. Fellow Jazz musician
Charles Mingus memorialized him in "
Goodbye Pork Pie Hat" After the end of World War II the pork pie's broad popularity declined somewhat, though as a result of the
zoot suit connection it continued its association with African American music culture, particularly
jazz,
blues, and
ska. In television between 1951 and 1955,
Art Carney frequently wore one in his characterization of Ed Norton in
The Honeymooners, and in
Puerto Rico the actor
Joaquín Monserrat, known as
Pacheco, was the host of many children's 1950s TV shows and was known for his straw pork pie hat and
bow tie—in this incarnation, the pork pie returned to its Buster Keaton style with rigidly flat brim and extremely low flat crown. In the 1960s in
Jamaica, the "
rude boy" subculture popularized the pork-pie, as well as hats resembling tall trilby styles. Jamaican diaspora brought the pork pie hat back into style in the United Kingdom through the connecting of youth cultures. When migration to the United Kingdom increased following the end of the Second World War and government calls for post-war reconstruction (see
Windrush generation,
British Nationality Act), shared musical and style interests thereby influenced the appearance of garments such as the pork pie hat in the emergent youth
mod and
rave subculture. The porkpie hat enjoyed a slight resurgence in exposure and popularity after
Gene Hackman's character
Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle wore one in the 1971 film
The French Connection. Doyle was based on real-life policeman
Eddie Egan, who played the captain in the film, and his exploits. Egan was famous all his life for wearing a pork pie hat. At about the same time,
Robert De Niro wore a pork pie hat in the 1973 film
Mean Streets (the same hat he wore when he auditioned for the film). Further, the
Two-Tone Ska revival of the 1970s also contributed to the revival of the pork pie hat in youth culture and fashion in the United Kingdom, where black and white tailored garments were coupled with this style of hat, as worn by members of bands
The Specials and
The Selecter, for example. ==Contemporary associations==