Dita Von Teese | Page 254 | the Fashion Spot

Dita Von Teese

LVRJ.com: ‘Strip Strip Hooray’ for burlesque dancer
by Doug Elfman
I rarely get flustered by celebrities, since they’re my job. But every few years, some star rattles my core. This year, that core-rattler is Dita von Teese.

Her face. Her body. Her stage presence. Her voice (it’s womanly, seductive, velvet).

I don’t mean to objectify von Teese, but she is the world’s most famous burlesque dancer and fetish model.

And she’s performing with other dancers through Saturday at the House of Blues in her variety show, “Burlesque: Strip Strip Hooray!”

I just saw her perform amazingly (and mostly nude) a few months ago, about 6 feet in front of my eyes. So I tell her the truth: I can’t believe she’s in her 30s. She looks 20-something.


“I think that comes from my mother. If you see any pictures of my mother, you’ll see she looks very, very young,” von Teese says. “She doesn’t have any wrinkles.”

Von Teese stays in shape with Pilates mostly, plus ballet classes and a little yoga when she’s in the mood.

“The key is to stay active, to keep doing different things. I get bored easily.”

Over the past decade, she has spent about $100,000 perfecting every seven minutes of her stage act.

“That’s what makes me different from a pop star. This is my own money, my own financing. I don’t show up with a sequined outfit that cost a couple of thousand dollars,” she says.

No, she’s talking about $50,000 gowns.

Her clothes collection is insane. She has hundreds of couture shoes. Some were tailored for her by Christian Louboutin.

She has loads of insurance on her fashions, but also on her body.

“I have that same insurance that Betty Grable had – the Lloyds of London (policy, which) insured Betty Grable’s legs and all that kind of business back in the old days.”

She doesn’t hold onto guilty-pleasure clothes.

“I think I have an Adidas tracksuit in baby blue from the early ’90s, but I don’t know where it is.”

About as close as she gets to dressing like most people is on Halloween, when she dresses up as her manager.

“I wear jeans and I go borrow all of her stuff,” she says.

It feels bizarre and uncomfortable.

“I feel like it’s a lot of work putting on jeans, socks, a belt, a shirt. There’s so many pieces to this look, that looks casual. But it’s so much easier to put a dress on, put up the zipper and go.”

When she does the Halloween get-up, she also wears a blond wig. And guess what. As a blonde in jeans, more men approach her.

“I’ve learned it’s true: I am intimidating or unapproachable to men” as a brunette fetish model, she says.

“So I’ve had to force myself to become slightly more sexually aggressive in the past few years, whenever I’m single.”

What I most want to know about von Teese’s dating life: Isn’t it difficult to date men who can’t possibly be as well-dressed as her?

She says there’s some truth to that, but she suggests love and lust overrule fashion.

“I can go on a date with a guy and look at his belt and go, ‘Oh no!’ ” she says and laughs.

“But there’s no substitute for chemistry, whether it’s with a friend or a lover.”

Actually, she prefers friends to wear their own fashions – “who do not dress like me, or wear red lipstick … who don’t need to take on my persona.”

Likewise, she prefers men who don’t dress as if they’re in a 1940s movie.

“I like guys that have their own distinctive style.”

Here’s a funny story.

She once dated an actor. (She won’t name him.) And he was staying in character for an odd movie role, so when he went out with her, he wore his character’s weird outfit.

“I took him to this fetish party. I was all dressed up, like I normally am. And he was in character (for the movie). He had a fringe shirt with a wolf on it, and jeans, and extensions for a mullet.”

Von Teese says other people at the fetish party got confused and angry that she was “all over this guy in a wolf shirt.”

“But I was into him! It didn’t matter what he was wearing,” she says. “We had such sexual chemistry.”


via pocketvenus.com
 
ARTDECO: Dita Von Teese Interview






Dear Dita Von Teese, how and why did you get the idea to develop a makeup collection with ARTDECO?

