Clothing in the Movies and on TV

Characters’ Clothes Tell Their Own Story

© Leslie Halpern

Mad Money is stylish, Copyright 2007 Overture Films, LLC

There's no need to book a flight to Paris to catch up on the latest runway fashions - just turn on the TV or visit your local Cineplex to find out what's fashionable.

To the viewing public, fashions on television and in the movies inspire our wardrobes. We rush to online auctions to buy Survivor buffs and Spiderman, Superman, and Batman costumes pack the display racks during Halloween time. Designer Marc Ecko has even created a new line of limited-edition, embellished Star Wars-inspired everyday apparel under license from Lucasfilm Ltd. However, to the costume designers, the clothing actors wear goes beyond setting trends to reflecting vital aspects of their characters.

Prime Time Inspires Fashions

“Over the years, prime time has played a prime role in women’s fashions,” writes Charlene Davis in her book Start Your Own Clothing Store (Entrepreneur Press, 2007). “Twenty years ago when Dynasty was popular, everyone wore gold chokers and football pads on their shoulders. Jump forward 20 years and the new rage was the beaded necklaces inspired by Courteney Cox and Jennifer Aniston of Friends. Now it’s all about the glamorous little dresses and outfits worn by the Desperate Housewives stars.”

Watching Sex and the City wouldn’t have been nearly as much fun if characters Carrie, Charlotte, Miranda, and Sam hadn’t spent most of their time in shoe and clothing stores searching for the perfect ensemble for their next big date. Imitating the style of our favorite actors, singers, sports figures, and other idols keeps the ratings up and the fashion industry booming.

These prime time fashions aren’t just for women. The casual pastels in the Miami Vice look dominated men’s fashions in the 1980s, and their favorite stars also influence children. Davis writes in her book for clothing store owners, “As with male and female adult fashions, pay attention to what the kids are wearing at the malls, schools, skating rinks, and other teen hangouts. Flip through magazines and TV channels. Watch Drake and Josh on Nickelodeon or That’s So Raven on the Disney Channel.”

Silver Screen Ensembles

In the 1970s, women flocked to stores looking for clothes and hats inspired by Diane Keaton in the movie Annie Hall, and many year’s later, she gave turtleneck sweaters a boost in her film Something’s Gotta Give. In Keaton’s newest film Mad Money, her character (an upper-middle-class housewife who decides to rob the Federal Reserve Bank where she’s taken a job as janitor) goes from wearing low-key navy blue and khaki ensembles to wearing luxurious cream colors with a Hermes scarf when she finds herself wealthy beyond her dreams. She also shops for expensive jewelry that she could not previously afford.

Shopping for clothes and accessories plays a crucial part in many movies. Would Pretty Woman have been the same without Julia Roberts’s triumphant shopping spree? Or would Legally Blonde have gotten off to the same exciting start if Reese Witherspoon had opted to wear any old dress to her special “engagement” dinner with her boyfriend? Without the slaves to fashion depicted in The Devil Wears Prada, the film would have no storyline.

So as consumers, we can look to television and movies for ideas on the latest fashion trends, but as the viewing public, we should study changes in clothes and accessories for clues about the personal development of the characters in our favorite television shows and films.

For more information about clothing, read Tips for Starting a Clothing Store.


The copyright of the article Clothing in the Movies and on TV in Celebrity Fashion is owned by Leslie Halpern. Permission to republish Clothing in the Movies and on TV must be granted by the author in writing.


Mad Money is stylish, Copyright 2007 Overture Films, LLC
       


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