Friday, April 17, 2020

Designer Double-Dip: Seeing Through the Drape

The time has come again when we pull back the curtain on the sometimes easy (sometimes hard) to spot habit of Hollywood repurposing articles of costuming. It makes sense, after all. Why build something, often out of beautiful, expensive fabric and then let it languish in closeted purgatory forever? This time, the clothing barely had time to get back from the cleaners until it was used again! LOL And the actress was recycled, too!

We begin with the recycled part. In an episode of Mannix, which aired in March of 1968, we find an artist sketching away. He's drawing a rather revealing get-up on an appealingly hourglass figure. The model isn't actually in front of him! It seems he's using a telescope to look through to the next building where a young lady is posing for someone else.
We have a soft spot for the rather simian-looking actor playing the artist, Paul Mantee. It's likely due to his starring role in the sci-fi camp classic Robinson Crusoe on Mars (1964), a movie that captivated us completely as a kid. Stay tuned below for a little bonus on that point!
This is what he sees through the scope; a pretty blonde with a generous amount of her torso bared as she models for a sculptor in that building.

Mantee has someone over - TV staple William Windom (some of you li'l chicks may have grown up watching him as Seth, the paunchy, cranky sheriff on Murder, She Wrote?) He has a look through the telescope and we see that the lady in question is:
...the lovely Leslie Parrish, who played Daisy Mae in Li'l Abner (1959), was in The Manchurian Candidate (1962) as Laurence Harvey's wife and appeared in countless television shows of the 1960s.
It seems she has a telltale mole along her waistline and this sparks a problem for Windom. He's just purchased an expensive Renoir painting in which the subject not only looks very much like this gal, but also has the same mole in the same spot!

He frantically asks Mantee how one gets to that room across the street. (Um... go downstairs, cross the alley, enter that building and then go up??)

By the time he arrives (maybe he took a taxi? LOL) the girl is gone. And the sculptor is not particularly eager to help.

Thus, Windom must hire the title detective Mannix in order to find out just what is up. He has the painting brought down....
Sure enough, the gal looks similar...
...and there's the mole, 'cause, you know, Renoir just couldn't resist dabbing this dark brown spot onto "his" masterwork!!
Close-up of "The Girl in the Frame" - the name of this installment of Mannix.
Incidentally, the real Renoir subjects tended to be far more nude and far more zaftig... But, you know what? I do think I see a mole on the center woman's behind!
Later, when Mannix catches up with the model, she's sporting one of those lunatic (and wonderful) hairstyles that could only have come from the mid-to-late 1960s. And it does turn out that she is - whether aware or not - part of an art forgery ring. But that Grecian get-up she was sporting in the first scene. Where have we seen that (and her!) before....?
 
Oh, here she is! Parrish had guest-starred on a September, 1967 episode of the famous sci-fi series Star Trek. As Lt. Carolyn Palamas, she was called upon to join a landing party in order to investigate an alien being seemingly in the form of Greek god Apollo who is holding their craft in stasis.
Apollo (played by one Michael Forest, who has a tribute to him here) is immediately taken with the young lady. And since so often the females on Star Trek were photographed with back-lighting and through gauze almost as thick as an Indian blanket, she is indeed lovely (she was thirty-two at the time... hardly Lucille Ball in Mame, 1974!)
Forest is unhappy with the way she looks in her Starfleet uniform. He thinks she should have one arm (and more!) bared. So with the wave of his hand, she is suddenly transformed into this eye-popping creation. Trek designer William Ware Thiess was legendary for exposing unexpected parts of the female form in his costumes, making sure to keep the crotch and nipples well covered as the censors dictated, but showing off other bits in the bargain.
Forest decides that the two need to head off on their own for some quality time, much to Captain Kirk and the others' dismay. But there's nothing they can do about it.
She isn't terribly resistant to the idea either, claiming to be able to do more good for their current problem this way. (BTW, color variations on this costume are due to the different sources used for these images. The unrestored visuals show it as more of a rosy pink while this color-corrected shot at right reveals its more true, shocking pink tone.)

