fiona MacCarthy (2011), op. cit.
  84. ^ Quoted in History Today, October 2011
  85. ^ History Today, loc. cit.
  86. ^ Saturday Book, vol. 16, 1956
  87. ^ Pearson Phillips in Age of Austerity, op. cit.
  88. ^ Dominic Sandbrook (2005) Never Had It So Good
  89. ^ Sophie Parkin (2012) Colony Room Club 1948–2008: A History of Bohemian Soho
  90. ^ Carol Dyhouse in History Today, November 2011
  91. ^ Diary, 13 February 1960, quoted in David Kynaston (2014) Modernity Britain: A Shake of the Dice, 1959–62
  92. ^ a b Times Saturday Review, 6 November 2010
  93. ^ Peter Lewis (1978) The 50s
  94. ^ Part of the Marple series, with Riley as Megan Symington.
  95. ^ Richard Davenport-Hines (2013) An English Affair
  96. ^ For example, A Book of Mediterranean Food (1950)
  97. ^ Cynthia Lennon (2005) John
  98. ^ See, for example, Sandbrook, op. cit.
  99. ^ Bob Hope in Telegraph Magazine, loc. cit.
  100. ^ And replicated by Sheridan Smith in the ITV biographical film, Cilla (2014)
  101. ^ A similar style to McGowan's was adopted in the early 2010s by British Labour Party politician Rachel Reeves.
  102. ^ Richard Wiseman (2006) Whatever Happened to Simon Dee?
  103. ^ TV advertisement of 1966: Washes Whiter (BBC2, 1990)
  104. ^ Time, 15 April 1966
  105. ^ See Times Magazine, 24 June 2006; David Moss in Antiques Trade Gazette, 27 August 2011 (number 2004)
  106. ^ Fiona MacCathy (2011) The Last Pre-Raphaelite
  107. ^ Keith Richards (2010) Life
  108. ^ Miller's production starred 13-year-old Anne-Marie Mallik in her only known acting role.
  109. ^ Andrew Pixley (2006) DVD viewing notes for Adam Adamant Lives!
  110. ^ Simon Winchester (2011) The Alice Behind Wonderland. Alice Liddell, the inspiration for Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, was the daughter of Henry Liddell, Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, where Dodgson was a Fellow.
  111. ^ Stoffel, Stephanie Lovett (1997). Lewis Carroll and Alice. ‘New Horizons’ series. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-30075-6.
  112. ^ Roger Lancelyn Green (1960) in Aspects of Alice (ed. Robert Phliips, 1971)
  113. ^ Thomas Fensch (1968) "Alice – the First Acidhead" in Aspects of Alice, op. cit.
  114. ^ Waldemar Januszczak in Sunday Times Culture, 27 November 2011
  115. ^ The first American branch of Laura Ashley opened in San Francisco in 1974, but had closed by the time a shop opened in New York in 1981 (Laura Ashley products having been sold in Bloomingdales and Macy's department stores for some years): Anne Sebba (1990) Laura Ashley: a Life By Design
  116. ^ Sebba, op. cit.
  117. ^ Nick Souter & Auart Newman (1987) The Postter Handbook
  118. ^ In 2013 The Oldie published a cartoon depicting women suffragettes of the early 20th century with the caption "... but I'm not sure about this proposal to burn our whalebone corsets" (Oldie, February 2013). A pragmatic 21st-century view was that "feminism is not about burning your bra in the street. It is about [among other things] women getting up in the morning and leaving the house to go to a job that pays them an actual wage ..." (Laura Smith, letter in Metro, 30 October 2012).
  119. ^ Susan Sweetser, quoted in Oxford Dictionary of Humorous Quotations (5th edition, ed. Gyles Brandreth, 2013) 119: 13
  120. ^ Interview with Rachel Sylvester & Alice Thomson, The Times, 2 March 2013.
  121. ^ The Times, 26 July 1999
  122. ^ The Times Knowledge, 24 June 2006
  123. ^ Photographs for album, Since Yesterday (1984)
  124. ^ Lichfield (1981) The Most Beautiful Women. See http://www.blackbookmag.com/article/guccis-cruise-wear-for-earth-mamas/3399
  125. ^ Richard Neville (1995) Hippie Hippie Shake
  126. ^ Stacey, Danielle (12 April 2016). "Kate Middleton wears AW15 Anna Sui as she changes into a floaty maxi dress for National Park visit". Mirror. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  127. ^ Kathrin Hartmann (25 June 2010), Ende der Märchenstunde: Wie die Industrie die Lohas und Lifestyle-Ökos vereinnahmt (books.google.com) (in German), Karl Blessing Verlag, ISBN 978-3-641-03632-4, retrieved 27 September 2015
  128. ^ Dirk Maxeiner; Michael Miersch (13 October 2014), Alles grün und gut? Eine Bilanz des ökologischen Denkens (books.google.com) (in German), Albrecht Knaus Verlag, ISBN 978-3-641-14310-7, retrieved 27 September 2015 (All green and well now? A balance sheet of ecological thinking) The Quote is used in a section of chapter 6 and attributed to Rutschky, he (no direct reference found in the Book) used it in a FAZ review of Sven Reichardts Suhrkamp volume Authentizität und Gemeinschaft
  129. ^ Brenda Strohmaier (2 October 2014), Wie man lernt, Berliner zu sein: Die deutsche Hauptstadt als konjunktiver Erfahrungsraum Campus Verlag 2014, p.166, footnote 150 (books.google.com) (in German), Campus Verlag, ISBN 978-3-593-50184-0, retrieved 27 September 2015
  130. ^ a b Karin Kaudelka; Gerhard Kilger (31 March 2014), Eigenverantwortlich und leistungsfähig: Das selbständige Individuum in der sich wandelnden Arbeitswelt (books.google.com) (in German), transcript Verlag, ISBN 978-3-8394-2588-6, retrieved 27 September 2015
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bohemian, style, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, september,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bohemian style news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Bohemian style often termed Boho chic is a fashion and lifestyle choice characterized by its unconventional and free spirited essence While its precise origins are debated Bohemian style is believed to have been influenced by the nomadic lifestyle of the Romani people during the late 19th century to the early 20th century The term Bohemian itself derives from the French Bohemien originally associated with the Roma community due to a historical misconception that they originated from Bohemia a region in the Czech Republic 1 Young Bohemienne Natalie Clifford Barney 1875 1972 at the age of 10 painting by Carolus Duran Main article Bohemianism Throughout history Bohemian fashion has undergone significant transformations reflecting the cultural shifts and influences of each era Today contemporary Bohemian fashion embraces flowing fabrics vibrant colors and natural woven materials instead of knits This style draws inspiration from various sources including the counterculture movements of the 1960s and 1970s reminiscent of the attire worn by attendees of the inaugural Woodstock music festival 1 The Bohemian style has achieved global popularity appealing to individuals seeking a unique and individualistic approach to fashion and lifestyle It encourages a sense of freedom and self expression often attracting those who prefer to live unconventionally sometimes in a nomadic manner and who may reside in colonies or communes fostering a strong sense of community Contents 1 Early 19th century and the role of women 1 1 Pre Raphaelites 1 2 Jane Morris Edward Burne Jones and Pre Raphaelite traits 1 3 Early flower power Effie Millais 2 Early 20th century and inter war years 2 1 Rational dress and the women s movement 2 1 1 The impact of lingerie in the 1920s and 30s 2 2 The Dorelia look 2 3 Bobbed hair and cross gender styles 3 Post Liberation Paris 3 1 The New Look 3 2 Rive Gauche 3 2 1 Juliette Greco 3 3 Saint Germain in retrospect 3 4 New influences in 1960s 4 America the beat generation and flower power 4 1 Greenwich Village and West Coast 4 2 Hippiedom and the Pre Raphaelites 5 London in the 1950s 5 1 Continental influences 6 Hamburg and Beatlemania 7 Swinging London 7 1 Victorian imagery 8 Women in the late 1960s and early 1970s 8 1 Girl power 9 Since the 1960s hippie boho chic 10 See also 11 NotesEarly 19th century and the role of women editThe Bohemian subculture has been closely affiliated with predominantly male artists and intellectuals The female counterparts have been closely connected with the Grisettes young women who combined part time prostitution with various other occupations In the first quarter of the 19th century the term grisette also referred to independent young women They often worked as seamstresses