fbpx
Wikipedia

Madonna wannabe

A Madonna wannabe, or Madonnabe, is a person (usually female) who dresses or acts like American singer Madonna. When she emerged into stardom in the mid-1980s, an unusually high number of women, particularly young women and girls, began to dress and do their hair and makeup in the style that Madonna displayed in public. The term was popularized by writer John Skow in a May 1985 Time cover story on the singer.[1] Numerous sociologists and other academics commented on the Madonna influence in her wannabes.

Madonna seen during the Celebration Tour in 2023

The term was officially recognized by the Webster's Dictionary in May 1991.[2] Following the disappearance of the trend, critics and journalists refer to female pop stars who emulate Madonna's clothing or musical style as Madonna wannabes. The term is also used as a nickname for her fandom, mainly to refer to her female fans, especially young ones.

History edit

 
A woman dressed in the Madonna's look and style of the wannabe era

In 1982, Madonna met French jewelry designer Maripol at the Roxy nightclub in New York City.[3] Both Madonna and Maripol styled the looks of her first two albums, Madonna (1983) and Like a Virgin (1984).[4] The French designer made a line of official Madonna jewelry and accessories for her Virgin Tour in 1985,[5] while the singer herself briefly sold a line of her own punk-chic clothing, called Yazoo, at Maripol's Bleecker Street shop.[6]

Some authors placed her video "Lucky Star" from her debut album as the beginning of the style and fad.[7] According to professor Santiago Fouz-Hernandez and author of Madonna's Drowned Worlds (2004), following the Virgin Tour, Madonna was immediately imitated by girls, and audience seemed to consist mainly of wannabes and look-alikes.[7] By this time, it was common to see young women across the world dressed in the style affected by Madonna.[8][9][10] John Skow from Time commented on the phenomenon:

"The bright side of this trend is that these Wanna Be's (as in "We wanna be like Madonna!") could be out somewhere stealing hubcaps. Instead, all of them, hundreds of thousands of young blossoms whose actual ages run from a low of about eight to a high of perhaps 25, are saving up their baby-sitting money to buy cross-shaped earrings and fluorescent rubber bracelets like Madonna's, white lace tights that they will cut off at the ankles and black tube skirts that, out of view of their parents, they will roll down several turns at the waist to expose their middles and the waistbands of the pantyhose."[1]

The style has been described as a thrift shop and "flash-trash" look.[11] It typically incorporated many beads, lace tops, bleached hair, ratted hair, rosaries, crucifixes, skirts, bracelets, bustiers and other underwear as outerwear elements, fingerless gloves,[12] as well as ribbon or bow-shaped headbands or tiaras in the hair, called Madonna bows. The fad peaked in 1985 and began to decline by that year's end, as Madonna's national tour wound down. Though the mania subsided, many women continued to wear the look and some features of the Madonna wannabe style for a number of years.[13]

Reactions edit

The trend impacted retailers and also costume contests of that era, thus Madonna's trademark look became an iconic fashion trend of the 1980s.[14][4] Macy's, opened their "Madonnaland" in 1985, a boutique selling clothes modelled after the singer's style.[15][16] In June 1985, there was a look-alike contest at Macy's Herald Square in New York City.[17] Pop artist Andy Warhol, who Madonna had met through her relationship with artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, her stylist Maripol, MTV contributor Nina Blackwood, and Madonna: Lucky Star author Michael McKenzie were the judges.[18][19][4] After its launch of "Madonnaland" by Macy's, many other retailers followed suit.[8]

In the TV program The 80's: The Decade that Made Us by the National Geographic, it was explained that "Madonna inspires countless girls across the globe to hit the nearest shopping mall to match her distinctive style".[20] Editors of Garb: A Fashion and Culture Reader (2008), described the target as "an immense following of copycat teenagers",[21] and it led to American journalist Ricardo Baca call her "the most imitated woman" in the world.[22] It was described the fad was seem to be "everywhere", and a mall was dubbed "Madonna Mall" because of the many girls who shopped there.[23] Author Jennifer Grayer Moore, wrote in Fashion Fads Through American History (2015): "The Madonna Wannabe phenomenon demonstrates the power of a mass-media personality to set a style and impact the fashion industry both by offering licensed products and by stimulating the sale of mainstream items".[13]