Parrish looks smashing at the side of Forest and seems strangely keen on being with him, even though he is so threatening to her entire starship full of fellow crew members.
It's tough to blame her, though, as he looks so cute in his slinky little gold toga!
This was a fairly daring glimpse for 1967 TV. She looks half naked here. An unused ending (nixed by the powers that be at NBC and never filmed) had Parrish winding up pregnant at the end of the episode! Both Star Trek and Mannix were Desilu productions and often shared common actors (and apparently some costume pieces, too!)
Being loved by a god isn't always easy....! Michael Forest had nice things to say about Ms. Parrish, saying she "was a delightful person to work with; no problems; never any difficulties; we would just discuss what we were going to do and we would do it. She was excellent and very personable. William [Shatner] was a bit of a problem, however. You never saw me standing with him; we were always in different shots. We would be talking to one another, but we wouldn't be on camera at the same time. I'm sure that's what he stipulated - because I was so much taller." An earlier screencap does show that in long-shot they were shown together (and also demonstrates that Shat's fears were valid! LOL But Apollo was supposed to be much taller, fer cryin' out loud...! Vanity...) Ms. Parrish left acting in 1974 and turned her attention to producing, social activism and television broadcasting. She is still with us today at age eighty-five!
Bonus Pics! 

Mr. Paul Mantee in Crusoe, taking a Martian bath!
Watching this movie on TV as a kid was a thrill, but never more so than when this fleeting rear nude scene (inset) came about! It was one time when cropped pan 'n scan afforded a somewhat better view.
This here Robinson Crusoe made me tingle in strange places!
I mean, he's drifting into Clint Walker territory here...! Paul Mantee. Robinson Crusoe on Mars. Be there!
Farewell till next time!

13 comments:

  1. What happened to Michael Forest's nipples?

    "Robinson Crusoe" was a Saturday matinee favorite of mine, along with "Mysterious Island", and for much the same reason - hunky castaways unburdened by much clothing. Paul Mantee was not conventionally handsome, but he sure had something - just wish we could have seen more of it.

    "Mannix" had one of the great theme tunes, in Viennese Waltz time, of all things. Every once in a while it runs through my head while doing housework or something.

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  2. I'm afraid Mike's nips fell victim to a healthy slathering of body makeup! LOL I think they often tried to blend the physique in a way that wouldn't allow them to stand out as prominent, at least on some shows. It almost has a Malibu Ken Doll body effect, doesn't it?? And I also love "Mysterious Island!" Michael Callen in the smallest of shorts. (Pat Boone went that route in "Journey to the Center of the Earth," too!) Thanks for commenting, Dan!

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  3. Yeah, we talked about the no-nipples thing when you reviewed the STAR TREK episode in a previous post.

    In some framegrabs, it looks like Shatner not only got his chest shaved (Nimoy must've refused for that one episode) whenever Kirk went shirtless, but got his nipples lightened as well.

    Off the top of my head, I don't recall this being done anywhere else, so it might've been a brief standards & practices thing at NBC (they were going after Barbara Eden's navel around this time), or possibly someone on the production team at ST.

    Comic books had been doing the no-nipples thing for a couple of decades by this point, particularly universal after the Comics Code, until about 1970. CONAN THE BARBARIAN is credited for loosening that up, but Neal Adams had put them in occasionally in some comics before then.

    This no-nipples thing is a big thing for me personally-- it actually made me feel there was something indecent about male nips when I was a kid, and I wouldn't take my shirt off in public unless I was going swimming. (And even then I would keep my arms or hands blocking them.)

    And the framecaps from that scene in ROBINSON CRUSOE ON MARS are such a nice bonus. Paul Mantee is a fairly unsung hottie, but he had a great body.



    Finally, addressing the theme of the post:

    Since I've been obsessed with that particular William Ware Theiss costume since it was discussed in a book on ST that I once had, I was able to recognize it instantly in the charcoal sketch in the first framegrab.

    I even blurted out "Leslie Parrish, 'Who Mourns for Adonais?,' William Ware Theiss, STAR TREK!" like I was on a game show!

    And because spotting recycled costumes and props is one of my favorite things, I really enjoyed seeing a second use of the costume, but even more so that it was still being worn by Leslie Parrish, practically recreating the whole look from before.

    I do wonder if that costume ever wound up in use anywhere else? Probably not something that was easy to make use of, but it seems like it could've worked as a costume in a musical number, or on an extra playing a Vegas showgirl or something.

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  4. I couldn't resist doing a quick Google Image search, and found a couple of frame grabs of Michael Forrest from a few years earlier, in Roger Corman's low-budget peplum ATLAS.

    These shots clearly show his unaltered nipples and nice sprinkling of chest hair that somebody at NBC or ST decided wasn't acceptable:

    http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-d5KXRBYCWM4/Tde7WYgbjsI/AAAAAAAAANM/daCNouGfhKk/s1600/michael-forest-misc-2-0035.png

    http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-tGkJOxONsNg/Tde7SvybNpI/AAAAAAAAANI/3m4qJVtudjk/s1600/michael-forest-misc-2-0014.JPG

    Not surprisingly, the other blog these came from was discussing Michael Forest's role as Apollo and followed it with a retrospective of other roles.

