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Beau Brummell

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Brummell, engraved from a miniature portrait.
Brummell, engraved from a miniature portrait.

George Bryan Brummell (born June 7,1778, London; died March 30,1840, Caen), better known as Beau Brummell, was an arbiter of fashion in Regency England and a friend of the Prince Regent. He led the trend for men to wear understated but beautifully cut clothes, adorned with elaborately tied neckwear. Brummell is credited with introducing and bringing to fashion the modern man's suit worn with tie. The suit is now worn throughout the world for business and formal occasions.

He claimed to take five hours to dress, and recommended that boots be polished with champagne. His style of dress came to be known as dandyism.

Brummell became an undergraduate at Oriel College, Oxford in 1794. He embarked upon a military career, but abandoned it when he learned that his regiment had been ordered to Manchester.

Dighton's caricature print of Brummell, from 1805.
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Dighton's caricature print of Brummell, from 1805.

A falling-out with the Prince of Wales led to Brummell's downfall; his famous remark "Alvanley, who's your fat friend?" (referring to Prince George, who had snubbed him shortly beforehand) probably didn't help. Brummell fled England in 1816 as the result of thousands of pounds of accumulated debts to tradesmen (his gambling debts, as "debts of honour," were always paid immediately). His friends arranged for him to become British consul at Caen in France, but unfortunately the post was abolished. He died penniless and insane from syphilis in Caen in 1840.

Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly wrote the essay On Dandyism and George Brummell.

Brummell's life was dramatised in an 1890 stageplay by American playwright Clyde Fitch; in a 1954 [film] with Elizabeth Taylor, Stewart Granger in the title role and Peter Ustinov as the Prince Regent; and in a 2006 BBC television drama, Beau Brummell: This Charming Man starring James Purefoy as Brummell, and first broadcast on BBC Four on June 19 2006.

He became, behind only the Prince Regent and the Lady Patronesses of Almack's, the historical character most likely to appear in Regency Romances. He has been made the detective/hero of a series of period mysteries by Rosemary Stevens, including Death on a Silver Tray (2000), The Tainted Snuff Box (2001), The Bloodied Cravat (2002), and Murder in the Pleasure Gardens (2003).

Stephen Sondheim, in [[Gypsy: A Musical Fable|Gypsy]] (1959), used Brummell's name to create a stunning rhyme:

Once my clothes were shabby.
Tailors called me "cabbie."
So I took a vow,
:Said, "This bum'll
:be Beau Brummell."
He is also affectionately remembered by Little Orphan Annie in the Broadway musical Annie (1977). In her reference to his keen fashion sense, "Your clothes may be Beau Brummelly, they stand out a mile ... you're never fully dressed without a smile".

From singer-songwriter Billy Joel's "Glass Houses" album (1980), the listener is told in the hit "It's Still Rock and Roll to Me" that "you could really be a Beau Brummell, baby, if you just give it half a chance".

T. S. Elliot mentioned him in "Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats" (which Andrew Lloyd Webber later made into the hit Broadway musical "Cats") in his poem about Bustopher Jones: "In the whole of St. James's the smartest of names / Is the name of this Brummell of cats."

Further reading

External links

 


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