THR on red-carpet beauty, what Head said, Zoe’s dough

The Hollywood Reporter’s recent style issue was packed with great stories. For instance, Meg Hemphill spotted four awards beauty trends that she predicts we’ll be seeing for months to come. They are:

Think bright pink for spring.

1. Bright pink lips: Who doesn’t love a flirty pink pout? Not Scarlett Johansson, who wore MAC’s Sheen Supreme in Behave Yourself, $14.50, on Oscar night, or Claire Danes, who dazzled at the SAGs with Joli Rouge in 709 Parisian Pink, $24, by Clarins. Shown here is MAC’s Full Fuchsia.

2. Messy side-dos: Let loose with a softly asymmetrical look. Hairstylist Laini Reeves, creator of Amy Adams’ up-do for the Globes, called the effect “1920s with a twist.”

3. Soft makeup: Nars Illuminating Cream, $29, was key to Olivia Wilde’s sheer glow at the Golden Globes. Makeup artist Spencer Barnes was going for “a soft, timeless look that wasn’t focused on trendy color schemes or any one bold application.”

4. Retro waves: Frederic Fekkai hairstylist Adir Abergel took a cue from old Hollywood and Rita Hayworth, then updated the look for Anne Hathaway on Globes night.

Edith Head

A must-read: Sam Wasson on the legacy of A-list costume designer Edith Head. The story is pegged to the release of two new books: “Edith Head: The Fifty-Year Career of Hollywood’s Greatest Costume Designer” and “The Dress Doctor: Prescriptions for Style from A to Z,” an adaptation of Head’s best-selling tome from 1959.

The spread features pictures from “Vertigo,” “Rear Window,” “The Birds” and other movies. Love this quotation from Head: “Clothes not only can make the woman – they can make her several different women. There’s no one style; there’s a style for a mood.”

THR’s cover story by Shirley Halperin details the empire of Rachel Zoe Inc., “a multiplatform brand powerhouse.” A companion piece names Hollywood ’s 25 most powerful stylists. The top four, after Zoe, are: Kate Young, Petra Flannery, Jen Rade and Anna Bingemann.

Other exiting news: Zoe and husband Rodger Berman are parents to a baby boy. Their first child, Skyler Morrison Berman, was born March 24 in Los Angeles.

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Can’t find Mr. Right? Mr. Bright might be right in front of you

A friend of mine was recently fixed up with a guy who said he loved music and liked to travel. He was a truck driver who listened to the radio. Another friend went on a blind date with an Irish dentist, who turned out to have a lovely brogue, but no front teeth. Seriously.

Despite the odd dating disaster, it’s important to keep a positive attitude when it comes to love. To help you out on that front, try Benefit’s Finding Mr. Bright: Your brightening makeup MANual, $36.

Mr. Bright just might surprise you.

The cute box contains four products that give your skin instant radiance:

 * Erase Paste in 02 (medium) brightening camouflage, 0.11 oz.

* Girl Meets Pearl golden-pink liquid pearl, 0.25 fl. oz.

* Posie Tint pink lip & cheek stain, 0.13 fl. oz.

* High Beam luminescent complexion enhancer, 0.08 fl. oz.

Erase Paste is a “creamy, industrial-strength” concealer, says the company’s site. Girl Meets Pearl, a “liquid pearl accent,” can be worn alone or on top of makeup. My favorite so far is Posie Tint, a super-sheer liquid blush that can be layered for deeper color. Apply High Beam liquid spotlight on cheekbones, brow bones and the bridge of your nose.

Mr. Right may be taking his time, it’s true, but meanwhile you’ll be sporting a gorgeous glow.

Product source: From my own collection; I did not receive product or compensation from Benefit.

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Remembering Hollywood legend Elizabeth Taylor

Elizabeth Taylor

Elizabeth Taylor, 79, one of the world’s most famous actresses, died today in Los Angeles. Her stunning beauty, charisma and wealth along with eight marriages, 50 movies and tireless advocacy efforts on behalf of those afflicted with HIV/AIDS ensure that her legacy will endure.

To that end, I’ve pulled a few of her memorable quotations:

“Some of my best leading men have been dogs and horses.”

“I don’t remember much about ‘Cleopatra.’ There were a lot of other things going on.”

“One problem with people who have no vices is that they’re pretty sure to have some annoying virtues.”

“Success is a great deodorant. It takes away all your past smells.”

“If someone’s dumb enough to offer me a million dollars to make a picture, I’m certainly not dumb enough to turn it down.”

“I, along with the critics, have never taken myself very seriously.”

“I will not be silenced and I will not give up and I will not be ignored.” (Referring to her HIV/AIDS charitable work)

Additionally, David Germain and Hillel Italie of the Associated Press wrote an excellent Taylor obit. To read it, visit: http://apne.ws/fk1lAm.

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On the radar: HBO’s ‘Mildred Pierce’ premiere in New York, the launch of ‘Parisian Chic,’ and an of-the-moment site

Kate Winslet and Guy Pearce walked the red carpet Monday night in New York at the premiere for HBO’s “Mildred Pierce,” directed by Todd Haynes and based on James M. Cain’s novel. The mini-series starts Sunday. The 1945 movie version of the book stars Joan Crawford in the title role.