or milliner s assistants and frequented Bohemian artistic and cultural venues in Paris Many grisettes worked as artist models often providing sexual favors to the artists in addition to posing for them During the time of King Louis Philippe they came to dominate the Bohemian modeling scene Due to the role and influence they had on 19th century French art the grisette became a frequent character in French fiction However the grisettes have been mentioned as early as in 1730 by Jonathan Swift The term grisette in poetry signified qualities of both flirtatiousness and intellectual aspiration George du Maurier based large parts of Trilby on his experiences as a student in Parisian Bohemia during the 1850s Poe s 1842 story was based on the unsolved murder of Mary Cecilia Rogers near New York City subtitled A Sequel to The Murders in the Rue Morgue It was the first fictional detective story to attempt to provide a real solution to a real crime The most enduring grisette is Mimi in Henri Murger s novel and subsequent play Scenes de la vie de Boheme the source for Puccini s famous opera La boheme Pre Raphaelites edit nbsp Jane Morris painted by Dante Gabriel Rossetti as Proserpine 1874 In 1848 William Makepeace Thackeray used the word Bohemianism in his novel Vanity Fair In 1862 the Westminster Review described a Bohemian as simply an artist or litterateur who consciously or unconsciously secedes from conventionality in life and in art During the 1860s the term was associated in particular with the Pre Raphaelite movement the group of artists and aesthetes of which Dante Gabriel Rossetti was the most prominent 2 As the 1860s progressed Rossetti would become the grand prince of Bohemianism as his deviations from normal standards became more audacious He then became this epitome of the unconventional his egocentric demands necessarily required his close friends to remodel their own lives around him His Bohemianism was like a web in which others became trapped none more so than William and Jane Morris 3 Jane Morris Edward Burne Jones and Pre Raphaelite traits edit Jane Morris who was to become Rossetti s muse epitomized probably more than any of the women associated with the pre Raphaelites an unrestricted flowing style of dress that while unconventional at the time would be highly influential at certain periods during the 20th century 4 She and others including the much less outlandish Georgiana Burne Jones wife of Edward Burne Jones 5 one of the later pre Raphaelites eschewed the corsets and crinolines of the mid to late Victorian era 6 a feature that impressed the American writer Henry James when he wrote to his sister in 1869 of the bohemian atmosphere of the Morrises house in the Bloomsbury district of London and in particular the dark silent medieval presence of its chatelaine It s hard to say whether she s a grand synthesis of all the pre Raphaelite pictures ever made whether she s an original or a copy In either case she s a wonder Imagine a tall lean woman in a long dress of some dead purple stuff guiltless of hoops or of anything else I should say with a mass of crisp black hair heaped into great wavy projections on each of her temples a long neck without any collar and in lieu thereof some dozen strings of outlandish beads 7 nbsp Effie Gray by Thomas Richmond In his play Pygmalion 1912 Bernard Shaw unmistakably based the part of Mrs Higgins on the then elderly Jane Morris He described Mrs Higgins drawing room he referred to a portrait of her when she defied the fashion of her youth in one of the beautiful Rossettian costumes which when caricatured by people who did not understand led to the absurdities of popular estheticism sic in the eighteen seventies 8 A biographer of Edward Burne Jones writing a century after Shaw Fiona MacCarthy 2011 has noted that in 1964 when the influential Biba store was opened in London by Barbara Hulanicki the long drooping structureless clothes though sexier than the dresses portrayed in such Burne Jones paintings as The Golden Stairs or The Sirens nevertheless resembled them 9 The interior of Biba has been described by the biographer of British 20th century designer Laura Ashley as having an atmosphere that reeked of sex It was designed to look like a bordello with its scarlet black and gold plush fitments but interestingly it implied an old fashioned Edwardian style of forbidden sex with feathered boas potted palms bentwood coat racks and dark lighting 10 MacCarthy observed also that the androgynous appearance of Burne Jones s male figures reflected the sexually ambivalent feeling of the late 1960s 11 Early flower power Effie Millais edit Effie Gray whose marriage to John Ruskin was annulled in 1854 before her marrying the pre Raphaelite painter John Millais is known to have used flowers as an adornment and probably also as an assertive statement While in Scotland with Ruskin still her husband and Millais she gathered foxgloves to place in her hair She wore them at breakfast despite being asked by her husband not to do so a gesture of defiance at a time of growing crisis in their relationship that came to the critical notice of Florence Nightingale 12 who tended to regard others of her sex with scarcely concealed scorn and was generally unsympathetic towards women s rights 13 A few weeks earlier on Midsummer Day Effie possibly inspired by Shakespeare s A Midsummer Night s Dream was said by her hostess Pauline Trevelyan to have looked lovely with stephanotis in her hair at an evening party in Northumberland 14 while the previous year a male friend had brought a vase of flowers for her hair from Venice 15 Ruskin s father was evidently shocked to learn that when Effie herself was in Venice she had removed her bonnet in public ostensibly because of the heat 15 In 1853 Millais painted Effie with Foxgloves in her Hair which depicts her wearing the flowers while doing needlework Other paintings of the mid to late 19th century such as Frederick Sandys Love s Shadow 1867 of a girl with a rose in her hair sucking a sprig of blossom which was described in 1970 as a first rate PR job for the Flower People 16 and Burne Jones The Heart of the Rose 1889 17 have been cited as foreshadowing the flower power of the mid to late 1960s Early 20th century and inter war years editRational dress and the women s movement edit nbsp Franziska Countess zu Reventlow undated photo the Bohemian Countess of Schwabing By the turn of the 20th century an increasing number of professional women notably in the United States were attempting to live outside the traditional parameters of society Between 1870 and 1910 the marriage rate among educated women in the United States fell to 60 30 lower than the national average By 1893 in the state of Massachusetts alone some 300 000 women were earning their own living in nearly 300 occupations The invention of the typewriter in 1867 was a particular spur For example by the turn of the 20th century 80 of stenographers were women 18 By this time such movements as the Rational Dress Society 1881 with which the Morrises and Georgiana Burne Jones were involved were beginning to exercise some influence on women s dress although the pre Raphaelite look was still considered advanced in the late years of the 19th century 19 Queen Victoria s precocious daughter Princess Louise an accomplished painter and artist who mixed in bohemian circles was sympathetic to rational dress and to the developing women s movement generally although her rumoured pregnancy at the age of 18 was said to have been disguised by tight corsetry 20 However it was not really until the First World War that many working women embarked on a revolution in a fashion that greatly reduced the weight and restrictions imposed on them by their clothing 21 Some women working in factories wore trousers The brassiere invented in 1889 by the feminist Herminie Cadolle 22 and patented in America by Mary Phelps Jacob in 1914 began gradually to supersede the corset 23 In shipyards trouser suits the term pantsuit was adopted in America in the 1920s were virtually essential to enable women to shin up and down ladders 24 Music hall artists also helped to