Glamour (presentation)

Lana Turner was considered to be a glamorous star.[1]
Art deco, as seen here on the Chrysler Building in Midtown Manhattan, is often characterised as glamorous.[2]

In the field of cultural studies, glamour, or glamor, is the impression of attraction or fascination that a particularly luxurious or elegant appearance creates, an impression which intensifies reality. Usually, a person, event, location, technology, or product such as a piece of clothing can be glamorous or add glamour. "Glamour" originally referred to a magic spell, an illusion said to be cast by witches.

Virginia Postrel says that for glamour to be successful it nearly always requires sprezzatura—an appearance of effortlessness, and to appear distant—transcending the everyday, to be slightly mysterious and somewhat idealised, but not to the extent it is no longer possible to identify with the person.[3] Glamorous things are neither opaque, hiding all, nor transparent showing everything, but translucent, favourably showing things.[4]

The early Hollywood star system in particular specialised in Hollywood glamour where they systematically glamorised their actors and actresses.[3]

Glamour can be confused with a style, which is adherence to a particular school of fashion, or intrinsic beauty; whereas glamour can be external and deliberate.

  1. ^ "50 Of The Most Glamorous Old Hollywood Actresses". Silver Petticoat Review. 13 November 2018. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference artdeco was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ a b "TED conference Virginia Postrel".
  4. ^ "The Gilded Age". The New York Times. 2004-10-10. Retrieved 2010-05-03.