I have always wanted to have a makeup collection, makeup is such a vital stepping stone to glamour, and it’s something I know a lot about, having worked as a makeup salesgirl for many years, and also since I do my own makeup for all red carpet events, my shows and most photoshoots. ARTDECO approached me and I was thrilled, because they have excellent products and they were willing to let me get very involved in the creation of the colors and textures, and to create things that I think are unique, things I want to use myself, and things that are available at affordable prices.

What do you think is special about the collection?

The lipstick colors are beautiful and unique, I have scoured the world for certain colors I haven’t been able to find, and so I am very proud to have been able to create these unique colors that are vibrant and special versions of brilliant red, orange, magenta, and fuschia tones. Our face powder is also lovely, one of my famous makeup artist friends was marveling at the fine texture, and also loves the rich pigments of our eyeshadows. It’s really thrilling to show these products to a world-class makeup artist and have him ask me how soon he can get some to use on his celebrity clients!



What does makeup means to you in general?

I think that makeup is a wonderful tool to becoming any woman you want to be, it’s something fun and creative, something that allows us to change the way we look without the commitment or danger of surgery. Makeup is the thing that made my idols like Marilyn Monroe, Rita Hayworth, Betty Grable and Marlene Dietrich become true legends. They were all beautiful women, but without makeup, they wouldn’t have achieved that extreme level of glamour that still makes us marvel at their images now. The understanding and mastery of making up your face, putting your best face forward, is something that can turn an ordinary woman into a fascinating one, and I think that even with one of two little things, any woman can be memorable.

When and to which occasions do you wear makeup modestly and when do you wear no makeup?

On an ordinary day, I never leave the house without a dusting of face powder and matte red lipstick. It take mere minutes to do, yet looks polished and elegant, and I never have to worry about who I will run into. I love the splash of vibrant color on my lips, it brightens my day. if I have a little extra time, I curl my lashes and apply mascara and a neutral peach eyeshadow. If I know I will be on the go all day and need to meet a friend for dinner, I will add my signature cat-eyeliner and then put a few makeup items in my handbag to refresh my makeup later. I also have my powder compact, a red lipliner and a red lipstick with me in my handbag, no matter what.

What would you recommend women, who haven’t found their own look yet?

I think that it is important for a woman to experiment and play with makeup to find her signature style, and then she should strive to perfect that perfect style. I can do my signature look in under 10 minutes now that I have practiced it for over 20 years. I really love when I see women that seem to have found their own signature, whether it be vibrant lipcolor or gunmetal-grey eyeliner. I know one woman who is so chic, and she wears this beautiful red toned blush on the apples of her cheeks. I know another who never leaves her house without the perfect angular blue-grey lid. I like it when I see women you have their own signature that becomes her daily ritual that makes her feel good about herself.

What do you expect from good make up products?

I’m very demanding, I like rich pigmented color, I don’t like sheer things that don’t make a grand effect on the skin. I love velvety matte but moisturizing lipsticks, colors with texture that looks like a rose petal, with that velvety look. I like lovely packaging. I never want to pull an ordinary looking powder compact out of my handbag, I love the ritual of applying makeup and I like to feel the beauty of the powder compact in my hand, to surround myself with those little luxuries, like having a brand new lipstick. It’s so simple, but quite satisfying. One other thing I love about my line from ARTDECO is that I can put my favorite eyeshadows, eyebrow powder and blush all in one compact which is easy for glamour on the go.

pocketvenus.wordpress.com
 
Last edited by a moderator:
AOL: You’ve Got… Dita Von Teese
Dita Von Teese discusses her burlesque act and explains why she thinks the art form has enduring popularity. Von Teese began performing in 1992 and penned the book, “Burlesque and the Art of the Teese.” (1:30)

http://www.aol.com/video/youve-got-dita-von-teese/517381446/?icid=maing-grid7|aim|video-module|sec3_lnk1|165033

via pocketvenus.wordpress.com
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Glamour’s Advocate (v. Coachella Sat/Sun 2012)

via pocketvenus.wordpress.com
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Dallas Observer: Q&A with Dita Von Teese
Dita Von Teese cannot be confined to one avenue of employment, while she’s known primarily for bringing back — and glamming up — the arena of burlesque as a whole, she’s also a fetish model, author, actress, creator of a German make-up line, and for the last several years, the cocktail-shaking spokeswoman for Cointreau. We caught up with her at a private party for the company where Dita held court in a poolside cabana. Below her, L.A.’s newest synchronized swim team, the Aqualillies, performed.