Chuck Klosterman notes while girls dressed like Madonna, "she never demanded them to do so".[24] Madonna reacted to this trend, and revealed in an interview with The Washington Post her own surprise for this phenomenon at the fact that a way of dressing she had chosen had suddenly become, quite spontaneously in fashion.[25] In another interview with Michael Gross in 1985, she revealed: "I was flattered that people wanted to look like me and dress me. But I think it was all part of a spirit that I had, and I think that the people who wanted to dress like me saw the humor more than anybody else".[26]

Impact on young female audiences edit

The Madonna wannabe phenomenon was studied by sociologists and other academics, as was noted by Spanish professor and philosopher Ana Marta González.[25] Young female audiences were the main target impacted by this trend. French scholar Georges-Claude Guilbert described her influence on wannabes as notably "deep" to the point "have undoubtedly influenced the decisions of many young women".[27] According to Lisa Lewis, for many young girls, imitating Madonna meant creating a space and identity of their own.[7] By this time, using fashion and identity was a fresh concept, which according to Dawn Currie in Girl Talk (1999), coincided with the emergence of the "attitude dressing".[11][7] Author Gary Goshgarian found that John Fiske and others interviewed young girls and find that the "Madonna wannabes are most taken with her assertive self-enjoyment, her seeming indifference to men".[28]

In the journal Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies (2001) from University of Colorado, an individual described: "Behaving like Madonna was a political statement for most of us. However, such statements we believed needed to be expressed with appropriate clothing. This quest for Madonna-ness, almost down to the bones, provoked a consumerist desire in most of us, prompting periodic excursions to the mall to update our wardrobes to keep up with the ever-changing fashion statements of Madonna".[29] Madonna herself, commented on this: "Maybe kids now see someone in the public eye doing what I do. Maybe that's the phenomenon and why young girls are dressing up like me—because finally someone else is showing that it's O.K."[6] "She projected an image of independence and of being unafraid to ask for what she wanted", wrote Frank Northern Magill discussing why many young girls wanted to emulate her.[30] Retrospectively, British fashion journalist Lauren Cochrane, wrote in 2016, "it was an impulse that they acted on for many decades".[31]

Continuity with the term edit

 
Her fandom, mainly female audience, was nicknamed also Madonna wannabes by diverse outlets.

Following the disappearance of the trend, critics and public used the term to refer female pop stars who had notable similarity with or majorly influenced by Madonna. When inducting Madonna into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, American singer and actor Justin Timberlake stated that "The world has always been full of Madonna wannabes, and I might have even dated a couple", referring to his former girlfriend, Britney Spears.[32] William Anthony Donohue, the president of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, called Lady Gaga a mediocre "Madonna wannabe" for her usage of Catholic imagery in her "Alejandro" music video.[33] A 2012 Star Tribune article ranked several singers as Madonna wannabees, including Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Katy Perry, Rihanna, and Lady Gaga, who topped the list.[34]

