List of bow tie wearers

This is a list of notable bow tie wearers, real and fictional; notable people for whom the wearing of a bow tie (when not in formal dress) is also a notable characteristic.

A list of bow tie devotees reads like a Who's Who of rugged individualists.

The New York Times [1]
Winston Churchill was often photographed wearing a polka dot bow tie.

Bow tie wearing can be a notable characteristic for an individual. Men's clothier Jack Freedman told The New York Times that wearing a bow tie "is a statement maker" that identifies a person as an individual because "it's not generally in fashion".[1] Numerous writers and bow tie sellers have observed that the popularity of this type of neckwear can rise and fall with the fortunes of the well-known people who wear them.[2][3]

Until the 20th century, the bow tie was the general rule for neckties. Starting in early 20th century, the bow tie started to become more rare.

In 1996, The Wall Street Journal quoted statistics from the Neckwear Association of America showing that bow ties represent 3 percent of the 100 million ties sold each year in the United States, most of them part of formal wear, such as for white tie and black tie.[4]

Attention to famous bow tie wearers in commerce and fashion commentary

Those who write about bow ties often mention famous people who wear or have worn them. These writers often make the point that the image conveyed to others by a bow tie can be affected by associations with celebrities and famous people in the past.

A common fashion accessory in the nineteenth century, the bow tie had positive associations by mid-twentieth century, bolstered by real-world personalities like President Franklin Roosevelt and the "political genius" Right Honourable Sir Winston Churchill as well as "devil-may-care" characters portrayed in movies by actors like Humphrey Bogart and Frank Sinatra.[5] By the 1970s, however, the bow tie became associated with nerds and geeks, such as the slapstick characters played by Jerry Lewis, and Mayberry's fictional deputy sheriff, Barney Fife. This perception was reinforced by the bow tie's association with Pee-wee Herman and U.S. Senator Paul Simon.[6]

The perceptions associated with bow ties started to take another turn in the 1980s, when Success Magazine's founder, W. Clement Stone, spoke out in support of the neck wear after the publication by fashion author John Molloy which observed, "Wear a bow tie and nobody will take you seriously."[7] Stone associated bow-tie wearing with virility, aggressiveness, and salesmanship.[8][9] In further defense of the bow tie, its use by figures such as Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Saul Bellow has been cited.[10]

Celebrities' effect on bow-tie wearing

Historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. wore a bow tie in the early 1960s, when he worked for U.S. President John F. Kennedy.

When a celebrity is noticed wearing a bow tie, it can affect bow tie sales; sales see an improvement when the accessory is associated with younger celebrities such as Tucker Carlson. When Raj Bhakta wore one during his stint on The Apprentice, haberdashers reported customers asking for a bow tie which looked like his.[2] Similarly, after Matt Smith made his debut as the bow tie-wearing Eleventh Doctor in Doctor Who, Topman reported a significant increase in demand for bow ties (from 3% of all tie sales to 14%).[11]

Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. wrote about his decision as a college student to start wearing bow ties in his memoir A Life in the Twentieth Century: Innocent Beginnings, 1917–1950. Schlesinger remarked that he made his decision in part because a number of famous men he admired had a penchant for the neck wear. In addition, he noted that they prevent dinner mishaps, saying, "It is impossible, or at least it requires extreme agility, to spill anything on a bow tie."[12]

Commercial interests using famous wearers to encourage sales

Bow tie sellers often cite famous people who have worn the neckwear as a way of encouraging more customers. Jack Cutone, co-founder of Boston Bow Tie, noted that there is ample evidence to support the uniqueness and stature of those who wear bow ties, including Abraham Lincoln, Winston Churchill, Albert Einstein and Sigmund Freud.[13] Beau Ties Ltd., an online bow tie seller, has featured a "C. Everett Koop bow tie," complete with an endorsement by Koop, who was Surgeon General of the United States during the Reagan administration.[14] Carrot & Gibbs, another bow tie seller, lists several famous wearers on its bow tie web page.[15]

Bow tie wearers of the nineteenth century

Karl Marx is one of the many notable people of the 19th century who were photographed in bow ties, which were conventional attire of the time.

