Is Time’s Up the End of Red-Carpet Fashion?
On the subject of men whose past behavior warrants reexamining in this new
era of accountability in Hollywood, there’s one who may be due for a reckoning
of a different sort. That would be the man known professionally as Mr.
Blackwell.
For nearly 50 years, until his death in 2008, Richard Blackwell—a former
eveningwear designer and onetime actor who became famous as an acerbic critic of
fashion—published a satiric worst-dressed list that skewered women in harsh
terms. He called Barbra Streisand “a masculine Bride of Frankenstein” and once
said Meryl Streep looked like “a gypsy abandoned by a caravan,” to give you some
idea of insults that, at the time, were treated as harmless dish. “I merely said
out loud what others were whispering,” Mr. Blackwell said, arguing that it
wasn’t his intention to hurt anyone’s feelings, just “to put down the clothing
they’re wearing.”
But in many ways Mr. Blackwell and his colorful quips were precursors to a
culture of red-carpet cattiness that flourished over the decades. From the late
Joan Rivers and the Fashion Police to gimmicks like the Mani Cam and Glambot,
the pageantry of awards season has turned into a form of blood sport. For years
there have been protests and plenty of pushback against the inherent sexism of
judging women (but rarely men) for their looks, yet very little has changed.
Until now.
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