push the boundaries of fashion these included Vesta Tilley whose daring adoption on the stage of a well tailored male dress not only had an influence on men s attire but also foreshadowed to extent styles adopted by some women in the inter war period It was widely understood that Tilley sought additional authenticity by wearing male underclothing although off stage she was much more conventional in both her dress and general outlook 25 By the early 1920s what had been a wartime expedient the need to economise on material had become a statement of freedom by young women This was manifested by shorter hemlines just above the knee by 1925 1926 21 and boyish hairstyles accompanied by what Robert Graves and Alan Hodge described as the new fantastic development of Jazz music 26 At the Antwerp Olympic Games in 1920 the French tennis player Suzanne Lenglen attracted attention with a knee length skirt that revealed her suspender belt whenever she leaped to smash a ball From then on sportswear for women as with day to day clothes became more free 27 although after the Second World War when the American player Gussie Moran appeared at the Wimbledon championships of 1949 in a short skirt that revealed lace trimmed panties the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club accused her of bringing vulgarity and sin into tennis and shunned the outfit s designer Teddy Tinling for many years 28 The impact of lingerie in the 1920s and 30s edit The Penguin Social History of Britain noted that by the 1920s newspapers were filled with advertisements for lingerie and undies which would have been classed as indecent a generation earlier 29 Thus in Ben Travers comic novel Rookery Nook 1923 a young woman evicted from home in her nightwear and requiring day clothes remarked Combies That s all right But in the summer you know we don t 30 while in Agatha Christie s thriller The Seven Dials Mystery 1929 the aristocratic heroine Lady Bundle Brent wore only a negligible trifle under her dress like much real life it girls of her class she had been freed from the genteel expectations of earlier generations 31 In Hollywood the actress Carole Lombard who in the 1930s combined feistiness with sexual allure never wore a brassiere and avoided panties 32 However she famously declared that though I live by a man s code designed to fit a man s world at the same time I never forget that a woman s first job is to choose the right shade of lipstick 33 Coincidentally sales of men s undershirts fell dramatically in the United States when Lombard s future husband Clark Gable was revealed not to be wearing one in a famous motel bedroom scene with Claudette Colbert in the film It Happened One Night 1934 According to Gable the idea was looking half naked and scaring the brat into her own bed on the other side of the blanket hanging from a clothesline to separate twin beds However he gave the impression that going without was a vital sign of a man s virility 34 More generally the adoption by the American movie industry of the Hays Production Code in the early 1930s had a significant effect on how moral and especially sexual issues were depicted on film This included a more conservative approach to matters of dress Whereas the sort of scanty lingerie on show in some earlier productions for example Joan Blondell and Barbara Stanwyck in Night Nurse 1931 35 had tended to reflect trends that in the 1920s defied convention and were regarded by many young women as liberating by the early years of the Depression such displays came to be regarded quite widely as undesirable Developments in the late 1960s and 1970s when the strictures of the code were abandoned followed a similar pattern although by then it was often women themselves who were in the vanguard of resistance to sexualized imagery Looking back at this period Graves and Hodge noted the protracted course that daring female fashions had always taken from brothel to stage then on to Bohemia to Society to Society s maids to the mill girl and lastly to the suburban woman 36 The Dorelia look edit Among female Bohemians in the early 20th century the gypsy look was a recurring theme popularized by among others Dorothy Dorelia McNeill 1881 1969 muse lover and second wife of the painter Augustus John 1878 1961 whose full skirts and bright colors gave rise to the so called Dorelia look 37 Katherine Everett nee Olive a former student of the Slade School of Art in London has described McNeil s tight fitting hand sewn canary colored bodice above a dark gathered flowing skirt and her hair very black and gleaming emphasizing the long silver earrings which were her only adornment 38 Everett recalled also the Johns woods with wild cherry trees in blossom and a model with flying red hair clad in white being chased in and out of the trees by nude children 39 With similar lack of inhibition as early as 1907 the American heiress Natalie Barney 1875 1972 was leading like minded women in sapphic dances in her Parisian garden 40 photographs of which look little different from scenes at Woodstock in 1969 and other pop festivals of the late 1960s and early 1970s Bobbed hair and cross gender styles edit By contrast short bobbed hair was often a Bohemian trait 29 having originated in Paris c 1909 and been adopted by students at the Slade 41 several years before American film actresses such as Colleen Moore and Louise Brooks the girl in the black helmet became associated with it in the mid 1920s This style was plainly discernible on a woodblock self portrait of 1916 by Dora Carrington who had entered the Slade in 1910 42 and indeed the journalist and historian Sir Max Hastings has referred to poling punts occupied by reclining girls with bobbed hair as an enduring if misleading the popular image of the idyll before the storm of the First World War 43 In F Scott Fitzgerald s short story Bernice Bobs Her Hair 1920 a young woman who wishes to become a society vamp regards the adoption of a bob as a necessary prelude 44 while Louise Brooks sexually charged performance as Lulu in G W Pabst s film Pandora s Box 1929 left an enduring image of the style which has been replicated on screen over the years most vividly by Cyd Charisse in Singin in the Rain 1952 Isabelle de Funes as Valentina in Baba Yaga 1973 45 and Melanie Griffith in Something Wild 1986 Bobbed hair was associated also with many popular singers and actresses in the 1960s and has frequently been evoked by writers and directors as well as fashion designers seeking to recapture the hedonistic or free spirit of the 1920s For example Kerry Greenwood s Cocaine Blues 1989 and succeeding novels about Phryne Fisher a glamorous but unconventional aristocratic investigator in late twenties Melbourne Australia conveyed an image five feet two 157 5 centimeters with eyes of green and black hair cut into a cap 46 that was later cultivated stylishly on television by Essie Davis in ABC s Miss Fisher s Murder Mysteries 2012 47 Around 1926 an even shorter style known as the Eton crop became popular 21 on her arrival in Tilling Rye in E F Benson s comic novel Mapp and Lucia 1931 Lucia described Quaint Irene as a girl with no hat and an Eton crop She was dressed in a fisherman s jersey and knickerbockers For many years trite assumptions were often made about the sexuality of women with cropped hairstyles a historian of the 1980s wrote of the Greenham Common peace camp in England that it brought public awareness to feminist separation and even to lesbianism hitherto seen in the mass media when acknowledged at all either in terms of Eton cropped androgyny or of pornographic fantasy 48 Even so others have drawn a stark contrast between the bohemian demeanor of the Greenham women and the bold make up and power dressing that tended to define women s fashion more generally in the 1980s 49 the so called designer decade One social historian has observed that the innocuous woolen jersey now known in Britain as the jumper or the pullover was the first item of clothing to become interchangeable between men and women and as such was seen as a dangerous symptom of gender confusion 21 Trousers for women sometimes worn mannishly