Bow ties were conventional attire in the nineteenth century. Portraits of U.S. presidents from Van Buren through McKinley commonly show them in bow ties. Wearing of a bow tie was seldom commented upon and did not form part of the public perception of figures such as American inventor Thomas Edison or Communist theorist Karl Marx.[16]

Bow tie wearers in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries

Architects

Educators

College and university professors

Other educators

U.S. Librarian of Congress Daniel J. Boorstin wore a bow tie in this official photograph.

Entertainers and media personalities

Pee-wee Herman character with his customary neckwear

Comedians

Journalists and commentators

  • Tucker Carlson, conservative American commentator[2][80] In 2005 he told the New York Times he had consistently worn bow ties since childhood, but he acknowledged that bow ties often provoke negative reactions, "like a middle finger protruding from your neck."[1] Following his tenure on CNN's Crossfire (Jon Stewart famously knocked the bowtie during his infamous 2004 appearance on the show), he has switched primarily to long neckties or no ties at all.
  • John Daly, journalist and host of What's My Line?, was often photographed in a bow tie;[81] evening dress (which included bow ties) was worn by the host and panelists on that game show[82]
  • Sir Robin Day (1923–2000), British television commentator and interviewer; his BBC News obituary said "With his thick horn-rimmed spectacles and trade mark polka-dot bow tie, he was the great inquisitor"[83]
  • Troy Dungan, retired chief weather anchor for WFAA-TV (ABC) in Dallas-Fort Worth, owns approximately 220 bow ties[84]
  • Dave Garroway (1913–1982), U.S. broadcaster, first host of the Today show[85][86]
  • Tom Keene, host of Bloomberg Surveillance on Bloomberg TV and Bloomberg Radio.
  • Roger Kimball (born 1953), no longer a bow-tie wearer, U.S. art critic and social commentator, co-editor and co-publisher of The New Criterion and publisher of Encounter Books [87]
  • Janusz Korwin-Mikke (born 1942), Polish liberal conservative publisher and politician[88]
  • Irving R. Levine (1922–2009), the first foreign correspondent accredited in the Soviet Union.,[89][90][91] the former economics reporter for NBC television, known for his "trademark bow tie", appeared for the first time in public wearing a necktie for the Brown University commencement in 1994. "I needed help in tying it," he later said.[92]
  • Russell Lynes (1910–1991), American art historian, photographer, author and editor of Harper's Magazine[93]
  • Tom Oliphant, writer for the Boston Globe[94][95]
  • Charles Osgood (born 1933), American broadcast journalist, described as having a "trademark bow tie"[96][97]
  • Gene Shalit (born 1926), U.S. movie critic and regular commentator on the Today show[98][99][100]
  • Harry Smith (born 1951), TV journalist, wore a "trademark" bow tie during his early career at a Denver station, but stopped wearing them when he joined CBS in 1987, when a network official told him that Charles Osgood was CBS' bow-tie-wearing personality and "We can't have two guys wearing bow ties." [101]
  • Jeffrey Tucker, editorial director of the American Institute for Economic Research[102]
  • Timothy White (1952–2002), rock journalist and "debonair dandy who "always wore his bow tie in public"[103] and prided himself in his jaunty bow tie and white buckskin shoes.".[104]
  • Tim Wonnacott, English antiques expert and television presenter best known for presenting Bargain Hunt.[105]
  • George Will (born 1941), American conservative syndicated columnist and regular on the This Week Sunday morning program on ABC television. He sometimes appears with a bow tie, sometimes with a long tie, as can be seen on the covers of his books. In 2005, he told the New York Times that whenever he wore a regular necktie, people commented on the absence of his bow tie.[1]
  • Matthew Winkler, editor-in-chef emeritus of Bloomberg News.

