Wednesday, 23 March 2011

Elizabeth Taylor: Classic Beauty In Every Sense

The antithesis of today’s Hollywood fashion icon, Taylor always dressed like a movie star
Elizabeth Taylor had it all: the violet, almond-shaped eyes, the creamy skin, the pouty lips and raven hair.
Of course, there were her Oscars, iconic roles and many husbands, too, but Taylor is most renowned for her beauty. She died Wednesday at 79 from congestive heart failure.
The public saw her mature from a young curly haired tomboy in "National Velvet" to the sultry "Cleopatra." Yet no matter the time, place or role, her glamour was consistent, and that was inspiring to women, even if they could never quite replicate it.
"Every quality that we consider classically beautiful, she had," said Amy Keller Laird, beauty director of Allure. "She was sexy and girlish at once, she had both those qualities all through her life."
In 1951, Taylor showed off her legendary 19-inch waist in a strapless dress with a bodice top, full tulle skirt and delicate flowers at the neckline designed by Edith Head that InStyle fashion director Hal Rubenstein said was the "blueprint for prom dresses of the '50s."
The same went for lingerie styles after she wore a lace-trimmed slip in "Butterfield 8." Black kohl eyeliner was all the rage  after "Cleopatra."


Elizabeth Taylor: Star Of A Lifetime

Taylor was the antithesis of today's Hollywood fashion icon, who is eager to be seen as an everywoman. She was always dressed like a movie star: hair done, makeup on and lots of jewelry. Never would you see Taylor in jeans and a T-shirt.

Rubenstein said he had the pleasure of meeting her a few times. "As a child, she was eerily beautiful — she never had a child's face, and as a woman, she was unmatchably beautiful," he said.

Interactive: Elizabeth Taylor's Life And Career (On This Page)

In person, the most striking thing about her was her impeccable features, but her broader appeal, the one the world saw in photographs, was her overall glamour, he said.
The big studios trained her to always step out the door as glamourpuss Elizabeth Taylor: She wore the role of movie star all the time, and she didn't apologize for it.
This 1961 photo shows actress Elizabeth Taylor in the film "Butterfield 8." The actress died Wednesday in Los Angeles of congestive heart failure at age 79.
"She was an incredible beauty and she had an awareness of her own beauty. Even those we think are great beauties today play it down and speak modestly — there's always something they don't like and they apologize for it, but she never did," Rubenstein said. "She was aware of her gifts and truly appreciated them."
He also noted that Taylor made sure any and all of her suitors, from boyfriends and husbands to reporters, knew that she liked gifts and that she expected them. After all, one of the most important diamonds of all time, a 69-carat stone, was a gift from husband No. 5 and 6, Richard Burton. It is now known as the Taylor-Burton Diamond.

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