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how was Prince able to pull off makeup and androgyny better than many of his associates? I know Prince wasn't the first, nor the last dude, to wear makeup and effeminate clothes in the world of rock and funk, but boy, he pulled it off better than anyone other than Bowie.
I see pix of Mark Brown, Micki Free, Jesse Johnson, BObby Z, Miko Weaver, even Andre Cymone...all decent to good looking men and yet none of them (IMO) pulled off the look as well as Prince. I wonder why that is the case? Andre came close in some ways.
IF you agree that P pulled it off best, do you think it was because he was doing it a bit earlier, changing his look more frequently, seemed to be more ironic/punkish about it, had a combination of swagger/vulnerability that made it work for him, or was just prettier than most of the other fellas. I think it was probably all of the above. I think most of the other dudes looked silly and derivative when they attempted it.
Bowie pulled off androgyny well also, probably because Bowie had a flair for the dramatic and had a deep speaking and singing voice. Damn, Prince had those characteristics as well (except he usually didn't sing in a deep voice and his sense of dramatics was better on stage than on film..)
[Edited 5/7/17 20:54pm] | |
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Prince wore a lot of makeup, but not as much as some of his contemporaries. Both he and Michael Jackson seemed to want their makeup artists to merely enhance what they were given and use a slightly exaggerated, but natural look. They didn't typically have pounds of blush contouring their cheeks like other glam rockers. . Of course, some years Prince really piled on the pancake dust (see: 1993-1995). His hair during that time also had a kind of weird/extreme vibe that sort of made his whole look a bit like a gaunt clown. But in most lighting and in most eras, his makeup was pretty subtle. | |
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HE concentrated mostly on his gorgeous eyes and covering up flaws in his complexion. I guess that made him look kind of emo or punkish rather than the cover of the Poison album..LOL.
As for Michael, he pulled it off well for a little while but ruined his looks with bad plastic surgery, and permanent makeup tattoed on.. I am not talking about how he dealt with his vitiligo either..
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Agreed on all points. I really don't think he was going for the same deal that his contemporaries were going for. Which is kind odd, no? Prince probably got the biggest flak for looking feminine, but he looked way more masculine than any member of Poison or Ratt or DeBarge. [Edited 5/7/17 21:00pm] | |
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I agree with everyone saying he didn't go to extremes often. But also...it was HIM. He wasn't following a trend, it was his personal style. I read in a piece by Sheila that when they first met in the late 70s, he had a big old Afro and more eyeliner than her. He owned the look with confidence. | |
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I think he got flak for being feminine by only those who didn't know his music well. From a distance, he was a dainty little dude almost more pretty than many girls and often sang in a falsetto. He also wasn't afraid of sexualizing himself and making himself appear sexually vulnerable. But I imagine there was a lot of men who begrudgedly became P fans because a girlfriend dragged them to a concert or they heard "Darling Nikki" and Prince earned his 'man' credibility by wailing on a guitar and speaking in his suprisingly deep voice and showing his swagger/sense of humor on stage..
As for glam rockers etc, their androgyny was so completely tongue in cheek that it wasn't even really androgyny. Poison were super macho dudes who never seemed vulnerable sexually or in their music. They were all about the conquest, never about being conquered by women.
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I'm not an expert on makeup or anything, but honestly, Prince was just a very pretty dude. Must've had some damn good genes. | |
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Because he was slight of build with delicate features. "Climb in my fur." | |
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Still had that big ol head, tho | |
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Yes, I agree about the difference between the "glam rockers" being simply macho guys wearing the "androgyny costume".
In Bowie's case, he actually was known to be bisexual back in the day so that added to his androgyny "street cred".
In P's case, he was doing the same stuff on and off stage as far as his style and grooming, in the same way that a female might get up on her day off work and put on a light bit of makeup and her favourite scent and outfit, purple associates have confirmed forever that P was the same way. He wasn't putting on a costume.
As for P's masculinity, I was just having this conversation with another fan and why P made men so uncomfortable with his unapologetic femininity, yet was still masculine as hell and sexy to women. We're still discussing it, but the vulnerability was brought up and also his unflinchingly seductive nature. He doesn't play vulnerable as weak like some others I won't name. Even when he was being quitely subdued, his natural speaking voice was deep and strong and sexy as opposed to the cringeworthy affectation of the sound of a butterfly's wings in a summer breeze.
Baby boy was pretty and petite, but his masculinity wasn't compromised one bit.
Just sayin. [Edited 5/7/17 21:42pm] | |
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Leave that chile's big ol' punkin head alone!
(He really did have a damned noggin, do, innit?)
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I love hims big ol punkin head, but I'm sayin | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Funny you should mention that because when Kim Berry casually/innocently said P was "tender headed", the thought of PS went through my mind very breifly and I wondered if those two things could be even remotely related to each other.
I dunno.
Hmmmmm...
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TrivialPursuit said:
Wasn't his head normal size, but the rest of him tiny? The wooh is on the one! | |
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simple warners bros and big chick. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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That is another way to look at it.
Either way, he was cutie-patootie.
It does have neurological componants in some diagnosed, but who knows for sure on a case to case basis?
I know one thing for sure...If there was any way to be a complicated being, P had the market cornered.
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He didn't have to try as hard as others.. thin.. good bone structure.. naturally pretty/attractive.. ***And he had MUCH more of what the young folks today call - SWAG! PLUS ----> light skinned black dudes were very 'in' - in the 80's. Prince/Al B Sure/Debarge ect.. Prince was winning on all fronts!!!.
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Beneath all of the lace and eye liner was Prince's sexiest trait- confidence! He knew he was the best at everything and that's where that intensely magnetic look came from. 'I am the best, better than the rest......' Both men and women respond to confidence. | |
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He's the only guy I'll tolerate wearing makeup. Gotta say though I hate when people project and that happened a lot after he passed. I remember MSNBC did a whole segment on the political statement he made with his afro. But according to Kim Berry Prince said he was sick of having to have his hair done all the time and wanted to go natural. Not everything he did was to make some grand statement. Paisley Park is in your heart
#PrinceForever 💜 | |
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We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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Right!!! I was trying to get some people to see that not to long ago. Sometimes it is just what it is. | |
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I don't think any of them tried to pull that look off
Mark Brown Bobby Z and Andre weren't trying to do that like Prince.
Micki Free copied Prince, Jesse Johnson -that was a part of who he was too, and then being in the purple camp he was free to be, I don't think he wanted to go as far as Prince did though.
and Vanity was the reflection | |
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OldFriends4Sale said:
Right!!! I was trying to get some people to see that not to long ago. Sometimes it is just what it is. You mean it wasn't his way of saying he is dying and wanted to go back to the beginning to say goodbye??? "Climb in my fur." | |
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More like, "Damn - I am pushing 60 and tired of getting my shit done everyday." We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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Lawd knows 35 years of conking your hair, a brutha needs that afro comb revival "Climb in my fur." | |
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We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves. | |
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"Climb in my fur." | |
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