Other entertainment personalities

Fashion designers

Lawyers

Archibald Cox

Politicians and political activists

The regular wearing of bow ties by a politician is often the subject of comment — from friends, foes and journalists:

Belgian former prime minister Elio Di Rupo
Estonian president Toomas Hendrik Ilves wore a bow tie for this photo with U.S. president George W. Bush

Psychiatrists and psychologists

Athletes

Other 20th-/21st-century people associated with wearing bow ties

Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan

Fictional characters

Bow ties are a consistent element in the depiction of some fictional characters.

Characters in film and television

Film and television characters portrayed by human actors as consistently wearing bow ties have included:

Characters in comics, cartoons, and anime

Bow ties are a consistent part of the depiction of many characters created by artists for entertainment media including comics, cartoons, and anime.

Among these are many Hanna-Barbera cartoon characters:

Other artist-created characters consistently or frequently depicted in bow ties include:

Notes

  1. St. John, Warren (2005-06-26). "A Red Flag That Comes in Many Colors". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-03-18.
  2. Sheehan, Jennifer (2005-08-15). "Bow Ties Come Bouncing Back into Fashion". Eastern Pennsylvania Business Journal.
  3. Fitch, Thomas (2006-11-06). "Why must the bow tie die?". TuscaloosaNews.com. Tuscaloosa News. Retrieved 19 March 2010.
  4. Milbank, Dana (1996-06-27). "Detractors Galore Don't Slow Sales Of Classy Ties to Rich and Famous". Wall Street Journal. Dow Jones. Retrieved 16 November 2008.
  5. O'Brien, Glenn (September 2003). "Why a bow tie's not just for schmucks". GQ.com. Conde Naste Digital. Retrieved 1 March 2010. O'Brien noted that a bow tie "can be a badge of courage," as personified by the World War II "bow-tie alliance of Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill," or the "mark of the urbane, independent, devil-may-care or rakish personality" such as characters portrayed by Humphrey Bogart and Frank Sinatra.
  6. Anderson, Susan Heller (1991-07-29). "Chronicle". New York Times. Retrieved 19 March 2010.
  7. Quoted in Welters, Linda (2005). Twentieth-century American Fashion. Berg Publisher. ISBN 1-84520-073-X.
  8. Conroy, Sarah Booth (1986-01-26). Washington Post. Stone believed bow-tie wearers to be "full of vim and vigour, aggressive and full of drive. They are the best salesmen and entrepreneurs." Missing or empty |title= (help)
  9. Kelly, Karen (2007). The Secret of the Secret. Macmillan. pp. 189. ISBN 978-0-312-37790-8.
  10. Epstein, Joseph (2001-05-04). "Fit To Be Tied: The enemies of civilization find a new target, just below the chin". Opinion Journal. Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 17 March 2010. First, though, let me organize a lineup of bow tie wearers to establish a variety. The most distinguished of all, of course, was Winston Churchill, whose favorite was a fine floppy blue job with white polka dots. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a tall man, often adds a giant butterfly to his getup, which gives his appearance a light and rakish air. Saul Bellow has taken to wearing bow ties late in life. Former Sen. Paul Simon is a habitual bow tie wearer, though, oddly, he seems never to have learned to tie them properly, for the right side of his ties never quite make it to full bow form. For diversity's sake, it would be good to have an NFL linebacker instead of Louis Farrakhan to round off this roster, but Churchill, Moynihan, Bellow, Simon and Farrakhan (a clip-on man, I surmise) perhaps provide sufficient diversity in themselves.
  11. "Doctor Who prompts surge in popularity of bow ties". The Daily Telegraph. London. 30 April 2010. Retrieved 1 May 2010.
  12. Schlesinger, Arthur M. (2002). A Life in the Twentieth Century: Innocent Beginnings, 1917–1950. Houghton Mifflin Books. p. 109. ISBN 978-0-618-21925-4.
