Mervinwaves
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Hello, the Golden Era is often associated with the busty hourglass figure. Are there examples of old Hollywood actresses with a small bust?
Even though this exact question was suspiciously posted by the exact same poster about a year and a half ago, I can point out that the "sweater girl" physique didn't become fashionable until the mid-1940s. As Fading points out, most prominent actresses of the 1930s tended to be substantially less pneumatic. The popular silhouette of the thirties was businesslike and athletic -- the "hourglass" was seen as a dated throwback to the 1890s, as portrayed in movies by Mae West.
There were a number of "topless" shows at the 1939-40 New York World's Fair, and Kodachrome home movie footage of some of these is extant. They reveal that without exception the women performing in these shows tended to be very small-busted.
I don't think we as males are allowed to notice these things anyMervinwavelonger socially acceptast: 2261854 said:Hello, the
longer. It is no longer socially acceptable.Hello, the Golden Era is often associated with the busty hourglass figure. Are there examples of old Hollywood actresses with a small bust?
lden Era is often associated with the busty hourglass figure. Are there examples of old Hollywood actresses with a small bust?
Also worth noting, when we look at such things through modern eyes, the sort of surgical enhancement that has become almost a norm in Hollywood in recent decades was far from available in the thirties. (Indeed, actresses considered 'busty', or at least 'sex symbols' even into the eighties are often, looking back, less prominent in the chest than is common now that surgical enhancement is all but a standard.)
Same here, regardless of whether or not those women are "stars". I realize they did it to themselves, so to speak, but I have compassion for those women who have inadvertently mutilated their bodies in an effort to attain a false and completely arbitrary standard of "beauty". I fully support anyone, male or female, who undergoes reconstructive surgery because of physical trauma or illness, but in my opinion performing the same procedure(s) on a perfectly healthy person is unnecessary and foolish....I applaud the few female stars today who, clearly, have said no to surgery...