Teddy Boys
The
original teen fashion rebel of the post-war era, the Teddy Boy paved
the path of rebellion for all hooligans to come.
During the war years, young men filled the working positions left
vacant by their enlisted fathers, and they had money to burn when
their fathers returned.
This new prosperity allowed adolescents to do something they had
never done before: engage in a carefree lifestyle called the teenage
years.
Originating in the early 50s from the streets of London, the Teds
were working class youths looking for an identity, and they found it
through a preference for romantic Edwardian dressing. ("Teddy" being a
nickname for Edward). The Edwardian look was one of dapper refinement,
featuring slim coats with velvet trim and the impeccable tailoring
preferred by upper class gentlemen. The Teds built their own
characteristic look by mixing the Edwardian style with American
Western and rock and roll looks. This conjunction of styles from the
past and the present created a dandified neo-Edwardian look that would
earmark the start of fashion conscious youngsters.
The Teddy Boy look soon found its way across the shores to American
boys, turning conventional society on its head. The rumblings of angst
were ready for an identity, and teens used the Teds as a prime
example. Long, draped jackets were borrowed from the zoot suit and
juxtaposed with thin, bootlace ties from the western look.
Skinny-legged stovepipe pants were cut short to show off wild
patterned socks worn with suede, crepe-soled creepers, or the
pointed-toe black oxfords called winkle-pickers. The only thing to top
off such an outrageous cornucopia of clothing was the wildly styled,
Brylcreemed pompadour called a D.A. The mandatory accessory was a
metal comb, which restyled the hair into pompadour perfection after is
got tousled during a fight.
While
the Teds started as a fashion clique, they soon earned a reputation
for fighting and vandalism. They hung out on street corners, desperate
to converse away from the parents who didn't understand them. They
carried flick-knives, cycle chains and razors. They started gangs and
terrorised the conventional world. Teddy Boy style was a direct
ancestor of the leather jacket, T-shirt wearing American bopper look
that was eventually preferred over the elegant stylings of the Brits.
Though the Teddy Boy style was inherently male, there were girls
who were friends and sweethearts of these new fashion rebels, and they
adopted their own look based on the boys' style. The girls paired the
velvet-collared jackets with slim tweed skirts and black stockings,
and wore heavy black eye-liner. They too wore winks, and some girls
even went so far as to adopt the greased pompadour D.A. for their
hairstyle.
The Teddy Boys created the first clique based on fashion: Teddy
Boys recognised other Teds and banded together, leaving the others
behind. Most parents strongly opposed their sons becoming Teds. The
backlash was especially strong in the north of England where it was
seen as an effeminate, antisocial, southerners craze. |