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Publisher
details: Vogue (UK) September 1986
Picture
credits: ??
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Friends
of Firth credits:
article and
images provided by Maria/Afirthionado
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Vogue
(UK) September 1986
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| 'Colin
Firth wears a floor-length coat in black wool, with a grey lining, huge
and warm. "Far from my usual style. I might buy a coat like this yes, I
think I would..." |
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Men in Vogue
Dressing Down
by Jessica Berens
Colin Firth was single-minded
and self-possessed as the Marxist Judd in Another Country; romantic and
stoic as Truelove in Dutch Girls. Next month that chiselled jawline slides
back into view when Granada Television shows its seven-part dramatisation,
Lost Empires, based on the J.B. Priestley novel about life in Edwardian
music halls. Firth plays the narrator, and heads a cast of 100 including
Laurence Olivier and Pamela Stephenson. The series was directed by Alan
Grint and took a year to make.
"Relationships can become
strained, especially with the stress, ension and frayed tempers on the
set." He recuperated in Inverness, where he disappeared, enigmatic and
so alone, "on retreat". He has wanted to be an actor since he landed the
part of Jack Frost in a school production and it entailed wearing silver
satin trousers and a sky blue sash. "I was very blonde then." As a teenager
he hated school, loved King Crimson and Camus, and got his hair cut short,
like everybody else, in 1977. Nowadays, "I dress down completely - I try
to get away with jeans. I don't like it when clothes are a huge issue."
You might catch him in the long leather coat he found in an attic, or the
1940s motorcycle jacket with fur trim, or his Doc Martens. Favourite haunts
are Jones, Paul Smith and Workers for Freedom, but the most frequently
visited store is Marks & Spencer near his Hackney flat. Envisage him
darting among the frozen Duchesse Desserts, the Viennese Fancies, the Heat
and Serve Moules Bonne Femme.
© Vogue (UK) 1986
Reproduced
with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution
is prohibited without permission.
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