as an expression of sexuality as by Marlene Dietrich as a cabaret singer in the 1930 film Morocco in which she dressed in a white tie suit and kissed a girl in the audience 50 also became popular in the 1920s and 1930s as did aspects of what many years later would sometimes be referred to as shabby chic 51 Winston Churchill s niece Clarissa was among those who wore a tailored suit in the late 1930s 52 Post Liberation Paris edit nbsp Cafe de Flore Saint Germain des Pres Paris the haunt of post war bohemians The New Look edit After the Second World War Christian Dior s New Look launched in Paris in 1947 though drawing on styles that had begun to emerge in 1938 1939 53 set the pattern for women s fashion generally until the 1960s Harking back in some ways to the Belle Epoque of the late 19th and early 20th centuries and thus not a new look as such it was criticized by some as excessively feminine and with its accompanying corsets and rustle of frilled petticoats as setting back the work of emancipation won through participation in two world wars 54 It also for a while bucked the trend towards boyish fashion that after the First World War tended to follow major conflicts 55 Rive Gauche edit American influences had been discouraged during the Nazi occupation of France but notably in the form of be bop and other types of jazz were strong among intellectual cafe society in the mid to late 1940s 56 In 1947 Samedi Soir lifted the lid on what it called the troglodytes of Saint Germain 57 namely bohemians of the Parisian Left Bank Rive Gauche district of Saint Germain des Pres who appeared to cluster around existentialist philosopher Jean Paul Sartre These included Roger Vadim who married and launched the career of actress Brigitte Bardot in the 1950s novelist Boris Vian since described as the epitome of Left Bank Bohemia standing at the center of its postwar rehabilitation 58 and singer Juliette Greco nbsp Juliette Greco in 1963 Juliette Greco edit At the liberation of Paris in 1944 the American journalist Ernie Pyle observed that the women were all brightly dressed in white or red blouses and colorful peasant skirts with flowers in their hair and big flashy earrings 59 while Lady Diana Cooper whose husband Duff Cooper became British Ambassador to Paris that year wrote that during the occupation Parisienne women had worn grotesquely large hats hung with flowers and fruits and feathers and ribbons as well as high carved wooden shoes 60 However in contrast to such striking bohemian adornments and subsequently the New Look which itself scandalised some Parisennes the clothes of the post war bohemians were predominantly black when Greco first performed outside Saint Germain she affronted some of her audience by wearing black trousers her bare feet slipped into golden sandals 61 In old age she claimed that this style of dress arose from poverty When I was a teenager in Paris I only had one dress and one pair of shoes so the boys in the house started dressing me in their old black coats and trousers A fashion was shaped out of misery When people copied me I found it a little ridiculous but I didn t mind It made me smile 62 Performing in London over fifty years later Greco was described as still oozing bohemian style 63 Saint Germain in retrospect edit Capturing the spirit of the time David Profumo has written of how his mother the actress Valerie Hobson was entranced by Roger Vadim s flatmate the director Marc Allegret while she was filming Blanche Fury in 1947 Allegret s apparently bohemian lifestyle appealed sharply to her romantic side and she revelled in the Left Bank milieu to which he introduced her during script discussions in Paris There were meals with Andre Gide Jean Cocteau and the long legged Zizi Jeanmaire For an attractive British woman who felt deprived of attention this was an ideal situation for some sort of reawakening 64 The previous year a perfume created for Hobson had been marketed as Great Expectations to coincide with her role as Estella Havisham in David Lean s film of that name based on Charles Dickens 1861 novel In England this attracted the custom of then University of Oxford undergraduate Margaret Roberts later British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher who a little daringly for the time also shopped for push up pink brassieres 65 In 1953 when Hobson starred in the musical The King and I in London it was apparent that she had retained a Parisienne mix of chic and Bohemianism A Daily Mirror journalist described her pale ladylike looks her well bred clothes she likes embroidery and painting while a young Etonian who visited her dressing room recalled that it had been freshly painted pink and white for her and was like entering a risque French apartment 66 Ten years later when Hobson s husband the politician John Profumo was involved in a sex scandal that threatened to destabilize the British government Prime Minister Harold Macmillan wrote that his Profumo s wife is very nice and sensible Of course these people live in a raffish theatrical bohemian society where no one really knows anyone and everyone is darling 67 Post war Paris was recalled fondly in 2007 when France introduced a ban on smoking in public places The aroma of Gauloises and Gitanes was for many years thought to be an inseparable feature of Parisian cafe society but the owner of Les Deux Magots once frequented by Sartre Simone de Beauvoir Albert Camus and other writers observed that things have changed The writers of today are not so addicted to cigarettes 68 A British journalist who interviewed Juliette Greco in 2010 described Les Deux Magots and the Cafe de Flore as now overpriced tourist hotspots and noted that chain stores and expensive restaurants have replaced the bookshops cafes and revolutionary ideas of Jean Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir s Rive Gauche 69 As measures of changing attitudes to cuisine and fashion by the early 21st century 80 of French croissants were being made in food plants while by 2014 only one factory continued to manufacture the traditional male beret associated with printers artists political activists and during the inter war years the tennis player Jean Borotra 70 New influences in 1960s edit The bohemian traits of post war Paris spread to other urban parts of the French speaking world notably to Algiers where an underground culture of jazz clubs girls and drugs grew up in the words of punk rock producer Marc Zermati who was in the city at the height of the Algerian war in the late 1950s all very French 71 However that war marked a turning point which in the view of some was so traumatic that ordinary French people looked instead to America as a new model for pleasure and happiness 72 This in turn led to the ye ye music of the early to mid 1960s named after the British band the Beatles use of yeah yeah in some their early songs 73 and the rise of such singers as Johnny Hallyday and Francoise Hardy The French also adopted a number of British singers Petula Clark Gillian Hills Jane Birkin who performed successfully in French Birkin forming a long term relationship with singer songwriter Serge Gainsbourg who was a seminal figure in French popular music in the 1960s and 1970s In 1968 major industrial and student unrest in Paris and other parts of France came close to ousting the government of President Charles de Gaulle who after leading the Free French during the Second World War had returned to power at the time of the Algerian emergency The events of 1968 represented a further significant landmark in post war France 74 although their longer term impact was probably more on cultural social and academic life than on the political system which through the constitution of the Fifth Republic 1958 has remained broadly intact 75 Indeed one paradox of 1968 was that the first student demonstrations broke out at Nanterre whose catchment area included the affluent and chic 16th and 17th arrondissements of Paris Its students were more modish and trendy than those of the Sorbonne in the city s Latin Quarter being described at the time in terms that typify more generally the styles and attitudes of