Dita doesn’t intend to get wet, it would be detrimental to the fabric of the gossamer-thin, 1930′s bias-cut sheer dress she’s chosen for the evening. It’s a poppy, floral print, accented at the tips of her shoulders by indigo velvet spaghetti straps which are tied into perfect bows. She’s shy, and smiles sweetly without fully raising her eyes. Instead, she tilts her head forward bashfully, revealing a perfect 1940′s tube of jet black hair. She is Dita Von Teese, the most glamorous lady in the world.

Mixmaster: The last time I saw you, you were in a giant martini glass.
DVT: Well, isn’t that a surprise?

I believe that initially your career began with posing in corsets, but what was your first paid gig?
I started working at a strip club when I was 19 or 20, so that’s where I began developing my show and learning about the history of strip tease. And even before that I was working in the LA underground scene as a go-go dancer and performance artist, so there were a lot of things that led up to what I do today. They started as little feather and fan dances in strip clubs and nightclubs and eventually led up to what they are now. It was never overnight, (snaps!) “I just did an amazing burlesque show!”

Did you have any heroines who you dug deepest into? Women you loved to research and look to most for direction?
When I first started performing burlesque, there was no internet so I really couldn’t draw from video clips, or even that much photo-wise. A lot of my inspiration came from vintage men’s magazines, where a lot of burlesque dancers would pose to endorse their books. I’d read about Gypsy Rose Lee, Sally Rand and I would just imagine how it was done in my head. That’s one of the factors of why I’m successful, I think: I didn’t have anyone to copy.


Photo by Drew Gaines
To me the most important thing is not focusing on what other people think is sexy; that’s a failure. When a woman is sexy onstage or off, it has a lot more to do with her own pleasure and sense of fun and playfulness, and for me that’s what’s always been the base of performing — that I’m having fun and there’s humor infused into it.

You’re very soft spoken for a gal who can hop in a giant martini glass and light up a room. Do you use burlesque as an outlet to celebrate your less-introverted, sexy side?
When I think about the early years when I started — playing with make-up and wearing eccentric clothes and developing a look that was different than what I was born with, a lot of that was to counteract my shyness. Now I’m grown up and I’m not an exhibitionist, that’s not why I do strip tease. For me it’s a way to act on things that I’m obsessed and fascinated with, not a way for me to act out. You’ll never see me dancing on a table in my personal life. Even my hemlines have to stay below the knee if I’m not performing.

You did a show for the New York Academy of Art where you only wore diamonds. Five million dollars worth. Was that the most glamorous you’ve ever felt?
I think it was more than five million! It was cool, it reminded me of those old stories of courtesans and burlesque dancers who would wear all of these jewels on stage surrounded by body guards, (even though a lot of times their jewels weren’t real). They came to my hotel with suitcases full of diamonds; it quickly became my goal to see how many of these I could wear at once!

Hold up, were they loose diamonds? Were you eyelash glueing them on?
No, there was a tiara. Broaches and jewelry sewn onto my g-string, there were pasties that were made and lots of bangle bracelets and earrings. But it was funny, whenever I’d have to go to the bathroom or something, I’d have all of these bodyguards trailing me.

Do you have any beauty tips for gals? Quick things that make you feel extra gorgeous?
I think my best beauty tip is that you can do anything you want if you set your mind to it. Discover what your signature make-up or hair look is, then refine it and perfect it until you can do it quickly and easily.

Damn it, Dita! We wanted magic and a quick fix.
I’m sorry! It takes devotion and work.

You’re known as one of the most beautiful ladies in the world, you must get hit on all of the time. What’s the worst way you’ve been approached?
Well, I don’t really get hit on all that much. Apparently I have an unapproachable look to a lot of men. I’ve discovered that I have to make first moves more than anything.

Dita, if a girl like you can’t get it done then there’s no hope for the rest of us. So you don’t have slobbery, drooley men constantly trying to paw at you?
What I get are the guys who are usually the drunkest, think they’re the most suave or approach me on a dare. And I delight in the sport of shooting them down.

