Gerry Anderson Fashions
The
death this week of Gerry Anderson has sparked an outpouring of nostalgia from
those brought up on his TV programmes in the 1960s and 1970s - Stingray,
Thunderbirds, Captain Scarlet, UFO, Space 1999 etc. And yes this is partly a
nostalgia for the future that never happened, the thrilling world of space
travel, underwater exploration and mass luxurious leisure that children in that
period were told would be their birthright in Tomorrow's World by the end of the
20th century. I won't labour the point - Simon Reynolds has after all written a
whole book about Retromania - but not only has that future not materialised but
the whole belief in the future expansion of human possibilities is often
dismissed as a mere retro fixation. The Association of Autonomous
Astronauts (1995-2000) was partly an attempt by some of the
children of the Gerry Anderson generation to carry forward that hope -
inevitably we called our 1999 conference in London 'Space 1999: ten days that
shook the universe'.
Never
mind the lack of personal jetpacks, one of the many disappointments of living in
the actually existing 21st century is that the futuristic clothes in Gerry
Anderson's shows haven't really caught on. There was a period in the techno
mid-1990s when interesting fabrics and unisex clothing took off, with
labels/shops like Vexed Generation in Soho. But for now looking like you crawled
out of an early 1970s album cover seems to be enough for the average hipster -
though to be fair is that any more retro than desiring to look like you crawled
out of an early 1970s TV show about the future?
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| UFO (1969-70) |
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| UFO (1969-70) |
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| Space 1999 (1973-76) |

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| Space 1999 (1973-76) |
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| Destiny Angel from Captain Scarlet (1967) |
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| Thunderbirds (1964-66) |
Well at least Britney Spears had a go at channelling Thunderbirds as a space age air hostess in the Toxic video:






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