Cheek dimples are often associated with youth and beauty and are seen as an
attractive quality in a person's face, accentuating smiles and making the smile look more cheerful and memorable. Throughout numerous cultures and history, there have been superstitions based on dimples: Chinese culture believes that cheek dimples are a
good luck charm and a proverb (often incorrectly credited to
Pope Paul VI) argues "A dimple in your cheek/Many hearts you'll seek/A dimple in your chin/The devil within". According to
Candy Bites: The Science of Sweets, the dent in
Junior Mints is based on this belief, arguing that a unilateral dimple is more attractive than bilateral.
Richard Steele wrote that a dimpled laugh "is practised to give to the features, and is frequently made a bait to entangle a gazing lover; this was called by the ancients the Chian laugh." "Did you ever see a pretty child's face without dimples in it? Dimples in the cheek – temping dimples – and a dimple in the chin that gave a roguish smartness to the face?" British boxer-turned-Hollywood actor
Reginald Denny had his cheek dimples gushed about in a
Photoplay article, which Professor Michael Williams inferred that "dimples might also provide a humanizing touch" in the handsome Denny who had "dimples in conjunction with the physique of a young Greek god[.]" This has led to artificial attempts to create them: the Ohio-based Dolly Dimpler company advertised in
Photoplay about a device that created dimples in customers' cheeks; in 1936, Isabella Gilbert invented the Dimple Maker, a face-fitting brace which pushed dents into the cheeks to emulate dimples, but it is unknown whether the artificial dimples could last this way (the
American Medical Association argued that frequent users could develop cancer); and from the ‘60s on, people can undergo,
dimple surgery, widely used in the 21st Century.
In fiction The sentiments appear in fiction: authors have described dimples in their characters for centuries to show beauty, especially in women, which has been seen as part of their sex appeal. This is possibly why cheek dimples have been identified with female characters: Anne from
Anne of Green Gables envied other female characters' dimples, whereas
Wives and Daughters featured a paragraph about Molly wondering whether she was beautiful as she looked in her mirror, which was followed by: "She would have been sure if, instead of inspecting herself with such solemnity, she had smiled her own sweet merry smile, and called out the gleam of her teeth, and the charm of her dimples."
Scarlett O'Hara exploited her cheek dimples in
Gone with the Wind when she was flirting to get her own way, to the point where
Rhett is implied to be aware of what she is doing.
Shakespeare often acknowledged cheek dimples, usually on children, such as "the pretty dimples of [the baby boy's] chin and cheek" in ''
The Winter's Tale or the "pretty dimpled boys, like smiling Cupids" from Antony and Cleopatra''; however,
Adonis' in
Venus and Adonis are mentioned from the point of view of the flirting
Venus. There are theories that some of his famous female protagonists had them as well, such as
Juliet Capulet, "
Jessica and
Maria [and]
Rosalind." ==See also==