Staging Fashion, 1880-1920

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Jane Hading, Lily Elsie, Billie Burke

Edited by Michele Majer

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Although Jane Hading (1859–1940), Lily Elsie (1886–1962), and Billie Burke (1884–1970) gained fame as stage actresses, their popular appeal also rested on their ability to cultivate a glamorous appearance. Their careers illustrate the early transformation of actresses into marketable commodities whose celebrity status depended on the consumption of their images. This celebrity, in turn, was used to market an array of beauty and fashion goods to women striving to emulate them.

The three women featured in Staging Fashion exemplify the factors that ensured success for 20th-century actresses. Each of these women was dressed by a leading couturier (or several couturiers), both onstage and offstage. In major cities such as New York, Paris, and London, actresses depended on exquisite, custom-made gowns both to secure principal roles and to maintain popularity. Their physical beauty, which was consistent with elite notions of class and race, was depicted on postcards and in popular fashion and theatre magazines and newspapers. Finally, these actresses developed distinct "personalities," which were conveyed by their stage roles and in numerous photos and articles.



Distributed for the Bard Graduate Center


Exhibition Schedule:

Bard Graduate Center(01/08/12-04/08/12)

Michele Majer is an assistant professor at the Bard Graduate Center, New York, and a research associate at Cora Ginsburg LLC, New York.

EXHIBITION SCHEDULE

Bard Graduate Center(01/08/12-04/08/12)

“The catalogue produced by the center and distributed by Yale University Press is as intimate and lovingly put together as the show."—Studio International

"The editor offers an important glimpse into the worlds of both fashion and theater and the interrelationship of the two. . . . Of great interest to fashion and costume historians."—K. Wagner, Choice

"an important contribution to our understanding of an under-researched area of dress and theatre history" — Veronica Isaac, Costume

ISBN: 9780300181135
Publication Date: February 21, 2012
Publishing Partner: Distributed for the Bard Graduate Center
208 pages, 7 x 8 3/4
168 color illus.
Threads of Power

Lace from the Textilmuseum St. Gallen

Edited by Emma Cormack and Michele Majer

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