Some media outlets and authors have referred to her fandom, mainly young, female audiences as "Madonna wannabes".[12] According to Sean MacLeod, author of Leaders of the Pack (2015), Spice Girls's debut single "Wannabe" was coined from the fans of Madonna, who were dubbed "wannabes".[35]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Skow, John (May 27, 1985). . Time. p. 7. Archived from the original on October 20, 2008. Retrieved November 7, 2008.
  2. ^ Voller 1999, p. 21
  3. ^ Hanra, Hanna (March 20, 2015). "Maripol: 'Did I discover Madonna? She discovered me!'". The Guardian. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
  4. ^ a b c Parker, Lyndsey (July 25, 2018). "Dress you up: Meet Maripol, the woman behind Madonna's early, iconic look". Yahoo. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
  5. ^ "Maripol Shot Madonna". Miss Rosen. August 13, 2009.
  6. ^ a b Cross 2007, p. 37
  7. ^ a b c d Fouz-Hernández, Santiago (2017) [1st pub. 2004]. Girlhood and feminism: 'Like a Virgin' and 'Express Yourself'. Routledge. p. 24. ISBN 978-1351559546. Retrieved April 7, 2022 – via Google Books. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  8. ^ a b Brown 2004, p. 187
  9. ^ Edwards & Bhaumik 2008, p. 264
  10. ^ "A star with staying power". CNN. 2004. Retrieved January 31, 2013.
  11. ^ a b Currie 1999, p. 35
  12. ^ a b Mansour 2011, p. 296
  13. ^ a b Moore 2015, pp. 115–116
  14. ^ Brady, Susan (May 31, 1985). "Seeking Madonna's Double". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 30, 2023.
  15. ^ Dickinson 2003, p. 187
  16. ^ . Boy Culture. February 22, 2010. Archived from the original on October 2, 2015. Retrieved January 31, 2013.
  17. ^ Dickinson 2003, p. 1987.
  18. ^ Guanlao, Nicocle (May 6, 2008). "Madonna's 1985 Look-Alike No Longer Rocks The Lace Gloves, But She's Still Madge's Biggest Fan". MTV News. Retrieved September 29, 2022.
  19. ^ Scaggs, Austin (October 29, 2009). "Madonna Looks Back: The Rolling Stone Interview". Rolling Stone. Retrieved August 2, 2021.
  20. ^ . National Geographic. Archived from the original on April 14, 2013. Retrieved April 7, 2014.
  21. ^ Giuntini & Hagen 2008, p. 299
  22. ^ Baca, Ricardo (November 5, 2008). . The Denver Post. Archived from the original on February 10, 2021. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
  23. ^ Burns 2016, p. 376
  24. ^ Klosterman 2007, p. 245
  25. ^ a b González 2009, p. 74
  26. ^ Gross, Michael (1985). "Madonna: Catholic Girl, Material Girl, Post-Liberation Woman". Official website of Michael Gross. from the original on July 6, 2022. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
  27. ^ Guilbert 2002, p. 168
  28. ^ Goshgarian 1993, p. 227
  29. ^ "Madonna". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. University of Colorado: 129. 2001. Retrieved April 7, 2022 – via Google Books.
  30. ^ Magill 1993, p. 2451
  31. ^ Cochrane 2016, p. 72
  32. ^ Soteriou, Stephanie (October 23, 2023). "Every Time Justin Timberlake Seemingly Shaded Britney Spears After Their 2002 Split". BuzzFeed News. Retrieved November 30, 2023.
  33. ^ "Lady Gaga dismissed as 'Madonna wannabe' for 'Catholic bashing' music video". Catholic News Agency. June 12, 2010. Retrieved January 15, 2015.
  34. ^ Riemenschneider, Chris (November 2, 2012). "Lifting the Material Girl's material". Star Tribune. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  35. ^ MacLeod 2015, p. 148.

Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Official website for Madonna