  13. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-03-04. Retrieved 2007-01-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)"Boston Bow Tie Launches Web Site to Market Distinctive and Stylish Bow Ties With a Traditional Flair" news release posted on Business Wire, December 30, 1999, according to the LookSmart FindArticles Web site, accessed January 17, 2007
  14. News release from Beau Ties Ltd., dated October 3, 2006 and titled "Dr. C. Everett Koop, Former U.S. Surgeon General, and Beau Ties Ltd. Create Birthday Bow Tie"
  15. Archived 2007-02-23 at the Wayback Machine Web page titled "The Definitive Bow" at the Carrot & Gibbs Web site, accessed January 17, 2007
  16. Archived 2007-03-14 at the Wayback Machine Style Guy column at MensStyle.com Web site (associated with GQ magazine), dated September 2003, accessed January 17, 2006
  17. "A Reign of Harmony". Tennessee Valley Authority. Retrieved 23 November 2008.
  18. Eisenman is shown wearing a yellow bow tie in the photo illustrating the article in Archinect, July 27, 2004
  19. "Peter Eisenman". KMP Furniture. Retrieved 23 November 2008. Known as an eccentric, Eisenman is often seen in a bowtie and a sweater with a small hole.
  20. Kester Rattenbury, Robert Bevan, and Kieran Long, Architects Today, Volume 2004, page 1988. Describes Eisenman as "the consummate intellectual New Yorker (big specs, big bow tie, big hair)..."
  21. John Taylor, Mr. In-Between: Deconstructing Peter Eisenman, New York Magazine, October 17, 1988, pages 46–52. "Eisenman wears bow ties and suspenders and those owlish glasses that for some reason are so popular among architects."
  22. While not absolutely clear, this Web page indicates Gropius was known for his bow ties: Web page titled "Stories from 'The Chronicle': Cataloguing Harvard's Ephemera", article by Lawrence Biemiller at Biemiller's Web site, the Web page indicates the article is from "The Chronicle of Higher Education. Published January 23, 2004." accessed January 18, 2007: "After three years of work, Ms. Norris not only knows how many of Walter Gropius's bow ties Harvard has (six), but also where they are (the Graduate School of Design)"
  23. Peter McNeil, Vicki Karaminas, The Men's Fashion Reader, pp. 113-114
  24. "A Reign of Harmony". Tennessee Valley Authority. Retrieved 23 November 2008.
  25. Anthony DePalma, The Most Happy College President: Leon Botstein of Bard, The New York Times, October 4, 1992
  26. Jacob M. Appel, Leon Botstein: The Maestro of Annandale, Education Update, January 2004. Refers to his "trademark bowtie."
  27. Office of the President, Whitman College website, archived from the original on 2011-05-30, retrieved 2011-06-03
  28. Bow Tie, Whitman College Bookstore, accessed June 2, 2011. "Our Whitman College president proudly wears a bow tie every day. Maybe you should too..."
  29. Troop, Don (March 19, 2010). "Presidents Who Wear Bow Ties". Chronicle of Higher Education.
  30. "Man on a Mission". ASEE Prism. American Society for Engineering Education. September 2000. the bespectacled, bow-tied Campbell...
  31. Clem Richardson, Cooper Union president George Cambell to exit -- on own terms, NY Daily News, May 3, 2010
  32. Thomas H. Maugh II (June 20, 2001). "Donald Cram; Creative UCLA Chemist, Nobel Prize Winner". Los Angeles Times. Many UCLA students have fond memories of Cram, wearing his trademark bow tie, playing his guitar and singing folk tunes in class as the semester end neared.
  33. "Nobel economist Angus Deaton on a year of political earthquakes". He is also wearing a blue bow tie with vivid red stars that once belonged to one of his mentors... December 22, 2016.CS1 maint: others (link)
  34. "Angus Deaton - Facts". www.nobelprize.org. Prof. Deaton is shown wearing a bow tie in his official Nobel Prize photo. Retrieved 2017-02-16.CS1 maint: others (link)
  35. "Haute Stuff". Dickinson Magazine. Dickinson College. Summer 2004. Archived from the original on 2009-03-09. Retrieved 23 November 2008. President William G. Durden ’71 is known around campus for his strong personal fashion sense—his penchant for wearing bow ties as well as his different colors of glasses frames ....
