|
|||
Images from Hollywood-Maxwell advertisement, 1955: courtesy Orange County Archives |
|||
As you walk up the right side of Main Street, your destination is the store right after Grandma’s Baby Shop. Across the entire width of the ornate, pale yellow storefront, a sign reads, “Intimate Apparel, Brassieres, Torsolettes.” |
|||
Photographer unknown, 1955: courtesy Orange County Archives |
|||
Even if you don’t feel a need to purchase a corset or bra while visiting the park, walk up the three steps onto the front porch, open the door, and enter the Victorian splendor of the Intimate Apparel Shop, presented by the Hollywood-Maxwell Brassiere Co. of Los Angeles. |
|||
|
|||
This is your opportunity to learn the history of underwear. Your host is the Wonderful Wizard of Bras. From his revolving stage, the Wonderful Wizard speaks to you through the marvel of tape recorder technology. Don’t miss the authentic Singer Sewing Machine from around 1860—it’s a “most unusual and unique part of the display,” according to advance publicity. And remember to look into all the 3-D boxes to see outer and intimate apparel of the past. As you slowly move your head, you’ll see the models’ turn-of-the-century attire disappear to reveal their corsets and pantaloons. Hollywood-Maxwell’s Intimate Apparel Shop is not just about the Victorian past. In fact, half the store is devoted to the latest bras and petticoats of 1955. |
|||
|
|||
Yes, when Disneyland opened in 1955, there really was an Intimate Apparel Shop, and it really featured the Wizard of Bras. But the Wizard didn’t look like the artwork at the top of this page. That artwork was from a Hollywood-Maxwell ad in a July 15, 1955, newspaper supplement for Disneyland in various Southern California papers, including the Santa Ana Register and the Long Beach Press-Telegram. In addition to ads, the supplement had articles about Disneyland—but the articles were publicity pieces that were essentially advertising too. One article included a rare photo of the Wonderful Wizard of Bras. |
|||
courtesy Orange County Archives |
|||
Here’s an entire article from the same supplement: |
|||
ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO THE SANTA ANA REGISTER — JULY 15, 1955 © 1955 Disneyland, Inc. |
|||
Back in 1955 and 1956, Disneyland had its own monthly newspaper, The Disneyland News. If Main Street, U.S.A. represented a small American town, it was only fitting to have a small-town newspaper. |
|||
© 1955 Disneyland, Inc. |
|||
The September 1955 issue of The Disneyland News included a human interest story about Hollywood-Maxwell’s Intimate Apparel Shop on Main Street. Here’s the entire short article for your enjoyment: |
|||
THE DISNEYLAND NEWS - SEPTEMBER 1955 © 1955 Disneyland, Inc. |
|||
The Intimate Apparel Shop didn’t last long. In January 1956, just a half year after it opened, it closed. The Glass and China Shop next door expanded and absorbed the Intimate Apparel Shop space. At least the Intimate Apparel Shop outlasted Grandma’s Baby Shop. Grandma departed before summer 1955 had ended. The Silhouette Studio moved in, and it’s still there today. In 1958, the Hollywood-Maxwell Company of California combined with the Vassar Company of Chicago, a part of Munsingwear. The result was the Hollywood Vassarette Intimate Apparel Division. At one time, Munsingwear was America’s underwear giant. Today, the Munsingwear brand is marketed by PremiumWear, Inc., and is best known for knit golf shirts with the penguin logo. PremiumWear, Inc. also markets Jockey brand underwear. The Vassarette brand is still around. It’s now a part of Vanity Fair Brands, LP. |
|||
Photo by Marion Caswell, 1975, courtesy Dennis Caswell |
|||
The Hollywood-Maxwell brand is history, but the storefront that once d Disneyland’s Intimate Apparel Shop is still part of Main Street, U.S.A. |
|||
Photo by Werner Weiss, 2007 |
|||
After the removal of the big China Closet sign, the storefront looked better than ever. There’s a good explanation for the raised porch and the white balcony railing above it. In the story of Main Street, U.S.A., this had once been a handsome residential house. As downtown grew, new commercial buildings were built on either side. Somehow, the old house was never demolished and replaced. |
|||
Photo by Werner Weiss, 2013 |
|||
Since April 2009, it’s been Fargo’s Palm Parlor. At least that’s what the sign says. The door is locked. The store is still part of the China Closet. Who the heck is Fargo, and why is there now a prominent sign for an occult business on Main Street? Fargo, it turns out, is Roland Fargo Crump, better known as Rolly Crump. |
|||
Photo by Werner Weiss, 2013 |
|||
A modified balcony railing allows you to see an elaborate window honoring Crump. It provides clues to some of his many contributions to Disneyland, especially his work on the Museum of the Weird (never built), Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room, “it’s a small world”, and the Haunted Mansion.
Fargo’s Palm Parlor No, the sign painter did not misspell bizarre. “Bazaar” refers to the Crump’s redesign of the Adventureland Bazaar. But as weird as many of Crump’s designs were, nothing is quite as weird as the idea of a bra and corset store in Disneyland featuring the history of underwear with the Wizard of Bras. |
|||
Click here to post comments at MiceChat about this article. © 2008-2021 Werner Weiss — Disclaimers, Copyright, and Trademarks Updated March 5, 2021 |