in a leather jacket at the 2010
World Economic Forum In the latter half of the 20th century, the leather jacket—in many forms—achieved iconic status and general acceptance through an inextricable link to
Hollywood. Such jackets were popularized by numerous stars in the 1940s and 1950s, including actor
Jimmy Stewart (who had actually commanded a U.S.
bomber squadron during
World War II) in the film
Night Passage (1957). The brown leather jacket has become a
de rigueur part of the wardrobe for the Hollywood adventurer, from
Gary Cooper in
For Whom the Bell Tolls to
Harrison Ford in the
Indiana Jones film series. A leather jacket could be used to shape a character, providing an important ingredient used to define the very essence of '
cool'. Prime examples include the
Perfecto motorcycle jacket worn by
Marlon Brando's
Johnny Strabler in
The Wild One (1953),
Honor Blackman as
Cathy Gale on
The Avengers,
David Hasselhoff as
Michael Knight in
Knight Rider and
Michael Pare in
Eddie and the Cruisers duo (1983 and 1989). All these served to popularize leather jackets among American youth from the
"greaser subculture" of the 1950s and early 1960s. Later depictions of this subculture feature via
The Fonz from the television series
Happy Days, produced in the 1970s and 1980s, but set in the 1950s and 1960s (Fonzie's leather jacket is now housed in the
Smithsonian Institution), and in the films
Eddie and the Cruisers and
Grease. Flight jackets, also (occasionally with
fleece collars, as seen in the film
Top Gun (1986), have remained fashionable for decades. In the 1990s, a variety of leather jacket patterned after an
eight ball, referred to as an
eight-ball jacket, was briefly trendy. It occasionally resurfaces as a retro fashion item. ==Popular culture==