It looks like a civilian flight jacket, loosely styled on an A-2. The pockets are cut into the body of the jacket not sewn on patch pockets, the pocket snaps are exposed, not hidden under the leather of the pocket flap, etc, etc. Nice looking jacket, but definitely not an A-2.
I'll point Curator Rick to this discussion. If anyone would know, he would. He's got original props from the movie (including one of the trousers Heston wore in the film -- there were two pair with distinct differences). I don't know anyone else who knows as much about this movie as he does.
OK here goes.
Edith Head was in charge of costumes. Those not made for the production were pulled from the Paramount Wardrobe Dept. not Western Costume Co.
Harry Steele's outfit
Hat (was not a fedora) - Australian military hat (late 40s, early 50s model). This particular model had a peculiar "double brim". Stewart Granger wears an identical model (but with lighter colored band)in the Allen Quartermain movie King Solomon's Mine.
"Scarf" - This was made from either a sheet or linen towel that had the blue woven identification strip you find in institutional linens it says"HOTEL LA PAZ"
boots - 3/4 Wellingtons, dark brown.
pants - on location shots in Peru Heston wore Army Officer's "pinks" these had back pockets w/ flaps, no front pleats, zipper fly The pair worn in studio shots Heston wore custom made pants resembling the "pinks" but with out back pockets. (Edith loved Heston's rear and wanted it "unblemished")
Jacket - made of horse hide - a cross between the A-2 and the G-2 flight jackets. front closes as on the G-2 (no storm flap), shoulder straps of the A-2, side entry pockets as on both but no patch pockets on front. these pockets instead are inset in the front of the jacket. The pocket flaps has exposed snaps. No gussets in back. The squadron emblem on right side was a well worn decal that resembled the US Air Forces Ferry Command. Leather name strip on left side.
White T-shirt
Last edited by Curator Rick on Wed Jul 16, 2008 8:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
How interesting when considering mention of Herbert Johnson's so-called Australian model for Raiders! One of the Fedora Loungers just had a copy of Granger's hat made and several photos are posted.
Thanks much for the info. Edith Head was just fantastic. Anyone else remember her TV appearances (on Merv Griffin as I recall)?
Indy dies, Mutt runs into Harry, they bond, Mutt goes off to war, Harry keeps on diggin'!
Sounds like a nice neat package...
"Mutt goes off to war"? Which one? The Korean ceasefire was signed 4 years before KOTCS. Maybe he gets drafted and sits in a tank in the Fulda Gap for a year or two. Or he joins the Legion, heads off to Algeria.
But Harry turning up as one of Indy's war buddies would be great, though.
This is what Deborah Nadoolman said about this film and the inspiration for Indiana Jones. Of course the whip was not "right there on Charlton Heston in 1954..."
Secret of the Incas (1954) starring Charlton Heston and directed by Jerry Hopper is almost a shot for shot Raiders of the Los Ark. Since both were made by Paramount, and Secret is no longer available on video – I can only guess that Larry Kasdan took that script and updated it for Steven. A great idea. We did watch this film together as a crew several times, and I always thought it strange that the filmmakers did not credit it later as the inspiration for the series. Raiders stands on it’s own as a modern classic, but the fedora jacket and whip are right there on Charlton Heston in 1954. My own work is not diminished by having seen that marvellous film. The spirit of Raiders was also informed by Alan Ladd’s 1940’s film noirs, which also had the same hard boiled adventurer, clad in leather jacket and felt fedora.
I have just seen Secret of the Incas again at the Eastman House in Rochester, and it really helped refresh my memory. Harrison’s Indiana is really a kinder and gentler Harry Steele, Heston’s archaeologist/adventurer. Heston’s fedora is considerably bigger and more unwieldy – compared to the one I designed for Indiana it looks practically like a picture hat!
Even for those who think Raiders the greatest/bestest/most-fabulous Movie Ever Made -- it didn't just come out of nowhere. Nor was Mozart, DW Griffith, and Michelangelo whispering sweet nothings from the afterlife into the ears of Lucas and Spielberg.
YARVTON wrote:Even for those who think Raiders the greatest/bestest/most-fabulous Movie Ever Made -- it didn't just come out of nowhere. Nor was Mozart, DW Griffith, and Michelangelo whispering sweet nothings from the afterlife into the ears of Lucas and Spielberg.