• The bowler hat was famously used by actors such as
Charlie Chaplin,
Laurel and Hardy,
Shemp Howard and
Curly Howard; and by the fictional character
John Steed of
The Avengers, played by
Patrick Macnee, who wore a variety of bowler hats throughout the series. In the 1964 film
Mary Poppins, set in
Edwardian London, 1910, the London banker George Banks (played by
David Tomlinson) wears a bowler. • logo (pictured in 2009) outside a branch in Manchester, England The British bank
Bradford & Bingley owns more than 100 separate trademarks featuring the bowler hat, its long-running
logo. In 1995, the bank purchased, for £2000, a bowler hat which had once belonged to
Stan Laurel. • There was a chain of restaurants in
Los Angeles, California known as
The Brown Derby. The first and most famous of these was shaped like a derby. • Many paintings by the Belgian surrealist artist
René Magritte feature bowler hats.
The Son of Man consists of a man in a bowler hat standing in front of a wall. The man's face is largely obscured by a
hovering green
apple.
Golconda depicts "raining men" all wearing bowler hats. • Choreographer
Bob Fosse frequently incorporated bowler hats into his dance routines. This use of hats as props, as seen in the 1972 movie
Cabaret, would become one of his trademarks. • In the 2007
Disney animated film Meet the Robinsons, the main antagonist is known as the Bowler Hat Guy, played by director
Stephen Anderson. • In
The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle and Friends cartoon series, the legendary "Kerwood Derby" was worn by such world conquerors as
Alexander the Great and
Elvis Presley (a play on the name of then popular TV personality
Durward Kirby). • In the mid-1960s
Batman TV series, the
Penguin's band of "fine feathered finks" usually wear derby hats. • There is a giant bowler hat along
I-30 in south
Dallas, Texas. •
Charlie Chaplin wore a bowler hat to his
morning dress as part of his '
Little Tramp' costume. •
Bing Crosby wears a bowler hat in the 1946 film
Road to Utopia, among others. •
Oddjob,
Auric Goldfinger's manservant, uses his razor-edged bowler hat as a weapon in the 1964
James Bond movie
Goldfinger. •
John D. Rockerduck possesses the distinctive character trait of eating his bowler hat whenever he is defeated by
Scrooge McDuck. •
J. Wellington Wimpy wears a bowler hat. • Notable comic book characters who wear bowler hats include
Timothy "Dum Dum" Dugan (
Marvel Comics),
Thomson and Thompson and
Professor Calculus from
The Adventures of Tintin series, and the
Riddler (
DC Comics). • Doctor King Schultz and "Butch" Pooch wear wide Derby-variant bowler hats in
Django Unchained. •
Matthew "Stymie" Beard from the
Little Rascals was always seen with a bowler hat. It was a gift from Stan Laurel. •
Ub Iwerks character
Horace Horsecollar is seen wearing an orange bowler hat complementing his outfit with an orange
horse collar. File:Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy - 1938.jpg|
Laurel and Hardy, 1938.
Stan Laurel took his standard comic devices from the British
music hall: the bowler hat, the deep comic gravity, and nonsensical understatement. File:Lego Store Leicester Square London Lester 2.jpg|
Lego of a classic London banker (with bowler and umbrella) at the Lego store in
Leicester Square, London File:Giant Bowler Hat.png|Giant bowler hat as roadside art in south Dallas, Texas File:Malcolm McDowell Clockwork Orange.png|
Alex DeLarge in the dystopian film
A Clockwork Orange (1971) ==List of wearers==