with a split variant (exposing the
philtrum) By the end of World War II, the toothbrush moustache had fallen out of fashion due to its strong association with Hitler, U.S. and
Chile intelligence documented a number of
Nazi émigrés with the style in South America in the decade after the war. It was donned by
several politicians of
Israel (
formed as a state in 1948), some for much of their careers. Hitler's dentist,
Hugo Blaschke (), wore a similar style, displaying an explicit toothbrush later in life. Armenian Soviet official
Anastas Mikoyan upkept a similar style as late as
1962. French railway worker
Jean-Marie Loret () donned a toothbrush to publicize his claim of being Hitler's son (since disproven). After the war, German artist
Otto Dix finished his 1933 satirical painting of the
seven deadly sins by adding a Hitleresque split toothbrush to a mask worn by
Envy. The moustache was utilized in popular cartoons, e.g.
Harry Hanan's
pantomime comic Louie (1947), which narrates the everyday trials of a domestic loser. It is worn by the father of the titular character of the British comic
Dennis the Menace (1951). The moustache also appears in the
Warner Bros. cartoons
Symphony in Slang (1951; dir. Tex Avery) and
The Hole Idea (1955). It appears on a puppet in the 1958 Japanese animated film
The White Snake Enchantress (which also features the toothbrush area–omitting
Fu Manchu). Caricatures resembling outgrown
nasal hair appear in
Rocky and Bullwinkle (1959–1964),
Osamu Tezuka's
Astro Boy (), and
The Pink Panther (1964–1980). The early 1960s American animated sitcom
The Jetsons features a character with the moustache—
George Jetson's boss,
Cosmo Spacely. It was worn by
Spider-Man character
J. Jonah Jameson, created by writer
Stan Lee and artist
Steve Ditko. The style appears in the animated films
The Rescuers (1977) and
Twice Upon a Time (1983), on an antagonist and a Chaplinesque character, respectively. In a
2002 episode of
South Park, a sleeping character is given the style as a prank. The 21st-century graphic memoir
The Arab of the Future depicts a toothbrush being worn in the 1980s. In musical photography, the toothbrush appears (outside of France) on the cover of French composer
Michel Legrand's debut album,
I Love Paris (1954). American comedian
Ray Goulding is caricatured with one on the cover of
Bob and Ray's 1958 album,
A Stereo Spectacular. In 1967, after omitting Hitler from
the cover of ''
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, the Beatles caricatured the style in the Magical Mystery Tour'' sleeve.
John Entwistle, bassist for English band
the Who, wore a split moustache omitting the toothbrush area . In 1970,
Keith Moon, drummer for the Who, donned the toothbrush for a
sardonic photo shoot as a Nazi officer (with musician
Vivian Stanshall). Around this time, violinist
Papa John Creach wore a similar—but less steep—moustache.
Roy Loney, of American rock band
Flamin' Groovies, flaunted a toothbrush on the cover of a 1971 live album. Inspired by Chaplin, keyboardist
Ron Mael of American band
Sparks wore a toothbrush; the band gained attention in 1974 with "
This Town Ain't Big Enough for Both of Us", featured on British music television series
Top of the Pops. While watching this,
John Lennon reputedly phoned his former Beatles bandmate
Ringo Starr and said he was watching Hitler perform (with
the lead singer of
T. Rex, to boot). The cover of
the 1974 debut album by American art-rock band
the Residents features a graffitied version of
Meet the Beatles! with a toothbrush-moustachioed Lennon. The inner artwork for
Billy Joel's
Songs in the Attic (1981) spoofs the toothbrush, which can also be found on the cover of
The Best of Talking Heads (2004). In live-action motion pictures, Soviet actor
Yevgeny Morgunov wore a toothbrush in the 1967 comedy film
Kidnapping, Caucasian Style. The live-action British sitcom
On the Buses (1969–1973) features a comedic villain with it, while the British sketch comedy series ''
Monty Python's Flying Circus'' (1969–1974) invoked it on occasion, most notably on a lunatic class of characters known as
Gumbys, who shout stupid phrases and commonly clap bricks; a version appears in 2014's
Monty Python Live (Mostly), and in October 2019 (Python's 50th anniversary), a
world record was attempted in London for the most people dressed as Gumbys. The 1979 Italian film
The Humanoid features an apparent
Darth Vader rip-off with a blocky shadow in the toothbrush region. Amongst other spoofs of Hitler in his work, American Jewish comedian
Mel Brooks donned the moustache (as Hitler) in the 1983
music video for "
The Hitler Rap".
Michael McKean's character briefly wears it in the American mockumentary
This Is Spinal Tap (1984). Between 1985 and 1989, the British children's television drama series
Grange Hill featured an authoritarian teacher played by
Michael Sheard (who also portrayed Hitler in several productions) with a toothbrush. In
Léon: The Professional (1994),
Natalie Portman wears the style via face paint to mimick Charlie Chaplin.
A villainous character in
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2000) and its
film adaptation wears the moustache. It appears on a mad
school principal in the animated series
Whatever Happened to... Robot Jones?. In
Mike Judge's 2006 comedy film
Idiocracy, the society of a greatly
dumbed-down future believes that Chaplin, not Hitler, led the Nazis. In 2009, English comedian
Richard Herring wore the toothbrush for a weeklong stand-up show in an attempt to "reclaim the toothbrush moustache for comedy [because] it was Chaplin's first, then Hitler ruined it". along with a
soul patch. This prompted Jordan's friend
Charles Barkley to say, "I don't know what the hell he was thinking and I don't know what Hanes was thinking. I mean it is just stupid. It is just bad, plain and simple." The moustache and Jordan's use of it are referenced in a 2015
Key & Peele sketch. In the Australian comedy series
Danger 5 (2012–2015), the titular spies wear a patch with a moustachioed skull during their postwar pursuit of Hitler. A silhouette of the style appears on posters for Hitler-related films such as ''
Look Who's Back (2015) and The Last Laugh (2016), as well as the History Channel investigative series Hunting Hitler (2015–2018; 2020). In a 2016 episode of The Cyanide & Happiness Show'', Hitler only shoots off his moustache at the end of WWII, but chokes to death on it decades later. In a 2025 special, Australian-American comedian
Jim Jefferies said he sometimes fashioned the style privately to mock Hitler, but did not
salute himself. In 2014, a photograph of Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and German Chancellor
Angela Merkel provoked online amusement due to the former's pointing finger casting a Hitleresque shadow onto the latter's face. Late that year,
Southern All Stars frontman
Keisuke Kuwata briefly sported a toothbrush moustache during a televised performance, prompting online speculation as to the reason. In 2025, far-right conspiracy theorist
Alex Jones flaunted the style while arguing that
Democrats are both far too quick to
call others Nazis and also are Nazis. Later that same year, while discussing
a purported 1954 photograph of Hitler in
Colombia, podcaster
Joe Rogan suggested that it was incredulous that anyone would don the moustache after WWII. Into the 21st century, the moustache remained a symbol of satire and protest, maligning people in power perceived to be acting like Hitler. It is also commonly used to allude to Hitler without referencing him by name or to mock him, e.g. in a 2015 book by comedian
Nick Offerman and the 2020 drama film
Mank. In 2026, a
Slovenian magazine depicted Donald Trump with
crude oil dripping from his nose, referencing the
administration's intervention in Venezuela. The style remains legal in Germany, despite the country's
general ban on
Nazi symbols. Nevertheless, the toothbrush continued to be widely derided as eliciting the association with Hitler. ==Other notable wearers==