Inès de la Fressange

Look book: Magazine illustrator, Roger Vivier consultant and former Chanel model Inès de la Fressange shares her style secrets in “Parisian Chic” out next month. In addition to fashion pointers, the book includes tips on living well, 70 pages of her favorite places to go in Paris as well as ideas for entertaining at home, and who does that better than the French?

A sample de la Fressange maxim: “A true Parisian is not looking to snag a billionaire husband. She is uninterested in spending for its own sake and sporting the labels to show for it.”

Read more and see highlights on savvy and soigné Shana Ting Lipton’s site, Chic Trek.

Newness to me: I recently discovered the elegant site NOWNESS, which features “stories influencing contemporary culture and global lifestyle, previewing the latest in fashion, gastronomy, art, film, music, design, travel and sport.” Part of the Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton family, the site notes that all content is editorially independent. Bella Freud, Bret Easton Ellis, Joan Juliet Buck and Daria Shapovalova are just a few of the contributors.

Inès de la Fressange image from Chic Trek.

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Catherine Deneuve stars in comic confection ‘Potiche’

Screen icon Catherine Deneuve

This week, the French comedy, “Potiche,” directed by François Ozon, opens nationwide. Potiche is French for arm candy/trophy wife or husband. It stars Gérard Depardieu and Catherine Deneuve, who recently came to the LA County Museum of Art for a Q&A after a preview of the movie. She was magnificent! Granted, “Potiche” is not a noir, but why pass up a chance to see a blonde legend like Deneuve on the big screen?

Chicago fans can see a sneak preview of “Potiche” on Wednesday, as part of the Music Box Theatre’s program that also includes “Repulsion,” “The Umbrellas of Cherbourg,” “Belle de Jour,” “ 8 Women” and “The Last Metro.”

Meanwhile, the Bazaar Report notes that the Brooklyn Academy of Music is hosting a retrospective of Deneuve’s work. It runs through March 31.

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What Zee sees

Joe Zee

“I love movies,” Joe Zee, creative director of Elle, recently told Alex Williams of The New York Times. About a Jennifer Lopez photo in 2008 by Carter Smith, Zee said: “I wanted a Polanski feel about it, so that’s why it was a black-and-white, with that sort of pained, but very glamorous, look on her face.”

Looking forward to Zee’s new reality show, “All on the Line,” which starts March 29 on the Sundance Channel. Read more at http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/17/fashion/17upclose.html.

Joe Zee image from www.zimbio.com.

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‘Sweet Smell of Success’ beautifully captures the sour stink of moral decay

Sweet Smell of Success/ 1957/ United Artists/ 96 min.

Michael Wilmington

This month, I am giving away a copy of Criterion’s new two-disc edition of “Sweet Smell of Success” directed by Alexander Mackendrick. Just leave a comment on any post in March and you will be entered; the winner will be drawn at random. Here, critic Michael Wilmington reviews this unforgettable film.

“Sweet Smell of Success,” an American movie masterpiece and one of the best and gutsiest of all the classic film noirs, is a sleek killer comedy/drama about Broadway in the ’50s.

It centers around two influential New Yorkers: megalomaniac star gossip columnist J.J. Hunsecker (Burt Lancaster) and one of his more energetic publicist-sources, scummy but fashionable Sidney Falco (Tony Curtis).

Falco, who wears a suit black as night, a dazzling white shirt and a poisonous leer that implies he’s seen something dirty and knows something even filthier, lives and dies each day by whether he gets a story planted in Hunsecker’s hugely successful column. Hunsecker, meanwhile, mostly holds court in the night spots that are his fiefdom, condescending to all the people, from Falco and other flacks, to movie stars to a U.S. Senator, who come to sip, smoke and pay him homage.

Hunsecker and Falco are unashamed users, almost proudly amoral. Hunsecker thinks he’s above morality; Falco thinks he can’t afford it now. Falco treats his potential patron with a fawning but mean-eyed servility. Hunsecker, with his ominous spectacles masking eyes of ice, freezes out Falco dismissively. “Match me,” Hunsecker tells the weasely Falco, in one of this movie’s many famous lines. Though Falco doesn’t actually scramble to light his cigarette, he does far worse.

Both these monsters have need of each other in this dark night and smoky day, in this world bounded by the Stork Club, Twenty One, Broadway and 42nd Street. Falco wants to use Hunsecker to ascend higher, into the sweet, smelly heights of Broadway gossip success, to become another Hunsecker.

Meanwhile, Hunsecker has nominated Falco for one of the dirty jobs he can’t get too close to: sabotaging the romance between his younger sister Susan (Susan Harrison) and her straight-arrow musician lover Steve (Martin Milner).

“Sweet Smell” deliberately patterned Hunsecker after one of the country’s most famous and powerful newspapermen Walter Winchell (1897-1972). Winchell’s daughter Walda was the model for Hunsecker’s sister Susan.

