Reblog: Sherlock Holmes, Style Maven
[As I was migrating posts from the original Baker Street Babble, I took a look at this post from 2019, and I thought it was pretty interesting and worth a reblog. Enjoy!]
As I've been catching up on Elementary, I happened to look at some pictures from earlier seasons of the show. I realized how much Jonny Lee Miller's look has evolved since the earlier days of the show. For example, here is a shot from towards the beginning of the show's run...
Note the rumpled jacket, and the vest with a T-shirt underneath. The vest gives a hint of dressiness to the otherwise Bohemian sloppiness. Now here's a picture from a later season...
This is generally how Miller looks later in the show, a much more tailored, dressy look than earlier. Now, as you may have guessed, I am NOT any sort of style expert...far from it. But I do find the costume design on Elementary particularly fascinating, especially considering that Lucy Liu's wardrobe as Watson has drawn a lot of attention over the past half dozen seasons. An article from The Atlantic describes some of the stylistic history of the character of Sherlock Holmes, with particular emphasis on the costume design of Benedict Cumberbatch's portrayal of Holmes in the BBC's Sherlock. Of course, the look of Cumberbatch's Sherlock is quite different from Miller's. See below...
If we dig back further in the cinematic history of Sherlock Holmes, and take a look at Basil Rathbone, we see the same sort of contemporary look for the time period in which the films came out. I mean, check out the snazzy fedora...
And what's with the funky hairdo in Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon (1943)? Nice modern suit, though (for the 1940s)...
Even when we get Sherlock back into his original setting of Victorian England, the dude is a snappy dresser. Here's Peter Cushing in The Hound of the Baskervilles...
I suppose I would be remiss if I didn't mention the most famous stylistic choice of all time when it comes to Holmes...the deerstalker cap, first seen in one of Sidney Paget's illustrations, but first made popular by stage actor William Gillette.
Yes, Mr. Holmes has always been stylish, regardless of the era in which he appears. I suppose even the sloppy, rumpled Bohemian look of Robert Downey, Jr. has its own "style"...I mean, you just have to love the sunglasses...