Now I don't want to get anyone's hopes up
too high because as it turns out, today's recycled costume didn't in fact show up in more than one movie. But it was reused, as I'll soon point out. If you don't already know, the lovely lady on the left is Gila Golan. Golan's life could easily have served as the basis of a movie itself (or at least a Lifetime network offering!)
Born in German-occupied Poland, she was found abandoned in a bundle at a train station, her Jewish parents striving to save her from an uncertain, and likely deadly, fate. Taken in by Catholic Poles who kept her hidden and alive through the war, she chose December 30th, 1940 as her birth date. She wound up after the war in a home for "lost" children and later emigrated to Israel as a teen in 1951, attending boarding school with plans to become a teacher. But she'd blossomed into a striking young lady and was photographed for a popular ladies magazine there. (Pic above-right is from later.)
Her attention-getting looks landed her in an Israeli beauty pageant, which she won! It is here that she first utilized the name Gila Golan (already the fifth name she'd lived under - the very first one unknown), to avoid offending the strictly religious folks who'd been assisting her to date. From there, she went on to compete in the Miss World pageant in 1960 and she almost won that, too, losing to Miss Argentina but coming in second. This led to a contract with Columbia Pictures as one of the studio's executives was in attendance with his wife! They fostered the young girl's career.
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Soon spotted by director Stanley Kramer, he placed her in his all-star drama Ship of Fools (1965.) Thereafter, she was thrust into the limelight with a full-on publicity treatment.
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This series of shots trumpeted her featured presence in the 1966 spy spoof Our Man Flint, with James Coburn. She was loaned out to 20th Century Fox for the film.
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The deep-cut, black one-piece with mesh front was a bit provocative, but she wound up wearing an even briefer suit in the finished film...
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In the final product, it was an itsy-bitsy, teeny-weeny, red bikini she wore. The mesh number was used solely for advance promotion. But eagle-eyed viewers may have seen it someplace else!
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The deep-cut mesh suit was worn by Pamela Tiffin in the Paul Newman detective thriller Harper (1966.) Much of Tiffin's screen time in the movie is spent poolside with Robert Wagner as seen above. This scene comes at close to the hour-and-a-half mark.
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Far more famous, though, is the itsy-bitsy, teeny-weeny, blue polka dot bikini that Tiffin wore earlier in the movie. Gyrating around on a diving board, she set hearts aflutter and was used in many of the promotional materials for Harper.
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Tiffin had heretofore been seen mostly as sweet, pure ingenue types in movies like Summer and Smoke (1961), State Fair (1962) and The Hallelujah Trail (1965), among others. She longed for an image change and before long dove into it...
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She moved to Italy, lightened her hair and pursued an entirely new career in European movies. She also, in the wake of a divorce, posed (only semi-nude) for Playboy in 1969. Though her new career as a comedienne in saucy Italian comedies was successful, she retired from the screen following a second marriage in 1974.
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Golan's career as an actress was even more brief than Tiffin's. Despite a featured role in the Jerry Lewis comedy Three on a Couch (1966), she found parts scarce. She made the Italian comedy Catch as Catch Can (1967) with Vittorio Gassman and then the highly unusual but fun adventure The Valley of Gwangi (1969) - with James Franciscus - taking on stop-motion dinosaurs. This was the last anyone saw of her in the U.S. She remarried in 1969 and settled into being a mother to three, along with non-show business interests.
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There were only two times that Golan appeared on American TV. Once was in Kraft Suspense Theatre in 1965 and then once on I Dream of Jeannie, as seen here (with Larry Hagman.) Her diving board is decidedly less elegant than the one Tiffin cavorted on! But amazingly enough, even this wrap-suit with belt was not original to the episode...
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She had previously been poured into this very swimsuit for some campy Easter studio publicity stills! So this post is sort of a double-double dip!
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Ms. Tiffin passed away in December of 2020 at age 78. Her 1974 marriage had lasted to that point and yielded two daughters. As for this mesh-front suit. One has to assume that it was from her home studio, 20th Century Fox, and not part of her Harper (a Warner Brothers project) wardrobe. Strangely, there is no costume designer credited for Harper, even though it features Lauren Bacall, Shelley Winters, Janet Leigh and Julie Harris! Someone had to dress these gals.