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  5. That Star Trek Apollo episode started preteen me down a pagan rabbit hole that lasted well into my twenties. I also had a book about Greco-Roman mythology written and illustrated for children and how I used to idle over the drawings of scantily clad Apollo. We also had an illustrated children's Bible, and I always thought the pagans were so much hotter and better groomed than the shaggy, heavily draped Xstains.

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  6. hsc, imagine being the makeup person on set that day (or week!) You'd either have it really great or maybe not so great. There are MOVIES from the mid-to-late '60s in which the women's nipple were faded/blended in in this way to avoid the nudity being so vivid. I can't even recall any at the moment but for some reason I'm getting "Taste the Blood of Dracula" in my mind as one. I LOVE Neal Adams' artwork. For me, he was in a class by himself that few if any could outdo. LOL at you being able to exclaim what the costume was right away. Good for you! BTW, I have similar (and in some cases better) pics of Mike Forest in "Atlas" right here at P.U. --

    https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-pgJSHqndVPI/WuDQ55sttXI/AAAAAAAA9AA/Kv1Iuq2MTeM8CW_G_z-sntBnnvFgDffSwCEwYBhgL/s1600/MF01b.jpg

    https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-E96DaDXRuhQ/WuDQ6ZrxnNI/AAAAAAAA9AI/ZKdCyQOiJgEiij1w55WatosnZh6PdLOjQCEwYBhgL/s1600/MF01c.jpg

    There are others besides these in his tribute.

    Jack, I wonder how many little gayboys were conversely led astray by Biblical imagery that went wrong, like John Derek as Joshua in "The Ten Commandments" or Jeff Hunter in "King of Kings!" I, too, always had a thing for Grecian togas and all you mention. Thanks!

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  7. Oh gosh, John Ericson (whom you covered many moons ago) was breathtakingly gorgeous in a production called: I Am Semiramis, aka Slave Queen of Babylon (1963). A European venture and at certain point it featured Ericson only in a white garment covering his special area. However, there were a few instances when he was standing or walking and what appeared to be something dark sticking out at the top and you can guess what it was. Of course in Europe things were not as stringent but it was a surprising and tantalizing slip up nowtheless. Shame the film is not uploaded anywhere. Cheers.

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    1. @Huttonmy710 I just watched Queen of Babylon on YouTube, perhaps the finest film ever made? I caught the dark something sticking out of John Ericson's toga and thought maybe it was a microphone at first, but I don't think they had that technology back then. Hmmmm...

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  8. The novelization of this ST episode includes the pregnancy. James Blish, who wrote the novelization, often worked from the script rather than the finished episode so they sometimes include plot points that didn’t make it to air. Fascinating to the hard-core Trekker I used to be in my younger days to spot the differences.

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  9. Just watched Queen of Babylon (well, fast forwarded to the scene in question) and whatever that dark area is just doesn't look, uh, three dimensional to me. I wonder if it was some sort of "back up" device in case of a wardrobe malfunction?
    There were probably many parents who didn't quite understand their sons' interest in Bible movies. Same with nature shows. I had a friend whose parents were convinced he was going to be a marine biologist because of his fascination with all those Jacques Cousteau specials. What he was really fascinated with were, as he put it, all those Speedos crammed with French peepees.

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  10. Hi all! Well, duh, I just HAD to go check out Slave Queen of Babylon, too, now....! John barely bothered to put clothes on at all for the first half of the movie. That's my sort of production! (Actually, the sets and mind-boggling costumes were really something to behold, along with the leading lady's makeup.) It looked to me like John had on a little pair of low-rise, black panties which sometimes crept up above his diaper as he was moving around. But he was gloriously beautiful! Especially his face in a late palace scene in his battle gear. Loved the waterfall area. There was one instance when he turned quickly and the drape of his swimming garment swept away, revealing the inner thigh. And he also had a moment with partial butt cheek exposed. (Why am I being SO analytical and microscopic about it all?!?! Ha ha! Just me, I guess...) F. Nomen, that's a neat distinction between the ST scripts and novels. I've never read any of the novels.

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  11. FYI, Star Trek and Mannix (Along with Mission: Impossible) were both Desilu productions and made at the same time.

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  12. My apologies, that's what I get for jumping around the article

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