Audrey Hepburn’s Sunbathing in the 1950s and the Japanese Tradition of Black Teeth

In the 1950s, Audrey Hepburn was known for her sunbathing. In Japan, having black teeth was considered beautiful. It was a fashionable and noble symbol, especially during marriage when women were required to blacken their teeth. This tradition, known as ‘kuro-shi,’ has a long history, dating back to the Nara and Heian periods (710-794 AD) and continued until the Meiji Restoration. In the classic Japanese novel ‘The Tale of Genji,’ there is a description of how Genji found Murasaki’s appearance more charming after she had her eyebrows removed and her teeth blackened. In 1938, a teacher named Helen Hulick was a witness to a robbery. However, she was sentenced to five days in prison for wearing pants in court, on the grounds of ‘contempt of court.’
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