young people in the late 1960s It is the girls that give the show away culottes glossy leather mini skirts boots driving up in Mini Coopers Rebellious sentiment is more obvious among the boys long hair square spectacles Che Guevara Cuban revolutionary died 1967 beards The picture in Nanterre in May was lots and lots of painted dollies cohabiting with unkempt revolutionaries 76 America the beat generation and flower power edit nbsp Snejana Onopka on the runway for Anna Sui in November 2011 In the United States adherents of the beat counter culture probably best defined by Jack Kerouac s novel On the Road set in the late 1940s written in 1952 and published in 1957 were associated with black polo neck or turtle neck sweaters blue denim jeans and sandals The influence of this movement could be seen in the persona and songs of Bob Dylan in the early to mid 1960s road films like Easy Rider 1969 and the punk oriented New Wave of the mid 1970s which among other things produced a boho style icon in Deborah Harry of the New York band Blondie However as with some American musicians of the mid 1960s such as Sonny and Cher Blondie came to international prominence only after a tour of Britain in 1978 77 Greenwich Village and West Coast edit New York s Greenwich Village which since the late 19th century had attracted many women with feminist or free love ideals 78 was a particular magnet for bohemians in the early 1960s Bob Dylan s girl friend Suze Rotolo who appeared with him on the cover of his second album The Freewheelin Bob Dylan 1963 recalled that the Village was where people like me went people who didn t belong where they came from where the writers I was reading and the artists I was looking at had lived or passed through 79 These beatniks as they came to be known by the late 1950s were in many ways the antecedents of the hippie movement that formed on the West Coast of the US in the mid 1960s 80 and came to the fore as the first post war baby boomers reached the age of majority in the Summer of Love of 1967 The Monterey Pop Festival was a major landmark of that year which was associated with flowerpower psychedelia opposition to the Vietnam war and the inventive music and flowing colorful fashions of among others Jimi Hendrix the Mamas amp the Papas Jefferson Airplane and the British group The Beatles whose album Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band is said to have caused the guru of psychedelia Timothy Leary to remark that my work is finished 81 Hippiedom and the Pre Raphaelites edit The documentary film Festival Murray Lerner 1967 recorded how the clean cut college kids who attended the Newport Rhode Island Folk Festival in 1963 1964 had by 1965 when Bob Dylan caused a sensation at that year s festival by playing an electric guitar become considerably scruffier the hippies were waiting to be born 82 Among other things the wearing of male neckties which in the mid 1960s had often drawn on 19th century paisley patterns 10 declined as muttonchop whiskers and teashades sunglasses came in by the time of the Chicago 7 trial late 1969 hair over the collars had become so commonplace that it was beginning to transcend Bohemian style taking on mass popularity in the 1970s The London art dealer Jeremy Maas reflected in the mid 1980s that there was no question that the Hippy sic movement and its repercussive influence in England owed much of its imagery its manner dress and personal appearance to the Pre Raphaelite ideal It was observed by all of us who were involved with these exhibitions of pre Raphaelite paintings that visitors included increasing numbers of the younger generation who had begun to resemble the figures in the pictures they had come to see 83 Jimmy Page of the British band Led Zeppelin who collected Pre Raphaelite paintings observed of Edward Burne Jones that the romance of the Arthurian legends captured in his paintings and the bohemian life of the artists who were reworking these stories seemed very attuned to our time 84 while the author David Waller noted in 2011 that Burne Jones subjects have much in common with the sixties rock chicks and their pop star paladins 85 London in the 1950s editAlthough the annual Saturday Book recorded in 1956 a view that London s now nothing but flash coffee bars with teddies and little bits of girls in jeans 86 the Edwardian teddy boy look of the times did not coincide with Bohemian tastes For women the legacy of the New Look was still apparent although hemlines had generally risen as as one journalist put it in 1963 photographs of those first bold bearers of the New Look make them seem strangely lost and bewildered as though they had mistaken their cue and come on stage fifty years late 87 The Bohemian foci during this period were the jazz clubs and espresso bars of Soho and Fitzrovia Their habitues usually wore polo necks in the words of one social historian thousands of pale duffel coat clad students were hunched in coffee bars over their copies of Jean Paul Sartre and Jack Kerouac 88 Various public houses and clubs also catered for Bohemian tastes notably the Colony Room Club in Soho opened in 1948 by Muriel Belcher a lesbian from Birmingham 89 As with the literary phenomenon of the so called Angry Young Men from 1956 onwards the image was more a male than a female one However when the singer Alma Cogan wished to mark her success by buying mink coats for her mother and sister the actress Sandra Caron the latter asked for a duffel coat instead because she wanted to be regarded as a serious actress and a sort of a beatnik 90 In 1960 the future author Jacqueline Wilson who as a teenager lived in Kingston upon Thames Surrey captured this look after spotting two acquaintances in a record shop in turquoise duffle coats extremely tight jeans and cha cha shoes being cuddled by a group of horrible spotty teddy boys 91 Continental influences edit In Iris Murdoch s novel The Bell 1958 an art student named Dora Greenfield bought big multi colored skirts and jazz records and sandals However as Britain emerged from post war austerity some Bohemian women found influences from continental Europe adopting for example the gamine look with its black jerseys and short almost boyish hairstyles associated with film actresses Audrey Hepburn Sabrina 1954 and as a Greco beatnik 92 in Funny Face 1957 and Jean Seberg Bonjour Tristesse 1958 and A bout de souffle 1960 as well as the French novelist Francoise Sagan who as one critic put it was celebrated for the variety of her partners and for driving fast sports cars in bare feet as an example of the free life 93 In 1961 Fenella Fielding played a mascara clad Greco alike in The Rebel with comedian Tony Hancock 92 while more recently Talulah Riley replicated the look for scenes in ITV s 2006 adaptation of Agatha Christie s The Moving Finger 94 set in 1951 Others favored the lower cut tighter styles of continental stars such as Bardot or Gina Lollobrigida Valerie Hobson was among those whose wardrobe drew on Italian couture in addition to a large collection of stiletto heeled shoes she possessed a skirt made from python skin 95 More generally European tastes including the Lambretta motor scooter and Italian and French cuisine which the widely traveled cookery writer Elizabeth David herself a bit of a Bohemian did much to promote 96 not only began to pervade Bohemian circles but offered a contrast from 1955 onwards with the brasher Americanism of rock n roll with its predominantly teenage associations Hamburg and Beatlemania edit nbsp Bobbed hair revival Barbara Feldon with Don Adams in Get Smart 1965 In 1960 when the Beatles then an obscure Liverpudlian combo with five members as opposed to their eventual fab four were working in Hamburg West Germany they were influenced by a Bohemian art school set known as Exis for existentialists The Exis were roughly equivalent to what in France became known as les beats and included photographer Astrid Kirchherr for whom the fifth Beatle Stuart Sutcliffe left the group and artist and musician Klaus Voormann who designed the cover for the Beatles album Revolver in 1966 John Lennon s wife Cynthia recalled that Kirchherr