When you watch Hunsecker and Falco do their routines – snazzy, cruel, funny – you’ll never forget them. You’ll hear Hunsecker telling Falco, “I’d hate to take a bite out of you. You’re a cookie full of arsenic.” Or Falco circling cigarette girl Rita (Barbara Nichols) and answering her query about whether he’s listening to her by wisecracking, “Avidly, avidly.”

Falco and Hunsecker are classic American movie characters, written with knifelike wit, commanding craft and true street genius by Ernest Lehman (who worked in this world) and Clifford Odets (a one-time playwright king of Broadway). It is directed with stinging life, energy and flawless insight by Alexander Mackendrick, an American of Scottish descent, who was one of the comedy experts of that British treasure-house, the Ealing Studio.

“Sweet Smell” was a sometimes-chaotic production. But Lehman or Odets never produced a better script. Mackendrick never directed a better movie. Elmer Bernstein rarely wrote a jazzier, sharper score. The master cinematographer James Wong Howe (“Hangmen Also Die!” “Pursued,” “Body and Soul”) never shot a darker, more brilliant noir.

Lancaster was sometimes more impressive, more richly colored and dominating, in tonier classics like “Elmer Gantry,” “From Here to Eternity” and “The Leopard.” But Curtis never topped Falco, not even in “Some Like It Hot.”

Lancaster was not Mackendrick’s choice for Hunsecker. He wanted Orson Welles or Hume Cronyn. It’s a weird piece of casting that works and it makes this a stronger, sexier and more subversive film. [Read more…]

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Film noir’s feline stars: The cat in ‘Femme Fatale’

More on the most famous kitties in film noir

The Cat on the Control Panel in “Femme Fatale” 2002

Name: Funk Soul Furrier

Character Name: Clouzot the Control Room Cat

Funk Soul Furrier has long been famous in the south of France.

Bio: Funk Soul Furrier is a part-time actor and full-time DJ, creating the intense, kit-kat rap that critic Naught DeClawde calls “the edgiest sound yet from the alley.” His album “No Mo’ Kow-Tow to the Bow-Wow” sold 24 million copies worldwide.

With his sultry good looks and haute high-tech, Funk Soul was a natural to play Clouzot the Control Room Cat, a key staffer at the Palais du Cinema, the primary theater of the Cannes Film Festival, and setting for the suspenseful opening of “Femme Fatale.”

While he may be new to American audiences, he has long been famous in the south of France, particularly in Nice, where he owns and runs Le club de Chat et de Souris (The Cat and Mouse Club).

Since playing in “Femme Fatale,” he has landed starring roles in several high-concept cat-food commercials as well as cameos in a handful of Polish art films.

“Femme Fatale” director Brian de Palma said of Funk Soul’s performance: “His honesty and emotion just knocked me out. He did an amazing job with very little input from me.”

Image from http://catsinsinks.com

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Good, clean fun from Filthy Farmgirl

Filthy Cougar soap is all natural goodness.

“Well groomed, smooth as silk, and ready to pounce!” proclaims the label on Filthy Cougar soap from Filthy Farmgirl. It’s true, any cougar must be primped, plumped and primed for action. Get ready for the hunt with this chunky golden bar and citrusy suds.

Says the company’s web site: “We believe our soap puts people in touch with the earth through their senses, and enlivens the otherwise mundane ritual of washing.” And Filthy Farmgirl, which lists workshops in Hawaii and Vermont as its contact info, is 100 percent natural, with “no yucky stuff” such as detergents, surfactants, sulfates, artificial scents, colorizers, or petroleum products. Nice!

The retro labels, printed on recycled paper, are my favorite part. These soaps will make nifty gifties for my friends, especially since shipping is free in the U.S.; for overseas, shoot an email and they’ll work something out, according to the site.

The cougar soap is $3 for a small bar, $8 for a large and $18 for a three-pack. What filthy cougar, poet, lumberjack, nurse, secretary, flight attendant, vampire, philosopher or delicate dude, etc. (there are 69 varieties total) wouldn’t appreciate a product that tells us to Live Nakedly?

Product Source: From my own collection; I did not receive products or compensation from Filthy Farmgirl.

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Prada plays with old-school influences at Paris Fashion Week

Loved Miuccia Prada’s update of vintage Hollywood style – fur stoles, flashy pumps, ankle straps and sassy sunglasses – at Paris Fashion Week.

The New York TimesCathy Horyn described it this way:

Miuccia Prada provided a strong if surprising close to the Paris shows on Wednesday, with a Miu Miu collection based on glamour from the 1930s and early ’40s. That meant delicate crepe dresses embroidered with lilies of the valley and pinched with tiny pleats at the front, wide-shouldered jackets and fur-trimmed coats. Other dresses and skirts, in crepe, had cummerbund effects in contrasting tones.

At times I felt that I was in a Bette Davis movie – Charlotte Vale alighting a gangplank but now in sparkly yellow pumps. Other collections, notably Balenciaga, had a ’30s undercurrent, but the influence at Miu Miu was pronounced.

Read her full report at http://nyti.ms/i6Vwt7.

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