The Diyareddha is the most widely used bathing costume by woman of
Asian countries including Sri Lanka. It is a piece of cloth similar to a
sarong. The sarong has its two ends sewn together and is generally
worn by men. While the women wear it without its two ends been sewn
together. The majority of the women in Asia when bathing outdoors at a
river, a hillside water spout, a well or at the community tap convert
the cloth they wear waist downwards (a jacket is worn on the upper
portion of their body) into a Diyareddha. This is easily done by simply
hoisting the cloth from round their waist to a level just above their
breasts and tying it at that position. ‘Diyareddha literally means
‘Water Cloth’ or cloth used for bathing.
It is an accepted
fact by both men and women that the Diyareddha is sexier than any other
bathing costume designed in the West, including the briefest of
bikinis. When the female form is completely exposed it could be
beautiful but not sexy. When it is partially covered it becomes both
beautiful and sexy. The reason for this phenomenon is obvious. The
unexposed areas introduce an element of mystery and leave it to the
imagination of the observer to complete the picture. In the West
bathing costumes for females were first designed in the 19th century
both in America and Great Britain during the Victorian Era. These
costumes covered the wearer from her neck to her ankles. Then gradually
the hemlines became shorter and shorter while the necklines began to
plunge lower and lower, culminating in today’s itsy bitsy tiny weenie
bikini, which left hardly anything to the imagination.
The
diyareddha on the other hand did not undergo any changes in centuries.
Women of today who wear the Diyareddha wear it exactly in the same
manner their ancestors did centuries ago. They tie it just above the
swell of their breasts and the cloth reaches down to just below their
knees. The Diyareddha still remains the sexiest bathing costume for
women because when it gets really soaked in water, it becomes a second
skin on the wearer and clings to her body. Thus it very clearly
outlines the curvaceous contours of the female torso while not
displaying a completely exposed vision to the eyes of the beholder.
Instead it tantalises the imagination of the observer by giving him
revealing glimpses of the female form through the translucent wet cloth
as different sections of it keeps clinging and unclinging to the body
of the bather.
In the late thirties and early forties
Hollywood discovered the above secret and introduced to the screen —
the Sarong Girl. The first actress to wear a sarong like a diyareddha
in a motion picture was Miss. Dorothy Lamour, She was a 22-year-old
American girl with the exotic looks of an Oriental female.
She,
had dark lanky hair which reached down to her waist. Her face was
beautifully oval with a pair of dewy doe eyes and full lips. In
addition she was tall and had a shapely lissome figure. Her first film
in sarong was released in 1936 titled, "THE JUNGLE PRINCESS" by
Paramount Studios with one of their leading male stars Ray Milland. It
was a low budget movie but it grossed a high figure at the box office.
The reason for the movie’s success was purely due to Miss. Lamour in a
sarong. At that period in Hollywood, the Hays Office imposed a strict
censorship on Hollywood films. There was a complete ban on the exposure
of female breasts in films although film producers had done so without
any hindrance in their films from the very inception of the motion
picture industry.
Miss. Lamour wore her sarong just above
her breasts and it ended way up her thighs where the accepted bathing
costumes ended at that time. In the film she wore the sarong Diyareddha
style throughout and invariably got it wet. The producers were thus
able to satisfy the dreaded Hays Office code of decency while not
reducing the sexy image of the heroine. Actually the sarong enhanced
the-sexy image. This movie was followed by another sarong one titled,
"HURRICANE" in 1937. It starred Miss. Lamour with a handsome new
beefcake star named Jon Hall. This film unlike the first was a major
production with a big budget. It was based on a novel by Charles
Nordhof and James Norman Hall the authors of the famous story ‘Mutiny
of the Bounty’, The film was directed by one of Hollywood’s
veteran-directors John Ford.
The next year Miss. Lamour’s
studio teamed her once more with Ray Milland the male lead in her first
sarong film. The new film was called "HER JUNGLE LOVE" and in it as
before she wore her and got it wet. Meantime Kiss. Miss Dorothy Lamour
had become a favourite with the forces engaged in World War Two and also
a major Hollywood star. She made many films other than her sarong ones
but could never shake off the Sarong Girl image which she had made
famous. She got into sarong again in, "ROAD TO SINGAPORE" with Bob Hope
and Bing Croaby, "TYPHOON" with Robert Preston and "MOON OVER BURMA"
also with Robert Preston in 1940. In 1941 she made yet another picture
in sarong, "ALLOMA OF THE SOUTH SEAS" once again with Jon Hall. The
next year it was "BEYOND THE BLUE HORIZON" with Richard Denning and
finally her studio-Paramount allowed her to end their sarong fetish
with a film called "RAINBOW ISLAND" with comedian Eddie Bracken.
Upatissa Attygalle - The ‘Diyareddha’ In Hollywood
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