Jack Nicholson Stomped On The Laws Of Sunglasses
24.06.2022 - 20:39
/ msn.com
Style Archive: a series in which we celebrate the stars of the past that made menswear what it is today. This week: the flagrant disregard of eyewear etiquette from Jack Nicholson. 'Sunglasses At Night', a little-known 1984 single from one-hit blunder Corey Hart, hasn't aged well.
One shouldn't wear their sunglasses at night. Or anywhere dark. Nor should music videos, as Hart's bizarrely does, depict the Western world as a futuristic dystopia in which anyone sans shades enjoys incarceration by decree of a Linda Farrow-esque monocrat.
Look, the Eighties saw a lot of cocaine. © Ron Galella Jack Nicholson at the Carlyle Hotel, New York (1985) Jack Nicholson wouldn't fall foul of such an authoritarian world, though. And to him, all the rules regarding sunglasses - whether fictional or otherwise - are to be broken.
For the Oscar-winner has stoked an ever-blazing bonfire of deregulation since the late Seventies; a stylish iconoclast that, arguably, has made his big transgression his Big Thing. Allow us to explain. Pre-Instagram, when the distance between celebrities and the great unwashed was of some distance, the reverence turned acute.
Famous names weren't just famous. They were stars, and thus able to do things us normal folk weren't, like wear sunglasses in settings it was once deemed impolite to do so. Nicholson, at the height of Hollywood, enjoyed carte blanche to don shades to any invite he saw fit.
The One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest star picked up 'Best Actor' for that very film in a pair of black-out aviators. He wore Wayfarers to suppers with then-girlfriend Anjelica Huston. There were slimmed down visors to accompany Warren Beatty at the boxing ring.