madonna, wannabe, madonnabe, person, usually, female, dresses, acts, like, american, singer, madonna, when, emerged, into, stardom, 1980s, unusually, high, number, women, particularly, young, women, girls, began, dress, their, hair, makeup, style, that, madonn. A Madonna wannabe or Madonnabe is a person usually female who dresses or acts like American singer Madonna When she emerged into stardom in the mid 1980s an unusually high number of women particularly young women and girls began to dress and do their hair and makeup in the style that Madonna displayed in public The term was popularized by writer John Skow in a May 1985 Time cover story on the singer 1 Numerous sociologists and other academics commented on the Madonna influence in her wannabes Madonna seen during the Celebration Tour in 2023 The term was officially recognized by the Webster s Dictionary in May 1991 2 Following the disappearance of the trend critics and journalists refer to female pop stars who emulate Madonna s clothing or musical style as Madonna wannabes The term is also used as a nickname for her fandom mainly to refer to her female fans especially young ones Contents 1 History 2 Reactions 2 1 Impact on young female audiences 3 Continuity with the term 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp A woman dressed in the Madonna s look and style of the wannabe era In 1982 Madonna met French jewelry designer Maripol at the Roxy nightclub in New York City 3 Both Madonna and Maripol styled the looks of her first two albums Madonna 1983 and Like a Virgin 1984 4 The French designer made a line of official Madonna jewelry and accessories for her Virgin Tour in 1985 5 while the singer herself briefly sold a line of her own punk chic clothing called Yazoo at Maripol s Bleecker Street shop 6 Some authors placed her video Lucky Star from her debut album as the beginning of the style and fad 7 According to professor Santiago Fouz Hernandez and author of Madonna s Drowned Worlds 2004 following the Virgin Tour Madonna was immediately imitated by girls and audience seemed to consist mainly of wannabes and look alikes 7 By this time it was common to see young women across the world dressed in the style affected by Madonna 8 9 10 John Skow from Time commented on the phenomenon The bright side of this trend is that these Wanna Be s as in We wanna be like Madonna could be out somewhere stealing hubcaps Instead all of them hundreds of thousands of young blossoms whose actual ages run from a low of about eight to a high of perhaps 25 are saving up their baby sitting money to buy cross shaped earrings and fluorescent rubber bracelets like Madonna s white lace tights that they will cut off at the ankles and black tube skirts that out of view of their parents they will roll down several turns at the waist to expose their middles and the waistbands of the pantyhose 1 The style has been described as a thrift shop and flash trash look 11 It typically incorporated many beads lace tops bleached hair ratted hair rosaries crucifixes skirts bracelets bustiers and other underwear as outerwear elements fingerless gloves 12 as well as ribbon or bow shaped headbands or tiaras in the hair called Madonna bows The fad peaked in 1985 and began to decline by that year s end as Madonna s national tour wound down Though the mania subsided many women continued to wear the look and some features of the Madonna wannabe style for a number of years 13 Reactions editFor further analysis see Madonna fandom The trend impacted retailers and also costume contests of that era thus Madonna s trademark look became an iconic fashion trend of the 1980s 14 4 Macy s opened their Madonnaland in 1985 a boutique selling clothes modelled after the singer s style 15 16 In June 1985 there was a look alike contest at Macy s Herald Square in New York City 17 Pop artist Andy Warhol who Madonna had met through her relationship with artist Jean Michel Basquiat her stylist Maripol MTV contributor Nina Blackwood and Madonna Lucky Star author Michael McKenzie were the judges 18 19 4 After its launch of Madonnaland by Macy s many other retailers followed suit 8 In the TV program The 80 s The Decade that Made Us by the National Geographic it was explained that Madonna inspires countless girls across the globe to hit the nearest shopping mall to match her distinctive style 20 Editors of Garb A Fashion and Culture Reader 2008 described the target as an immense following of copycat teenagers 21 and it led to American journalist Ricardo Baca call her the most imitated woman in the world 22 It was described the fad was seem to be everywhere and a mall was dubbed Madonna Mall because of the many girls who shopped there 23 Author Jennifer Grayer Moore wrote in Fashion Fads Through American History 2015 The