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How else could it have fallen onto Golan's body when she was working at Fox instead of her home studio Columbia? Maybe someday I'll see it in a prior Fox film and learn its origins. As for Golan, she wed a Columbia board member (and magnate of the company who produces Geritol!), had three girls of her own and remained wed until her husband died of a heart attack in 1980. He (Matty Rosenhaus) incidentally was depicted very unflatteringly in a book about the David Begalman-Cliff Robertson embezzlement scandal of the late-'70s. (A description, by the way, his own grandson claimed was totally on the money!) She is still with us today at (a presumed) age 80. She reportedly wed again and lives in Florida, with interests in the music and religion of Judaism.
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***UPDATE!***
It didn't take long for one of my eagle-eyed readers to alert me to the fact that this storied swimsuit did in fact make at least one further appearance on-screen beyond what's been shown above. One year after Harper and Our Man Flint, the mesh-front article was utilized for television! As it was rather revealing for the time (showing an inversion of what people now lovingly describe as "side boob,") the teeny bow at the waist was snipped off and a larger, more skin-covering one was sewn into the chest of it! The suit appeared in 1967 in an episode of Batman, a series produced by, natch, 20th Century Fox Television.
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This particular episode is the (infamous) one in which Batman dons some yellow trunks over his Batsuit and surfs in costume! (The Joker catches a wave as well.) Judging from the inset with Burt Ward's Robin held captive, the surf might not be all that was up!
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By this point in the series' run, Yvonne Craig was on hand as Barbara Gordon, aka Batgirl. She's on the scene at the beach in the very suit detailed above. As this show was aimed at kids (with the added wit to keep adults invested as well), having her chest exposed that much simply would not do... hence the bow.
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Someone there knew that this was going to make for some eye-catching publicity. She was photographed extensively on set.
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Of course it's a matter of taste, but I daresay she filled out the little black number better than anyone else! Fans (and she has legions) probably bemoan the addition of that meddlesome bow. Holy Obscuring Detail, Batman!
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Hi Poseidon!
ReplyDeleteA fun lineage of a very distinctive bathing costume! I'm unfamiliar with Gila, though she's lovely, but I LOVE both Pamela Tiffin and Yvonne Craig!!
Pamela was such a knockout with a deft comic touch. She really seemed to be on the path toward bigger things when she bowed out. She was so striking, the switch to blonde didn't really enhance her looks.
Yvonne had the longest career and yet hers was all but over by the 80's, but she was everywhere in the 60's and 70's. She was another one with a sure hand at comedy.
Poseidon, you're too young to remember it, but that black mesh insert swimsuit was a 1964 mass-produced item designed by Margit Fellegi for Cole of California called a "Scandal Suit"-- with a bow added:
ReplyDeletehttps://art.famsf.org/margit-fellegi/scandal-suit-womans-bathing-suit-200926
https://vintagenorth.files.wordpress.com/2012/08/cole-of-cali-scandal-suit-i.jpg
https://houseappeal.files.wordpress.com/2014/06/black-swimsuit-pdf-p-6.jpg?w=656&h=431
They were a big thing for a year or two; C of C even had them in animal prints and sometimes with additional mesh inserts on the sides.
I think the even more daring suit worn by Claudine Auger in THUNDERBALL was at least based on this suit-- with a "twist"-- if not an actual later Cole of California design:
https://64.media.tumblr.com/9c711fc3a801ac69202b63fc33d46e5d/tumblr_oq78zjTKry1qgdj9no2_400.jpg
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EwWJZinXMAAuDAD.jpg
But swimsuit aside, I definitely enjoyed the look at Gila Golan and Pamela Tiffin and the details on their lives. Great post, as always!
joel, I didn't mention it, but probably "One, Two, Three" with James Cagney was one of Pamela's more notable films (and two that took eons for me to finally see, "Come Fly With Me" and "The Pleasure Seekers," were others.) As you say, she seemed on the verge of bigger things when she a) took off for Europe and then b) dropped out. I still haven't fully gotten over that first shock (years ago) of seeing her suddenly all blonde and sultry! 180 switch....!
ReplyDeletehsc....! It's amazing to be "too young" for anything!! LOL Thanks so, so much for providing the history on this prolific bathing suit! Love the name of it, The Scandal Suit. I would hate to see some of the floppy people who wore it, thinking they were Gila, Pamela or Yvonne! One did need a certain natural lift as there was no real support built in to speak of. I DO appreciate all the background, links, etc... to help identify the suit's origins. Someone at 20th Century Fox picked up one or more for stock. Ha ha! Thanks again.