  36. Archived 2006-11-13 at the Wayback Machine Boucher, Norman, "E. Gordon Gee: Introducing the seventeenth president", Brown Alumni Magazine, September/October 1997
  37. Ho, David (March 29, 1999). "Bacteriologist Alexander Fleming" (PDF). Time. Archived from the original on October 2004. He was a short man, usually clad in a bow tie, who even in his celebrity never mastered the conventions of polite society.
  38. Burke, Adrienne, "Gazing at Science Stars: An Ansel Adams protégée captures the nature of brilliance", article in Science and the City webzine of the New York Academy of Sciences, September 16, 2005, accessed January 18, 2007
  39. Eugene P. Kennedy (1992). "Sailing to Byzantium". Annual Review of Biochemistry. 61: 1–28. doi:10.1146/annurev.bi.61.070192.000245. PMID 1497305. With abundant hair just becoming a little gray, and usually wearing a soft bow tie, Lipmann presented a figure closer to the stereotype of the artist than of the scientist.
  40. "Nobel Laureates". Retrieved 2013-01-08. The scientist, known for his clarinet playing and Western-style bow ties, describes his mode of reasoning: “I am inclined to make large intuitive jumps and then set about to test the conclusions.”
  41. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-08-11. Retrieved 2013-12-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  42. "Texas A&M President Website". Texas A&M University. Texas A&M University. 18 June 2009. Archived from the original on 9 December 2008. Retrieved 23 November 2008. The similarity between Bowen and Bowtie tends to help people remember my name.
  43. Maxey's photo at Roanoke's website Archived 2007-12-14 at the Wayback Machine shows him in a bow tie
  44. Gabor Steingart (December 11, 2007). "The End of Globalization?". Spiegel Online. Spiegel Online. Retrieved December 13, 2009. The hallway eventually leads to an office where a 92-year-old man [Samuelson] wearing a bowtie is sitting at his desk eating sushi.
  45. Cassidy, John (December 14, 2009). "Postscript: Paul Samuelson". The New Yorker. Condé Nast Digital. Retrieved December 17, 2009. Then [Samuelson] bounced in on the soles of his feet, a diminutive man dressed in a light gray suit, a red-and-white-striped shirt, and a snazzy bow tie.
  46. James, Ioan (2004), Remarkable Physicists, p. 301, ISBN 0521017068, Professors were expected to dress formally; Schrodinger usually wore a sweater and bow tie in winter
  47. Gribbin, John (2013), Erwin Schrodinger and the Quantum Revolution, p. 1920, ISBN 978-1118331880, Schrodinger addressed his students wearing a sweater and a jaunty bow tie ...
  48. "USC Bow Tie Bus Tour travels to Grand Strand Sept. 2". USC Times. University of South Carolina. August 2004. Archived from the original on January 13, 2005. Retrieved 23 November 2008.
  49. "Bow Tie Bus Tour rolls again" (PDF). USC Times. University of South Carolina. February 2005. Retrieved 23 November 2008.
  50. "Dr. Gene Spafford talks CERIAS-ly about bow ties". April 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  51. "Charity Auction — Some of Spaf's Bow Ties". July 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  52. "His Find Became Tumors' Nemesis". The Trenton Times. May 9, 2010. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  53. "Our Sixth President" (PDF). Blue & White. Johnson Bible College. 14 September 2007. p. 8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-11-14. Retrieved 23 November 2008. There is more to Gary Weedman than just an appreciation for bow ties and a dissertation on Alexander the Great.
  54. Neely, Jack (December 7, 2011), "How Johnson Bible College Became a University", Metro Pulse, Knoxville, Tennessee, archived from the original on April 28, 2012, Gary Weedman undermines the stereotype of the Tennessee Bible-school evangelist. In a bow tie and a herringbone tweed suit, the current president of the school now known as Johnson University speaks in the middle-America accent of his Illinois home and comes across more as professor than proselytizer.