Madonna Wannabe phenomenon demonstrates the power of a mass media personality to set a style and impact the fashion industry both by offering licensed products and by stimulating the sale of mainstream items 13 Chuck Klosterman notes while girls dressed like Madonna she never demanded them to do so 24 Madonna reacted to this trend and revealed in an interview with The Washington Post her own surprise for this phenomenon at the fact that a way of dressing she had chosen had suddenly become quite spontaneously in fashion 25 In another interview with Michael Gross in 1985 she revealed I was flattered that people wanted to look like me and dress me But I think it was all part of a spirit that I had and I think that the people who wanted to dress like me saw the humor more than anybody else 26 Impact on young female audiences edit The Madonna wannabe phenomenon was studied by sociologists and other academics as was noted by Spanish professor and philosopher Ana Marta Gonzalez 25 Young female audiences were the main target impacted by this trend French scholar Georges Claude Guilbert described her influence on wannabes as notably deep to the point have undoubtedly influenced the decisions of many young women 27 According to Lisa Lewis for many young girls imitating Madonna meant creating a space and identity of their own 7 By this time using fashion and identity was a fresh concept which according to Dawn Currie in Girl Talk 1999 coincided with the emergence of the attitude dressing 11 7 Author Gary Goshgarian found that John Fiske and others interviewed young girls and find that the Madonna wannabes are most taken with her assertive self enjoyment her seeming indifference to men 28 In the journal Frontiers A Journal of Women Studies 2001 from University of Colorado an individual described Behaving like Madonna was a political statement for most of us However such statements we believed needed to be expressed with appropriate clothing This quest for Madonna ness almost down to the bones provoked a consumerist desire in most of us prompting periodic excursions to the mall to update our wardrobes to keep up with the ever changing fashion statements of Madonna 29 Madonna herself commented on this Maybe kids now see someone in the public eye doing what I do Maybe that s the phenomenon and why young girls are dressing up like me because finally someone else is showing that it s O K 6 She projected an image of independence and of being unafraid to ask for what she wanted wrote Frank Northern Magill discussing why many young girls wanted to emulate her 30 Retrospectively British fashion journalist Lauren Cochrane wrote in 2016 it was an impulse that they acted on for many decades 31 Continuity with the term edit nbsp Her fandom mainly female audience was nicknamed also Madonna wannabes by diverse outlets Following the disappearance of the trend critics and public used the term to refer female pop stars who had notable similarity with or majorly influenced by Madonna When inducting Madonna into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame American singer and actor Justin Timberlake stated that The world has always been full of Madonna wannabes and I might have even dated a couple referring to his former girlfriend Britney Spears 32 William Anthony Donohue the president of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights called Lady Gaga a mediocre Madonna wannabe for her usage of Catholic imagery in her Alejandro music video 33 A 2012 Star Tribune article ranked several singers as Madonna wannabees including Britney Spears Christina Aguilera Katy Perry Rihanna and Lady Gaga who topped the list 34 Some media outlets and authors have referred to her fandom mainly young female audiences as Madonna wannabes 12 According to Sean MacLeod author of Leaders of the Pack 2015 Spice Girls s debut single Wannabe was coined from the fans of Madonna who were dubbed wannabes 35 See also editFashion of Madonna Madonna impersonator Madonna and religion religious criticismsReferences edit a b Skow John May 27 1985 Madonna Rocks the Land Time p 7 Archived from the original on October 20 2008 Retrieved November 7 2008 Voller 1999 p 21 Hanra Hanna March 20 2015 Maripol Did I discover Madonna She discovered me The Guardian Retrieved August 2 2018 a b c Parker Lyndsey July 25 2018 Dress you up Meet Maripol the woman behind Madonna s early iconic look Yahoo Retrieved August 2 2018 Maripol Shot Madonna Miss Rosen August 13 2009 a b Cross 2007 p 37 a b c d Fouz Hernandez Santiago 2017 1st pub 2004 Girlhood and feminism Like a Virgin and Express Yourself Routledge p 24 ISBN 978 1351559546 Retrieved April 7 2022 via Google Books a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b Brown 2004 p 187 Edwards amp Bhaumik 2008 p 264 