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Made For Each Other

Fashion and the Academy Awards

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The red carpet on Oscar night is the film industry's own catwalk, a place where talent, beauty and style vie for attention. Here, fashion expert Bronwyn Cosgrave gives us the stories from behind the parade of dresses. From the splendour of Vivien Leigh to the war-era chic of Ingrid Bergman, from Grace Kelly's glacial glamour to Nicole Kidman's groundbreaking Christian Dior by John Galliano, Cosgrave's detail-laden insider chronicle traces the trends of the ceremony from its inception in 1929 to the present: a must-have for every film fan and fashion lover.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 11, 2006
      At the first Academy Awards event in 1928, Janet Gaynor had received
      \t\t advance word of her "best actress" award for three silent films the year
      \t\t before. For the ceremony she wore a store-bought Peter Pan–collared dress,
      \t\t but for future events she sought the advice of designer Gilbert Adrian, whom
      \t\t she married. In this entertaining look at the history of Academy Award fashion,
      \t\t Cosgrove, who covered the Oscars for British Vogue and the BBC, demonstrates that the Gaynor-Adrian
      \t\t pairing was the start of many between star designers and actresses—Givenchy
      \t\t and Audrey Hepburn, Edith Head and Grace Kelly, Thea van Runkle and Faye
      \t\t Dunaway, Scaasi and Streisand, Halston and Liza, Bob Mackie and Cher. Earlier
      \t\t screen queens (and their producers and minders) had quickly learned that a
      \t\t drop-dead appearance at the awards ceremony led to invaluable glam photos and
      \t\t inches in print: Carole Lombard, Vivien Leigh, Garbo and especially
      \t\t perfectionist Marlene Dietrich who, after experimenting, turned to Dior.
      \t\t Cosgrave could have simply served up a deep dish of anecdotes, gossip and tales
      \t\t of rivalry, but she has gone several steps further to deliver a carefully
      \t\t researched and footnoted book that belongs in every Hollywood historian's
      \t\t library and is sure to be consulted for a long time to come. 90 b&w photos
      \t\t and illus., 12-page color insert (not seen by PW).

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 1, 2007
      At the first Academy Awards event in 1928, Janet Gaynor had received advance word of her "best actress" award for three silent films the year before. For the ceremony she wore a store-bought Peter Pan\x96collared dress, but for future events she sought the advice of designer Gilbert Adrian, whom she married. In this entertaining look at the history of Academy Award fashion, Cosgrove, who covered the Oscars for BritishVogue and the BBC, demonstrates that the Gaynor-Adrian pairing was the start of many between star designers and actresses\x97Givenchy and Audrey Hepburn, Edith Head and Grace Kelly, Thea van Runkle and Faye Dunaway, Scaasi and Streisand, Halston and Liza, Bob Mackie and Cher. Earlier screen queens (and their producers and minders) had quickly learned that a drop-dead appearance at the awards ceremony led to invaluable glam photos and inches in print: Carole Lombard, Vivien Leigh, Garbo and especially perfectionist Marlene Dietrich who, after experimenting, turned to Dior. Cosgrave could have simply served up a deep dish of anecdotes, gossip and tales of rivalry, but she has gone several steps further to deliver a carefully researched and footnoted book that belongs in every Hollywood historian's library and is sure to be consulted for a long time to come. 90 b&w photos and illus., 12-page color insert (not seen byPW).

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  • English

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