How do you shoot them down? What’s your favorite way to dodge an advance?
My favorite way is pretending I don’t speak English.

Dita is currently revamping and redefining her new production, Strip Strip Hooray. When every last glittery element is perfect, Dallas will get another peek at Ms. Von Teese. Until that day comes, you’ll just have to use your imagination.

via pocketvenus.wordpress.com
 
Beaut.ie: Perfect the Pin Up Look with the Dita Von Teese Classics Collection from ARTDECO
ARTDECO’s latest collection is a genius collaboration with burlesque beauty Dita Von Teese. The perfectly painted pin-up – known to insist on doing her own make up – has forged a career from being the modern face of old Hollywood glamour. The pin up look is a classic for a reason, and this new collection allows all of us to channel this sexy retro style.


No one rocks a bold lip quite like Dita, so it’s no surprise that the lip products are the stars of this collection. Six shades of Art Couture Velvet lipstick are on offer, along with three lip liners and a glossy red lip lacquer.

Fans of a sheer wash of colour should look away now – these are incredibly pigmented with a velvety texture and strong, vibrant colours, from orange to magenta, fuchsia and several stunning shades of red. €19.25 is the damage for a lipstick, €11.05 for the liners and the lip lacquer is €16.70. The prices are decent considering the quality, and the black pinstriped casing is the icing on the cake.

The high definition pressed powder is a lovely piece of kit that should go down well with paler skinned Celtic complexions. It’s not cheap at €31.75, but a pale, matte complexion is key to the pin up look and this pretty compact should help to achieve

Eyes are catered for with a selection of soft, neutral shadows, €6.75, that range from mattes to sheers to subtle shimmers. Buttery soft and easy to work with, they’re housed in a pretty magnetic palette that can also house blush – four shades are available here, in very pale shades of pink. They’re €10.85. Two sets of lashes, €16.70, a mascara (price as yet unknown) and a Dita gel liner, €21.50, are also available.

This isn’t one of those hollow celebrity ‘collaborations-in-name-only’, either. If her recent tweets are anything to go by, Ms Von Teese seems incredibly proud of this collection, and no wonder – like Dita herself, I reckon it’s a modern classic with timeless appeal.

via pocketvenus.wordpress.com
 
Last edited by a moderator:
LittleMsSunshine, thank you for great posts :flower:

I hope her ArtDeco collection will soon be available in Central Europe. I'd love to try gel eyeliner and nailpolish.
Besides, I agree with the review, she is co consequent in everything she does, even in advertising products.
 
LittleMsSunshine, thank you for great posts :flower:

I hope her ArtDeco collection will soon be available in Central Europe. I'd love to try gel eyeliner and nailpolish.
Besides, I agree with the review, she is co consequent in everything she does, even in advertising products.

Actually, it's now available not only in Germany,but even in Poland! I'm going shopping today :D
 
Dita Von Teese (...) attends the Schiaparelli and Prada: Impossible Conversations event held at the Beverly Hills Hotel on Tuesday (June 12) in Beverly Hills, Calif.

The party celebrated the Costume Institute bringing its latest exhibition to Los Angeles.

It first opened at NYC’s Metropolitan Museum of Art during the 2012 Met Ball last month.

(...)

Dita paired her Herve L. Leroux dress with Chanel earrings, a Christian Louboutin bag and shoes, and a vintage bracelet.


dita-von-teese-rose-mcgowan-impossible-conversations-02.JPG


dita-von-teese-rose-mcgowan-impossible-conversations-03.JPG

justjared.buzznet.com
 
Dita Von Teese hologram at Christian Louboutin launch

source youtube.com, uploaded by theverysimong

Also here is the making OF video

source Youtube.com, uploaded by TheCooltureOfficial
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Dita Von Teese talks to Kate Shapland about her fragrance

source youtube.com, uploaded by Kate Shapland
 

Users who are viewing this thread

New Posts

Forum Statistics

Threads
215,717
Messages
15,313,023
Members
89,729
Latest member
Anonyme13579
Back
Top