A star with staying power CNN 2004 Retrieved January 31 2013 a b Currie 1999 p 35 a b Mansour 2011 p 296 a b Moore 2015 pp 115 116 Brady Susan May 31 1985 Seeking Madonna s Double The Washington Post Retrieved November 30 2023 Dickinson 2003 p 187 Return to Madonnaland Boy Culture February 22 2010 Archived from the original on October 2 2015 Retrieved January 31 2013 Dickinson 2003 p 1987 Guanlao Nicocle May 6 2008 Madonna s 1985 Look Alike No Longer Rocks The Lace Gloves But She s Still Madge s Biggest Fan MTV News Retrieved September 29 2022 Scaggs Austin October 29 2009 Madonna Looks Back The Rolling Stone Interview Rolling Stone Retrieved August 2 2021 The 80s The Decade That Made Us National Geographic Archived from the original on April 14 2013 Retrieved April 7 2014 Giuntini amp Hagen 2008 p 299 Baca Ricardo November 5 2008 25 questionable things about Madonna The Denver Post Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved January 31 2022 Burns 2016 p 376 Klosterman 2007 p 245 a b Gonzalez 2009 p 74 Gross Michael 1985 Madonna Catholic Girl Material Girl Post Liberation Woman Official website of Michael Gross Archived from the original on July 6 2022 Retrieved July 6 2022 Guilbert 2002 p 168 Goshgarian 1993 p 227 Madonna Frontiers A Journal of Women Studies University of Colorado 129 2001 Retrieved April 7 2022 via Google Books Magill 1993 p 2451 Cochrane 2016 p 72 Soteriou Stephanie October 23 2023 Every Time Justin Timberlake Seemingly Shaded Britney Spears After Their 2002 Split BuzzFeed News Retrieved November 30 2023 Lady Gaga dismissed as Madonna wannabe for Catholic bashing music video Catholic News Agency June 12 2010 Retrieved January 15 2015 Riemenschneider Chris November 2 2012 Lifting the Material Girl s material Star Tribune Retrieved 15 January 2015 MacLeod 2015 p 148 Bibliography editBurns Gary 2016 A Companion to Popular Culture John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1405192057 Brown Stephen 2004 Free Gift Inside Forget the Customer Develop Marketease John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 1841126020 Cross Mary 2007 Madonna A Biography Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 33811 3 Currie Dawn 1999 Girl Talk Adolescent Magazines and Their Readers University of Toronto Press ISBN 0802082173 Dickinson Kay 2003 Movie Music the Film Reader Routledge ISBN 0415281598 Edwards Elizabeth Bhaumik Kaushik 2008 Visual Sense A Cultural Reader Berg Publishers ISBN 978 1845207410 Giuntini Parme P Hagen Kathryn 2008 Garb A Fashion and Culture Reader Pearson Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0131119109 Gonzalez Ana Marta in Spanish 2009 Ficcion e identidad Ensayos de cultura postmoderna Ediciones Rialp ISBN 978 8432137280 Goshgarian Gary 1993 The Contemporary Reader HarperCollins ISBN 0673522229 Guilbert Georges Claude 2002 Madonna As Postmodern Myth How One Star s Self Construction Rewrites Sex Gender Hollywood and the American Dream McFarland amp Company ISBN 0 7864 1408 1 Klosterman Chuck 2007 Fargo Rock City A Heavy Metal Odyssey in Rural North Dakota Scribner ISBN 141658952X MacLeod Sean 2015 Leaders of the Pack Girl Groups of the 1960s and Their Influence on Popular Culture in Britain and America Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1442252028 Mansour David 2011 From Abba to Zoom A Pop Culture Encyclopedia of the Late 20th Century Andrews McMeel Publishing ISBN 978 0740793073 Moore Jennifer Grayer 2015 Fashion Fads Through American History Fitting Clothes into Context Fitting Clothes into Context ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1610699020 Further reading editBoisvert Donald L Jay Emerson Johnson 2012 Queer Religion Volumen 1 ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0313353581 Brownlee Nick 2003 Bubblegum the history of plastic pop Sanctuary ISBN 1860745121 Cochrane Lauren 2016 Fifty Women s Fashion Icons that Changed the World Design Museum Fifty Hachette UK ISBN 978 1 840 91747 5 Ferraro Thomas J 2005 Feeling Italian The Art of Ethnicity in America New York University ISBN 0814727476 Magill Frank Northen 1993 Great Events from History II 1969 1992 Salem Press ISBN 0 893 56812 0 Olszewski Mike 2003 Radio Daze Stories from the Front in Cleveland s Fm Air Wars Kent State University Press ISBN 0873387732 Sellers John 2007 Perfect from Now On How Indie Rock Saved My Life Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1416539124 Merrell Floyd 2003 The Mexicans A Sense Of Culture Westview Press p 110 ISBN 0813340446 Voller Debbi 1999 Madonna The Style Book Omnibus Press ISBN 0 7119 7511 6 External links editOfficial website for Madonna Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Madonna wannabe amp oldid 1187675722, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.