Bikini
The bikini made its official debut in the summer of 1946, just
a few days after the US. Military conducted nuclear tests and
exploded the H-bomb on the Bikini Atoll, a string of islands in
the Pacific. French designer Reard, still lacking a name for his
new suit, capitalised on the exotic local and newsworthy
event.
The slinky suit was deemed so indecent that French models
refused to wear it for the runway. Reard found a willing model in
Micheline Bernardini, a nude dancer at the Casino de Paris. Her
scantily-clad photos made her an immediate sex symbol, and forever
declared the bikini the symbol of sex.
Europe was the first to embrace the bikini, and the French
blonde bombshell Brigitte Bardot immortalised the suit in the
movie Girl in the
Bikini. America, however, wasn't ready to reveal, and the
movie was censored in the US.
Censors also made it their duty to prohibit the suit from the
country's beaches and guards measured the girls in their bathing
suits to make sure that they didn't reveal too much. You'd get the
stamp of approval if (like a good respectable girl) you kept your
belly button under wraps. If not, the bikini got you booted from
the beach.
As morals loosened in the 60s, the bullet-bra and hipster brief
bikini made a big splash. Singer Brian
Hyland immortalised the suit with his song Itsy Bitsy
Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini, and fresh-faced Frankie
Avalon and Annette Funicello
starred in a series of beach movies
that featured bikini-clad girls dancing on the beach.
Raquel Welch enflamed the primal urges in her prehistoric fur
bikini in One Million
Years B.C., and Jane Fonda's Barbarella
was outta this world as a futuristic bikini babe.
The 70s got even teenier with the string bikini, and the tiny
top made a turn on the disco
floor when paired with designer jeans or slinky satin shorts. The
bikini made its night time debut, and there was no stopping it.
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