, 1957 Coach
Tom Landry wore the hat while he was the head coach of the
Dallas Cowboys (1960 to 1988). It would later become his trademark image. A
cenotaph dedicated to Landry with a depiction of his fedora was placed in the official
Texas State Cemetery in
Austin at the family's request. In addition the Cowboys wore a patch on their uniforms during the 2000 season depicting Landry's fedora. His panel in the Cowboys "Ring of Honor" features a depiction of a fedora where a uniform number is shown for players.
Indiana Jones re-popularized the fedora in the
Indiana Jones franchise. The backstory of how he obtains the hat is told in the prologue of
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, the third film of the series, and the character who gives him the hat is credited as "Fedora". The character
Freddy Krueger, from the
Nightmare on Elm Street franchise, also wears a brown fedora. The fedora hat of the ninth president of Turkey,
Süleyman Demirel, was a famous part of the president's image. Ice hockey coaches often wore one, most notably coaches
Punch Imlach,
Toe Blake,
Billy Reay, and
Murray Armstrong. In the 21st century, the fedora has made a reappearance in the fashion world along with other types of classic hats such as the porkpie and the homburg. In addition, the fedora has appeared in recent portrayals of movies and television shows that are set in the past, such as
Mad Men (2007–15),
Shutter Island (2010), and
Boardwalk Empire (2010–14).
Michael Jackson also frequently wore a fedora while performing on stage. By the early 21st century, the fedora had become a symbol of
hipsters.
Vice has referred to the early 2000s as a "fedora
renaissance", with celebrities like
Johnny Depp and
Peter Doherty wearing the hat. '' The fedora was worn by film actors such as
Edward G. Robinson,
George Raft and
Humphrey Bogart. The fedora was a characteristic of
film noir and has been the chosen accessory of movie detectives and criminals alike. It was worn by Bogart as Sam Spade in
The Maltese Falcon (1941) and Philip Marlowe in
The Big Sleep (1946). Peter Eliopoulos wrote in
The 1930s: The Reality and the Promise: "The popular Bogart-styled fedora was worn slightly cocked, it was pulled down just above the eye line, so that the wearer peeked beneath the brim and through the cigarette smoke that gathered momentarily before curling itself around the top of the hat."
Billy Wilder wrote and directed the film
Fedora (1978), which takes its title from the female lead character played by
Marthe Keller. In addition, fedoras are a strong theme throughout the picture. Most of Wilder's films feature fedoras prominently in promotional materials as well as in the finished films.
Gangsters and jazz by the
Bureau of Investigation in 1929 Fedoras were much associated with
gangsters during
Prohibition era in the United States, a connection coinciding with the height of the hat's popularity between the 1920s and the early 1950s.
Michael Jackson American singer-songwriter
Michael Jackson wore fedoras during his iconic performances including
Billie Jean, "
Smooth Criminal", "
Dangerous" and "
You Rock My World". Moreover, he wore fedoras during his public appearances for
fashion aesthetics and covering of his
scalded head as a result of combined effects of
lupus and the
Pepsi incident in 1984. The fedora quickly became his style in the global outreach and people still attribute the hat to him worldwide.
TV Tom Baker wore a fedora when playing the
Fourth Doctor in the
science fiction series
Doctor Who. == In religious communities ==