was fascinated by the Beatles teddy boy style but that they in turn were bowled over by her hip black clothes her avant garde way of life her photography and her sense of style 97 As a result the group acquired black leather jackets as well as fringed hairstyles that were the prototype of the mop top cuts associated with Beatlemania in 1963 1964 98 The latter coincided with the revival of the bobbed style for women promoted in London by hairdresser Vidal Sassoon 99 initially for actress Nancy Kwan and adopted by among others singers Cilla Black 100 Billie Davis and in America Bev Bivens of We Five and Tammi Terrell fashion designers Mary Quant and Jean Muir American actress Barbara Feldon in the TV series Get Smart and in the form of a longer bob Cathy McGowan who presented the influential British TV pop music show Ready Steady Go 1963 1966 101 However when longer blonde hair associated with among many others Julie Christie Samantha Juste Judy Geeson and fashion model Lorna McDonald who at the end of each edition of the BBC s Dee Time jumped into Simon Dee s open E type Jaguar 102 came to typify the sixties look advertisers turned to the Bohemian world for inspiration through its use of herbs Sunsilk shampoo was said to have stolen something from the gypsies 103 Swinging London editBeatlemania did not of itself create the apparent iconoclasm of the 1960s however as one writer put it just as Noel Coward and Cole Porter reflected the louche carefree attitude of the Nineteen Twenties so did the Beatles music capture the rhythm of breaking free experienced by an entire generation of people growing up in the Sixties 10 By the middle of the decade British pop music had stimulated the fashion boom of what Time called swinging London 104 Associated initially with such mod designs as Quant s mini skirt this soon embraced a range of essentially Bohemian styles These included the military and Victorian fashions popularized by stars who frequented boutiques such as Granny Takes a Trip the fusion of fashion art and lifestyle opened by Nigel Waymouth in the King s Road Chelsea in January 1966 105 and by 1967 the hippie look largely imported from America although as noted London stores such as Biba had for some time displayed dresses that drew on Pre Raphaelite imagery 106 The Rolling Stones Keith Richards whose early girlfriend Linda Keith had in her late teens been a bohemian force in West Hampstead noted on the Stones return from an American tour in 1967 how quickly hippiedom had transformed the London scene 107 Victorian imagery edit nbsp Lewis Carroll s Alice John Tenniel This fusion of influences was discernible in two black and white productions for BBC television in 1966 the series Adam Adamant Lives starring Gerald Harper as an Edwardian adventurer who had been cryopreserved in time and Juliet Harmer as Georgina Jones a stylish mod who befriended him and Jonathan Miller s dreamy rather Gothic production of Lewis Carroll s mid Victorian children s fantasy Alice in Wonderland 1865 108 Confirming the aspiration Sydney Newman the BBC s Head of Television Drama in the 1960s reflected of Adam Adamant that they could never quite get the Victorian mentality to contrast with the 60s 109 On the face of it Carroll a pseudonym for Charles Lutwidge Dodgson had been a rather conventional and repressed Oxford University don but he was a keen and artistic photographer in the early days of that medium taking among other things rather bohemian looking pictures of Alice Liddell and other young girls 110 and he developed an empathy and friendship with several of the Pre Raphaelites 111 the sculptor Thomas Woolner and possibly even Rossetti dissuaded him from illustrating Alice himself 112 a task that was undertaken instead by John Tenniel The imagery of Alice both textually and graphically lent itself well to the psychedelia of the late 1960s 113 In America this was apparent in among other ways the Alice happening in Central Park New York 1968 when naked participants covered themselves in polka dots 114 and the lyrics to Grace Slick s song White Rabbit 1966 One pill makes you larger And one pill makes you small that she performed with both the Great Society and Jefferson Airplane including with the latter at Woodstock in 1969 Women in the late 1960s and early 1970s edit nbsp Mid 1970s dresses by Laura Ashley exhibited at the Fashion Museum Bath England in 2013 By the late 1960s shops such as Laura Ashley whose first London outlet opened in 1968 115 were routinely promoting the peasant look and selling a range of uniquely eccentric clothes The magic was being able to step into a Laura Ashley dress and imagine you had found something out of a dressing up box 116 At around the same time too and into the 1970s the brassiere or bra which as noted had been seen as a liberating innovation in the early part of the century came to be regarded by some women such as the Australian academic Germaine Greer The Female Eunuch 1969 as an unduly restrictive symbol of traditional womanhood However the much publicised incidence of bra burning in the 1970s tended to be overstated and came to be satirised for example in the 1973 film Carry On Girls and a poster by Young amp Rubicam 117 one of a mildly subversive series for Smirnoff vodka I never thought of burning my bra until I discovered Smirnoff It was also seen by many including Greer herself as a distraction from the cause of women s liberation 118 A Vermont lawyer later observed wryly that like every good feminist in training in the sixties I burned my bra but that now it s the nineties I realize Playtex underwear manufacturer had supported me better than any man I know 119 Claire Perry who became a Conservative Member of Parliament in 2010 and later a government minister reflected that as a women s officer at Oxford University in the early 1980s she was a bra burning feminist with a hideous new romantic haircut but that her feminism had in her view matured 120 Girl power edit By the mid 1980s the American singer Madonna had turned the bra into a positive even provocative fashion statement Madonna s flamboyant and gritty style notably seen to bohemian effect alongside Rosanna Arquette in the 1985 film Desperately Seeking Susan was in turn a precursor of so called girl power that was associated in the 1990s with various prominent young women such as singers Courtney Love who played the 1999 Glastonbury Festival in a headline grabbing pink bra 121 and the more commercially oriented Spice Girls and offbeat or quirky American television series Xena Warrior Princess Buffy the Vampire Slayer Caroline in the City Sex and the City Since the 1960s hippie boho chic editMain article Boho chic nbsp Zooey Deschanel left performing with M Ward as She amp Him Newport Folk Festival 2008 Journalist Bob Stanley remarked that the late 1960s are never entirely out of fashion they just need a fresh angle to make them de jour 122 Thus the features of hippie fashion re emerged at various stages during the ensuing forty years In the mid to late 1980s variants of the short and fundamentally un Bohemian rah rah skirt which originated with cheerleaders were combined with leather or denim to create a look with some Bohemian or even gothic features for example by the singing duo Strawberry Switchblade who took inspiration from 1970s punk fashion 123 In the 1990s the term hippie chic was applied to Tom Ford s collections for the Italian house of Gucci These drew on among other influences the style popular in retrospect of Talitha Getty died 1971 actress wife of John Paul Getty and step granddaughter of Dorelia McNeil who was represented most famously in a photograph of her and her husband taken by Patrick Lichfield in Marrakesh Morocco in 1969 124 Recalling the influx of hippies into Marrakesh in 1968 Richard Neville then editor of Oz wrote that the dapper drifters in embroidered skirts and cowboy boots were so delighted by the bright satin 50s underwear favored by the matrons of Marrakesh that they wore them outside their denims a la Madonna the singer twenty five years later 125 In the early 21st century boho chic was associated initially with