Posted on 01/13/2009 2:49:11 AM PST by Daffynition
In case you have been in a hole the last few years, stylish men have cast aside razors for electric clippers and taken to styling their face and body hair aka manscaping with a zeal not seen since Edward Scissorhands. The beard, that onetime symbol of rural cluelessness, has become a badge of urban hipsterdom. This has grown to include a spectrum of variations, from a weeks slackerly growth to a handsome Czar Nicholas II beard to a full-blown Rutherford B. Hayes thicket.
But its upstairs neighbor, the mustache, has had a bumpier ride. It, like the beard, enjoyed its most widespread popularity between 1850 and 1900; John Wilkes Booth, it must be conceded, had a beaut. But today, the mustache cannot shake its ties to the sexy-yet-buffoonish machismo of the mid-1970s, epitomized by Burt Reynolds, Sam Elliott and the Village People, stache sporters all.
Lately, though, there are signs that the mustache is at long last shaking off the most unsavory of those associations. Exhibit A is, of course, Brad Pitt, who grew one just before the filming of Quentin Tarantinos new World War II film, Inglourious Basterds, and flaunted it for the paparazzi over the holidays. Emanuel Millar, the head of the films hair department, said he was surprised when Pitt showed up to shoot avec mustache and insisted on keeping it despite the fact that it was not true to the period. Exhibit B is, of course, the Milk Mustache that is, the one worn by the scene-stealing James Franco, playing Sean Penns long-suffering and dreamy boyfriend in Milk. While Penns performance is the most talked-about aspect of the film, Francos mustache has elicited plenty of admiration on its own.
Exhibit C is Jason Giambi, the Yankees first baseman whose summer comeback coincided with his sprouting a particularly fine-looking mustache, prompting many to recall the 1972 World Series, when a handlebar-wearing Rollie Fingers and the Oakland As took on the clean-shaven Cincinnati Reds in the Hairs vs. the Squares.
Despite these fetching examples, the fate of the mustache is uncertain. Unlike the beard, it still carries plenty of baggage, skewing either too old-school gay (see Milk) or too old-school straight (see John R. Bolton).
No one knows that fact better than the men who have grown one. Douglas Friedman, 36, a photographer, has endured many a jab since he grew a porn-star stache, as the basic mustache is now widely known, on a whim 10 years ago. I get a lot of good-natured ribbing, but its usually derogatory, he said. Once he was asked for a photo of himself for the contributors page of a major fashion magazine, only to have it dropped without explanation. Later, he found out why: the magazines editor hates mustaches.
Other editors are only too happy to use the image and all it implies.
Dov Charney, 39, the often controversial chief executive of American Apparel, known for its provocative ads, grew a 70s-style mustache in 2004.
I had it for seven months eight months max, Charney said. But over the next three years, whenever newspapers, magazines or bloggers ran stories about him, even after a photographer had come to take a current picture, most ended up using an old, mustached picture.
People were really attached to that image, he said. In both positive articles, where they wanted to portray me as this sex-positive playboy, as well as the ones where they wanted to demonize me.
Comedic effect
The problem is, the men who look good in a mustache are vastly outnumbered by those using it for comedic effect (See Anchorman and Borat). Jason Lee does an admirable job straddling the fence as the star of the television series My Name Is Earl. Though his mustache looks good on him, in a 76 Camaro kind of way, it also reads as an albatross of sorts - a token of his characters lowlife nature for which he is forever making amends. You have to wonder if his mustache will magically fall off on the last episode.
Even the pro-mustache Movember movement is a double-edged razor. Originating in Australia in 2004, Movember challenges men to grow mustaches for the month of November to raise money for mens health charities; an estimated 200,000 men worldwide participated in 2008. It brings the mustache back every fall, only to kill it off a few weeks later.
James Austin, 37, a currency salesman with a U.S. bank in London, participated with 12 colleagues and, by the end of the month, was torn about shaving. It actually suits a lot of people, Austin said. Theres one guy in particular who doesnt have much of a top lip, so he looks better.
There was little hope that his own would last, though. My wife put the kibosh on that, he said.
Brandon Roberts, 28, a hotel executive assistant in New York, grew a mustache after seeing the re-release of Cruising two years ago, only to realize that, happily, he was now the spitting image of his father in the 1970s. I think its easier to pull off a beard, he said. Having a mustache takes a certain something. You have to have it and own it and pull it off.
Others take that notion a step further, likening the mustache to womens re-embrace of overtly sexual tokens like stilettos and push-up bras. In 2006, irked that the new popularity of the beard had left the mustache eating dust, Jay Della Valle, 28, persuaded nine 20-something men to grow mustaches and document the experience in a film, The Glorius Mustache Challenge. (It was released on DVD last year.) He now hosts mustache parties and events like Movember and the Stache Bash in St. Louis. Like some cross between Robert Bly and Elmer Gantry, he kicks these off with an evangelical ceremony, invoking the transfiguring masculine power of the mustache.
You got to wear it with this attitude, Della Valle said. Your mustache is always there, saying, Yeah, I have a mustache, so bring it on. If you have a sense of humility connected to your mustache, it doesnt look as good as it should.
But for all its reclaimed machismo, he added, The bottom line is this: The best response to the question, Why the mustache? is, because its fun.
In other words, why should you grow a mustache? Because its not there.
shoulda told him to keep the fuzz and taken the girl :)
Me too. Just shaved the beard after a few years and left only the mustache. I’ve had that for about 25 years. Shaved it once just after I got married and my wife said I looked to dorky without it.
Totally shaved the head a few months ago too. Kind of cold this winter though.
Same here - I’ve had facial hair for most of my adult life (usually a moustache in the late spring/summer and a beard in the colder months). It’s a Northern Thing. Keeps the Arctic blasts off your face rather effectively.
Groan! Which comedy club are you doing your routine at again? LOL!
ping

Decided to try it out once several years ago -- wife likes it. Says it makes me look "edgy". I don't know -- I just don't care for the baby-faced excessively-groomed metrosexual look.
SnakeDoc

There exists a fine line between looking like a man, and looking like a shipwrecked man.
SnakeDoc
Eeeuuuwww. That’s not appealing.
My comment got removed. I tried to make it as family friendly as possible! OOPS!
I miss Baggy!!!!
I miss Biggio!!!
No kidding. It’ll be nice to see them get their tickets to Cooperstown in a few years, though.
SnakeDoc
I am a sucker for a man with a beard. I think you should grow one, even red beards are sexy. My husband can’t grow one because of his job but he has promised when he’s 60 he’ll grow me a beard. {-( that is a really long, long time from now.
The one I can’t figure out are the dudes that shave their heads but have the massive chin merkin.
Here in ski country my “Ambrose Burnsides” keep the area between my collar and goggles warm.....
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