  55. Official photo shows him in a bow tie. Also, Nicholson Baker is quoted as calling him a "chronic bow-tie wearer."
  56. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-03-05. Retrieved 2008-01-26.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Davis, Pamela, "Bill Nye, the successful guy", article in The St. Petersburg Times, October 11, 1999, accessed January 18, 2007
  57. Humor is a part of his program, so the bow tie may spoof academics and associate him with comedians. Rahner, Mark, "Eye to eye with Bill Nye the Science Guy", article in The Seattle Times, April 26, 2005, accessed January 18, 2007
  58. A. L. Kursanov, Sketches to a Portrait of A.I. Oparin Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine, Lecture presented at the Opening of the International Symposium "Biochemistry of the 21st Century: Problems and Frontiers", devoted to The One Hundredth Anniversary of the Birth of A. I. Oparin, Moscow, May 13—18, 1995. "The bow tie ... was an immutable detail of ... Oparin's attire for his whole life. This tie ... was almost a part of his personality, one that added some aura of self-confidence and authority to his whole demeanor."
  59. Archived 2007-02-19 at the Wayback Machine Web page titled "The Life and Times of Murray N. Rothbard [...]" at Libertystory.net Web site, accessed January 18, 2006
  60. Anecdotage Web site, "Bow tie" item, accessed January 18, 2007
  61. Sullivan, Kevin, "40 Years After Missile Crisis, Players Swap Stories in Cuba", article in The Washington Post, October 13, 2002, page A28, as reprinted at the Latino Studies Resources Web site. From the article: "Historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. looked out through thick glasses, wearing his trademark bow tie"
  62. National Public Radio profile: Christopher Whittle, June 28, 2000: "Whittle is a bow-tie wearing entrepreneur determined to reform education, while making a profit."
  63. Pope Brock, Christopher Whittle; This Man Wants to Teach Your Children Well—and for Profit, People 38(12), September 21, 1992: "He's a man of disarming charm, his signature bow tie and his grin both a little lopsided."
  64. Photo at Museum of Broadcasting website shows him in a bowtie
  65. A Mega Bar Mitzvah for Actor Fyvush Finkel, by Masha Leon, Forward, Friday, July 16, 2004
  66. Image:Pee-Wee Herman (1988).jpg shows the character in typical neckwear
  67. "Thrilling Adventure Hour: The Graphic Novel... and Beyond!". Retrieved 2014-03-10.
  68. "Marc Evan Jackson". 2013-05-27. Retrieved 2014-03-10.
  69. Archived 2006-10-19 at the Wayback Machine Web site for Frankel's Costume, describes its ventriloquist dummy resembling Laurel as "This Stan Laurel Doll has been faithfully reproduced with his blue overalls, a long-sleeved white shirt, and a red, polka-dotted bow tie.", accessed January 18, 2007
  70. Was named one of the "10 Best Bow Tie Wearers of 1988." (Anthony Tommasini, Horowitz at 85: Still Playing Free, The New York Times, Sunday, September 25, 1988)
  71. Soibelman, David (1993-12-03). "What Poets, Presidents and Groucho Shared Bow ties: Only a few men can master these sartorial butterflies". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-11-14.
  72. , SoundCloud
  73. "Garry Moore, 78, the Cheery Host Of Long-Running TV Series, Dies". The New York Times. 1993-11-29. Retrieved 2008-07-11.
  74. Garry Moore, Britannica Online
  75. Moore for Housewives, Time magazine, February 2, 1953
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  77. Haberman, Clyde (March 30, 1997). "Mark Russell's High-Wire Act With No Net". The New York Times. Retrieved May 8, 2010.
  78. Brumby, Arian (2012-05-23). "An Interview with Paul F. Tompkins: A Very Fancy Man". Retrieved 2014-03-10.
  79. "A Web Series about Dressing Like a Grownup". 2011-10-13. Retrieved 2014-03-10.
  80. Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine Metz, Ann, "Never trust a man in a bow tie" posted at StyleDash Web site November 2, 2006 at 12:43 p.m., accessed January 17, 2007
  81. Still photos of Daly show him wearing a bow tie