supermodel Kate Moss and then as a highly popular style in 2004 2005 with actress Sienna Miller In America similar styles were sometimes referred to as bobo ashcan chic or luxe grunge their leading proponents including actresses Mary Kate Olsen and Zooey Deschanel As if to illustrate the cyclical nature of fashion by the end of the noughties strong pre Raphaelite traits were notable in among others singer Florence Welch model Karen Elson and designer Anna Sui 126 In Germany terms like Bionade Bourgeoisie Bionade Biedermeier or Bioheme refer to former Bohemians that gained a sort of Cultural hegemony with their LOHA lifestyle 127 the phenomenon of such former young bohemians becoming established during the years is a typical aspect of gentrification processes A bon mot of Michael Rutschky claimed that at the end of the 20th century not the Proletariat but the Boheme became the ruling class 128 The group in question uses especially food as a means of distinction 129 130 131 and separation 130 Among others the lemonade trademark Bionade has been connected with the phenomenon See also editBohemia in LondonNotes edit a b Howarth Alice 26 July 2022 The history of Boho chic and why it s back for 2022 harpersbazaar com Harper s Bazaar Retrieved 23 August 2023 The original Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood had been formed in 1848 by William Holman Hunt Rossetti and John Everett Millais who aspired to a style of painting that they felt had been lost since the time of Raphael 1483 1520 Franny Moyle 2009 Desperate Romantics See for example Virginia Nicholson 2002 Among The Bohemians Though more conventional in many ways than Jane Morris Georgie Burne Jones was becoming a bit of a bohemian even in the early days of her marriage for example she would ask her maid to model for sketches in mid morning whereas a typical bourgeois wife would have given priority to the housework Fiona MacCarthy 2011 The Last Pre Raphaelite Judith Flanders 2001 A Circle of Sisters Henry James letter to Alice James 10 March 1869 Pygmalion introduction to Act III Fiona MacCarthy 2011 The Last Pre Raphaelite a b c Anne Sebba 1990 Laura Ashley a Life By Design MacCarthy op cit Suzanne Fagence Cooper 2010 The Model Wife The Passionate Lives of Effie Gray Ruskin and Millais Florence Nightingale s observations regarding the foxgloves are noted in correspondence of her friend the novelist Elizabeth Gaskell whose acquaintance with Effie Ruskin dated back to their schooldays However it is unclear when Nightingale herself met Effie Cooper op cit footnote 85 Gaskell was especially well connected In 1861 for example she was part of a house party at Fryston Hall Yorkshire given by Richard Monckton Milnes a persistent suitor of Florence Nightingale that included also the MP William Forster Austen Layard who excavated the biblical city of Ninevah and the American Union Minister in London Charles Francis Adams Gaskell was among a group visiting nearby Pomfret Castle when Adam received news of the Trent incident that in the early stages of the American Civil War almost brought Britain and the Union to war see Amanda Foreman 2010 A World on Fire David Cannadine 1998 History in Our Time Diary of Pauline Lady Trevelyan 24 June 1853 quoted in Robert Brownwell 2013 Marriage of Inconvenience a b Brownwell op cit Robert Melville in New Statesman 20 November 1970 See MacCarthy op cit Eleanor Mills in Sunday Times Culture 19 July 2015 reviewing Kate Bolick Spinster Virginia Nicholson 2002 Among The Bohemians John Sutherland in The Times 21 December 2013 reviewing Lucinda Hawksley Princess Louise Queen Victoria s Rebellious Daughter a b c d Martin Pugh 2008 We Danced All Night The Times Luxx 26 November 2011 Andrew Marr 2009 The Making of Modern Britain Henrietta Heald For England s Sake History Today October 2014 p 33 Kate Adie 2013 Fighting on the Home Front The Legacy of Women in World War One Tilley was actively involved in recruitment for war service and was happily married to her songwriter Walter de Frece who was later knighted and became a Member of Parliament Robert Graves amp Alan Hodge 1940 The Long Weekend A Social History of Great Britain 1918 1939 Edward Fawcett in Royal Academy of Arts Magazine June 2012 Times obituary of Gussie Moran 19 January 2013 a b John Stevenson 1984 British Society 1914 45 Rhoda Marley to Clive FitzWatters and Harold Twine in Travers Rookery Nook chapter XII Offering to assist her Clive had suggested to Twine that it will be more or less guess work on my part in the bag put one pair of thin com er lady s summer underwear Rhoda asked if Twine could just manage a pair of cami knickers and a Princess petticoat As early as 1920 in Travers debut novel The Dippers Pauline Dipper s black silk petticoat did not extend unduly and it was possible to esteem the shapely outline of calf and instep compressed in stockings of the same material chapter III Also in The Dippers a young woman tried to start a conversation about hygienic underclothing for ladies with a man she mistakenly believed to have written articles on the subject I wanted to speak to you about something delicate this is not a subject one can discuss in public People have such conventional ideas Helen Monk to Henry Talboyes chapter VIII Glamour s Golden Age BBC4 26 October 2009 Jane Ellen Wayne 1993 Clark Gable Portrait of a Misfit Quoted in Halliwell s Filmgoer s Companion 10th ed 1993 edited by John Walker Almost 70 years after Lombard s death the Sunday Times described red lipstick as the ne plus ultra not further beyond of make up We respect red lipstick as a badge of loveliness and youth Georgia May bold style Florence Welch sexual confidence Scarlett Johansson and old school glamour Rosie Huntington Whiteley and above all we appreciate that it doesn t work for everyone Shane Watson in Style 4 December 2011 Wayne op cit Tim Stanley Speaking in Code History Today October 2014 Graves amp Hodge op cit Virginia Nicholson 2002 Among the Bohemians Katherine Everett 1949 Bricks and Flowers See also Juliet Nicholson 2006 The Perfect Summer Katherine Everett 1949 Bricks and Flowers See Diana Souhami 2004 Wild Girls Gilbert Cannan 1916 Mendel Gretchen Gerzine 1989 Carrington Max Hastings 2013 Catastrophe Europe Goes to War 1914 Hastings himself rejected the notion that the years immediately before the war represented some sort of golden age See Ellie Pithers in Telegraph Magazine 26 January 2013 The term vamp after vampire was associated in particular with the silent film actress Theda Bara 1885 1955 Valentina was originally a comic book creation by Italian artist Guido Crepax inspired by Louise Brooks in Pandora s Box see Roland Jaccard ed 1986 Louise Brooks Portrait of an Anti Star Greenwood 2012 Unnatural Habits Tasmanian born Davis was in her early 40s when she played Phryne Fisher though the heroine of the books was only as old as the century 28 in 1928 Other recent examples of the 1920s style bob have included Gemma Arterton in St Trinian s 2007 and Michelle Dockery as Lady Mary Crawley in the 5th series of ITV s Downton Abbey 2014 the latter set in 1924 Alwyn W Turner 2010 Rejoice Rejoice Britain in the 1980s Graham Stewart 2013 Bang A History of Britain in the 1980s Tim Stanley Speaking in Code in History Today October 2014 at page 21 Dietrich made clear her personal preference for such clothes I do not wear them to be sensational I think I am much more alluring quoted ibid Achieving Laid Back Minimalism With Shabby Chic Style 4 April 2020 Clarissa Eden 2007 A Memoir From Churchill to Eden Pearson Phillips in Age of Austerity 1945 1951 ed Michael Sissons amp Philip French 1963 Phillips loc cit With reference to the colourless utility garments that became commonplace in Britain during the war Phillips loc cit quotes an expert of the time at London s Victoria and Albert Museum as asserting that men will feel oppressed and frightened by excessive femininity when they return from war See Dan Halpern in The New Yorker 25 December 2006 Samedi Soir 3 May 1947 Dan Halpern The New Yorker 25 December 2006 Quoted in Nicholas Rankin 2011 Ian Fleming s Commandos The Story of 30 Assault Unit in WWII