Poseidon, there's a current knockoff or two of the Scandal Suit out there for sale along with vintage originals, so if you do enough Googling, you can probably find photos posted by someone with a figure that isn't quite up to that suit. (I spotted at least one um, "plus-sized" wearer of a knockoff while Googling those links.)
ReplyDeleteDescriptions of the suit online did say that it had a built-in bust support, as did most one-piece suits in the era. And the fabric was stretch materials, including the mesh. (There were other variants that used mesh to connect a bikini into a one-piece; I'm not sure if that design was supposed to be more "modest" or more "slimming".)
I think they gradually eliminated a lot of the construction of swimsuits in the '70s, but at one point, they were pretty solidly built, basically a "foundation garment" women swam in-- "jiggling" wasn't a thing women did before bras were getting ditched post-Woodstock.
I've got to track down THE PLEASURE SEEKERS sometime-- not only Pamela Tiffin, but Ann-Margret in a movie that was reviewed hilariously in that book BAD MOVIES WE *LOVE* from the early '90s.
One can usually spot those 1960's swimsuit-shots by their poses that contort the models with a petulant sway-of-the-hips; as well as giving us faces that make offer formerly forbidden, sensual eye-contact with the observer – and all topped by a bouffant sprayed within an inch of its life. And now, looking back, that ubiquitous pose seems so affected; yet, at the time, I well remember that it was the height of seductiveness. Thank you, Poseidon, for another swanky post!
ReplyDeleteDean W, I did get your 2nd message asking me to make a slight correction to this one, but I'm not able to do that. Imagine the ramifications if a webmaster was able to go in and alter some of the words in a person's comment! I have a lot of powers but that's not one of them. Thanks very much!
Deletehsc, I hear ya, but if the whole entire front of a swimsuit is missing except for some stretch netting across the front, how much support could it be for someone with huge tits?
ReplyDeleteBefore I recently changed my DirecTV lineup, I had Fox Movie Channel, which showed The Pleasure Seekers many many times! Before that, I wasn't sure I would ever get to see it. Bad Movies We Love is my personal Bible!
Hi Poseidon, thanks for the heads-up! Though, since you can't change my wayward grammar, that'll mean I'll have to stop posting on the net while blind-drunk, watching TCM until the sun comes up (I call it multi-tasking).
ReplyDeleteI'm so amazed at your eye for costuming. Love these gumshoe fashion posts! I saw Cruella the other day and everyone had been telling me that the fashion was great. But maybe if the film had been better, the fashion would have come off better to me. But it was like they shoehorned the Cruella origin story into The Devil Wears Prada concept. Emma Stone even had similar hair to Anne Hathaway tho AH didn't have the nerdy glasses if I remember right. For every costume you see recycled in old films, there's at least 1000 recycled screenplays.
ReplyDeleteShawny, so true. I've recently been delving into the past when it comes to TV sitcoms and it's been a little bubble-bursting to see that some of my favorite "The Golden Girls" story ideas were outright copied from other prior shows, just with the slightest tweaking. I knew it happened on dramas all the time, but somehow didn't catch it as much with the comedies (probably because I can count on my hands how many comedy shows I ever got into...!) Recycling is not a new concept! LOL Thanks!
ReplyDeleteOMG I loved this! so mind blowing you can pick these out, all these gorgeous girls in my favorite period for hair and makeup. I love an Israeli girl doing Easter cheesecake, hilarious. I don't love the Flint movies but they did get gorgoues women in them for decoration. I watch "Harper" every time it comes on and that poolside go go bit is my favorite, especially with Paul Newman's unenthusiastic response. What a story about Gila, and I loved Pamela Tiffin, a friend used to see her on the upper east side here in NY frequently before she passed away last year. I don't love her as a blonde but she's definitely striking.
ReplyDeleteGingerguy, hilarious reflection on the Iraeli Easter connection...! Very neat that you knew someone who got to see Miss Tiffin in action. I also have never been able to get excited about the "Flint" films, but I enjoyed seeing Jean Hale in one, who had a great bitchy part in "The Oscar" as a spoiled star. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteIsn't there an identical 'Cole of California' swimsuit for sale in an upcoming Profiles of History auction - the property of Claudine Auger?
ReplyDelete