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...fall collections: Hollywood-inspired '40s retro glamour. His suits and dresses were stiletto-slim, with huge, dramatic sleeves or swaths of material around the shoulders or waist. Jackie wouldn't wear one of these, and Audrey would be overwhelmed in one, but it is easy to imagine Joan Crawford or Bette Davis stalking an errant lover using the costume as a weapon. Ghost, designed by Tanya Sarne -- who is also English -- was back in the black-and-white era too: waterfall dresses, flowing crepe trousers and handsome bias-cut skirts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A NEW TOUCH OF CLASS | 4/17/1995 | See Source »

...last week, noontime oglers were largely out of luck. Most of the supermodels were absent from the runways. They have, in a sense, grown too big for the fashion world that created them and turned them into internationally admired adventuresses. Instead of modeling clothes in New York City, Cindy Crawford was in Miami shooting her first movie, Fair Game, with Billy Baldwin. Vendela fans could have found the towering Swede in Los Angeles, where she had recently done a guest spot on Murphy Brown. Naomi Campbell, usually ubiquitous all through Fashion Week, appeared in just two shows. She had intended...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE RUNWAY GIRLS TAKE OFF | 4/17/1995 | See Source »

...Only Everything, singer-guitarist Juliana Hatfield moves from the forehead-slappingly obvious to the deftly oblique. On her last album, Become What You Are, she took swipes at easy targets like the grotesquely gorgeous Cindy Crawford set. This time, says Hatfield, "I wanted there to be more for people to sink their teeth into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PROMISE KEPT | 4/3/1995 | See Source »

Writing the History of Music in the USA. Richard Crawford, University of Michigan. Davison Room, Music Building...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: At Harvard | 3/16/1995 | See Source »

...especially hard for girls. The depiction of females in movies, on television and especially in advertising ranges from the unattainable to the disgusting. It is frustrating for the average young woman to be told that she should grow up to be like a society's goddess like Cindy Crawford, and it is insulting and dangerous to say she should desire to look like Kate Moss. In addition to this pressure, girls often become victims of the bitter social rivalries that pervade young female social circles and are subjected to the unwanted attention of hormonally-challenged young males...

Author: By Jonathan R. Brooks, | Title: A Question of Self-Esteem | 3/10/1995 | See Source »

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