Letter 23 September 1944 Darling Monster The Letters of Lady Diana Cooper to her Son John Julius Norwich 1939 1952 ed John Julius Norwich 2013 Antony Beevor amp Artemis Cooper 1994 Paris After the Liberation Interview with Will Hodgkinson Times Saturday Review 6 November 2010 The Times 27 June 2000 David Profumo 2006 Bringing the House Down In contrast to Vadim who had not turned twenty Allegret 1900 1973 was in middle age when he directed Hobson He had been married to the daughter of the editor of French Vogue who left him after the war for a theatrical agent Andre Bernham taking their daughter with her ibid Jeanmaire is probably best remembered through the second line And you dance like Zizi Jeanmaire of Peter Sarstedt s song Where Do You Go To My Lovely 1969 which captured the spirit of Parisian high life in the late 1960s Charles Moore 2013 Margaret Thatcher The Authorized Biography Volume One Not for Turning Eve Champman and Hugo Williams quoted in David Kynaston 2009 Family Britain 1951 57 Harold Macmillan diary 22 March 1963 quoted in Alistair Horne 1989 Harold Macmillan 1957 1986 Charles Williams 2009 Harold Macmillan BBC NEWS World Europe Bidding goodbye to the Gauloises news bbc co uk February 2007 Will Hodgkinson Times Saturday Review 6 November 2010 Simone de Beauvoir was an existentialist companion of Sartre See Bruno Waterfield in The Times Saturday Review 25 July 2015 regarding the sanitised Europe of the early 21st century and its effect on French culture Bruno Waterfield in The Times Saturday Review 25 July 2015 reviewing Jonathan Fenby 2015 The History of Modern France Andrew Hussey History Today March 2015 p 64 reviewing Barnett Singer The Americanization of France Hussey loc cit Notably She Loves You John Lennon Paul McCartney 1963 Patrick Seale amp Maureen McConville 1968 French Revolution 1968 At the time Seale amp McConville op cit described de Gaulle s survival in 1968 as an amazing demonstration of political virility in a man of 77 He resigned the following year and died in 1970 A later historian contrasted the stature of de Gaulle with the soap opera lives of Presidents Sarkozy 2007 2012 and Hollande 2012 Jonathan Fenby 2015 The History of Modern France From Revolution to Present Day Seale amp McConville op cit When the British band the Rolling Stones arrived in Los Angeles in 1964 they were met by Sonny Bono who was then doing promotional work for producer Phil Spector A year later he and Cher were feted at the Dorchester Hotel in London and presented to the world by Ahmet Ertegun see Keith Richards 2010 Life Eleanor Mills in Sunday Times Culture 19 July 2015 reviewing Kate Bolick 2015 Spinster Suze Rotolo 2009 A Freewheelin Time Suze Rotolo observed that the Beats had already cracked the facade of constricted and rigid morality and we the next generation broke through it A Freewheelin Time op cit See The New Yorker 26 June 2006 Jason Anderson This Land is Your Land in Uncut September 2015 p 60 Quoted in Des Cars Laurence 2000 The Pre Raphaelites Romance and Realism New Horizons series Translated by Garvie Francisca London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 30100 5 See also Fiona MacCarthy 2011 op cit Quoted in History Today October 2011 History Today loc cit Saturday Book vol 16 1956 Pearson Phillips in Age of Austerity op cit Dominic Sandbrook 2005 Never Had It So Good Sophie Parkin 2012 Colony Room Club 1948 2008 A History of Bohemian Soho Carol Dyhouse in History Today November 2011 Diary 13 February 1960 quoted in David Kynaston 2014 Modernity Britain A Shake of the Dice 1959 62 a b Times Saturday Review 6 November 2010 Peter Lewis 1978 The 50s Part of the Marple series with Riley as Megan Symington Richard Davenport Hines 2013 An English Affair For example A Book of Mediterranean Food 1950 Cynthia Lennon 2005 John See for example Sandbrook op cit Bob Hope in Telegraph Magazine loc cit And replicated by Sheridan Smith in the ITV biographical film Cilla 2014 A similar style to McGowan s was adopted in the early 2010s by British Labour Party politician Rachel Reeves Richard Wiseman 2006 Whatever Happened to Simon Dee TV advertisement of 1966 Washes Whiter BBC2 1990 Time 15 April 1966 See Times Magazine 24 June 2006 David Moss in Antiques Trade Gazette 27 August 2011 number 2004 Fiona MacCathy 2011 The Last Pre Raphaelite Keith Richards 2010 Life Miller s production starred 13 year old Anne Marie Mallik in her only known acting role Andrew Pixley 2006 DVD viewing notes for Adam Adamant Lives Simon Winchester 2011 The Alice Behind Wonderland Alice Liddell the inspiration for Alice s Adventures in Wonderland was the daughter of Henry Liddell Dean of Christ Church Oxford where Dodgson was a Fellow Stoffel Stephanie Lovett 1997 Lewis Carroll and Alice New Horizons series London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 30075 6 Roger Lancelyn Green 1960 in Aspects of Alice ed Robert Phliips 1971 Thomas Fensch 1968 Alice the First Acidhead in Aspects of Alice op cit Waldemar Januszczak in Sunday Times Culture 27 November 2011 The first American branch of Laura Ashley opened in San Francisco in 1974 but had closed by the time a shop opened in New York in 1981 Laura Ashley products having been sold in Bloomingdales and Macy s department stores for some years Anne Sebba 1990 Laura Ashley a Life By Design Sebba op cit Nick Souter amp Auart Newman 1987 The Postter Handbook In 2013 The Oldie published a cartoon depicting women suffragettes of the early 20th century with the caption but I m not sure about this proposal to burn our whalebone corsets Oldie February 2013 A pragmatic 21st century view was that feminism is not about burning your bra in the street It is about among other things women getting up in the morning and leaving the house to go to a job that pays them an actual wage Laura Smith letter in Metro 30 October 2012 Susan Sweetser quoted in Oxford Dictionary of Humorous Quotations 5th edition ed Gyles Brandreth 2013 119 13 Interview with Rachel Sylvester amp Alice Thomson The Times 2 March 2013 The Times 26 July 1999 The Times Knowledge 24 June 2006 Photographs for album Since Yesterday 1984 Lichfield 1981 The Most Beautiful Women See http www blackbookmag com article guccis cruise wear for earth mamas 3399 Richard Neville 1995 Hippie Hippie Shake Stacey Danielle 12 April 2016 Kate Middleton wears AW15 Anna Sui as she changes into a floaty maxi dress for National Park visit Mirror Retrieved 3 November 2016 Kathrin Hartmann 25 June 2010 Ende der Marchenstunde Wie die Industrie die Lohas und Lifestyle Okos vereinnahmt books google com in German Karl Blessing Verlag ISBN 978 3 641 03632 4 retrieved 27 September 2015 Dirk Maxeiner Michael Miersch 13 October 2014 Alles grun und gut Eine Bilanz des okologischen Denkens books google com in German Albrecht Knaus Verlag ISBN 978 3 641 14310 7 retrieved 27 September 2015 All green and well now A balance sheet of ecological thinking The Quote is used in a section of chapter 6 and attributed to Rutschky he no direct reference found in the Book used it in a FAZ review of Sven Reichardts Suhrkamp volume Authentizitat und Gemeinschaft Brenda Strohmaier 2 October 2014 Wie man lernt Berliner zu sein Die deutsche Hauptstadt als konjunktiver Erfahrungsraum Campus Verlag 2014 p 166 footnote 150 books google com in German Campus Verlag ISBN 978 3 593 50184 0 retrieved 27 September 2015 a b Karin Kaudelka Gerhard Kilger 31 March 2014 Eigenverantwortlich und leistungsfahig Das selbstandige Individuum in der sich wandelnden Arbeitswelt books google com in German transcript Verlag ISBN 978 3 8394 2588 6 retrieved 27 September 2015 Jorg Albrecht Leipzig 2 October 2014 Martina Low ed Vom Kohlrabiapostel zum Bionade Biedermeier books google com Vielfalt und Zusammenhalt Verhandlungen des 36 Kongresses der Deutschen Gesellschaft fur Soziologie in Bochum und Dortmund 2012 Teil 1 Campus Verlag 2014 in German Campus Verlag ISBN 978 3 593 50082 9 retrieved 27 September 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bohemian style amp oldid 1220321290, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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