  82. Terry Teachout, The Games People Played in a Simpler Time, The New York Times, October 28, 2001
  83. "Sir Robin Day: 1923–2000" article at BBC News website, August 7, 2000, accessed January 18, 2007
  84. Troy Dungan career retrospective, retrieved on 29 July 2007.
  85. Gamarekian, Barbara. " Rummaging in Broadcasting's Attic", The New York Times, October 8, 1988. Accessed November 17, 2008. "There is Jimmy Durante's battered hat, Rudy Vallee's megaphone and Dave Garroway's trademark glasses and bow tie."
  86. Obituary mentions his "horn-rimmed glasses and bow ties"
  87. Bernard Chapin, The Highest Criterion: An interview with Roger Kimball, History News Network, March 17, 2003. "Here before us, bespectacled and sporting a bowtie, is one of our greatest enforcers."
  88. Archived 2016-01-26 at the Wayback Machine Janusz Korwin-Mikke's official blog clearly showing him with a bowtie.
  89. Vanderbilt Television News Archive, Web page titled "NBC Evening News for Monday, Jul 20, 1973", accessed January 17, 2007, "Abstract: (Studio) NBC's Irving R. Levine known for bow tie ... John Dunlop, Archibald Cox and George Shultz dogmatically disregard faddish widths".
  90. |level=2–3|pageid=3905-1386 Levenger Web site, Web page titled "How They Work: Gifts of a Journal" by Steve Leveen: "With his serious reporting on NBC and ubiquitous bow tie, Irving R. Levine became a television icon to a generation of Americans.", accessed January 17, 2007
  91. The Business News Luminaries Web site, Web page titled "Irving R. Levine" One sentence states: "The economics assignment gave Mr. Levine a mild-mannered persona, and his trademark bow tie did little to subtract from a Mr. Peepers image." accessed January 17, 2007
  92. Archived 2008-03-04 at the Wayback MachineBrown Alumni Magazine Web page titled "Journalism", section titled "Irving R. Levine '44", dated November/December 2000, accessed February 2, 2008
  93. Russell Lynes, 80, an Editor and Arbiter of Taste (obituary) by Richard Severo, September 16, 1991, The New York Times, retrieved February 18, 2008: "He was tweedy, bow-tied, pipe-smoking, buttoned-down and urbane, an aficionado of things like Bugatti cars and Downing cottages."
  94. Alessandra Stanley and Maureen Dowd (September 1988). "The Dweebs on the Bus". GQ. The bow-tied and whimsical Boston Globe reporter Tom Oliphant...
  95. Zimmerman, William (2011). Troublemaker: A Political Memoir of the Sixties. Random House Digital. p. 323. ISBN 9780385533485. Tom wore his signature business suit, bow tie, and beat-up running shoes.
  96. New Jersey Q & A: Charles Osgood; A New Face at CBS 'Sunday Morning', by Albert J. Parisi, The New York Times, April 24, 1994
  97. Charles Osgood biography, CBS News Sunday Morning website
  98. Photos of him always include a bow tie, for example the photo illustrating "Gene Shalit on his gay son," The Advocate website (accessed May 23, 2008)
  99. Biography Research Guide: "He is known for frequent use of puns, oversized handlebar moustache, and for wearing colorful bowties."
  100. A 2006 news story about Shalit's daughter referred to "his trademark horned-rimmed glasses, handlebar mustache and bow tie."
  101. Off Limits: Holy Moses!, Denver WestWord, October 17, 2002
  102. "Cobden Centre's Toby Baxendale talks UK monetary reform with Jeff Tucker of the Mises Institute". Gold News. June 3, 2011. Jeff Tucker (he of bow-tie fame)
  103. Pareles, Jon (July 1, 2002), "Timothy White, 50, Billboard Editor in Chief", New York Times
  104. Obituary in The Independent, accessed January 18, 2007
  105. https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/lifestyle/sa-weekend/meet-bargain-hunts-tim-wonnacott/news-story/c0dbff981b8dbd1e2c0fe0499efbb870
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  107. Ray Broadus Browne and Pat Browne, The Guide to United States Popular Culture, 2001, Popular Press, ISBN 0-87972-821-3, ISBN 978-0-87972-821-2, page 308: "[Collyer] always wore a bow tie."
  108. Booth, Jenny (September 15, 2009). "Flamboyant TV chef Keith Floyd dies of heart attack". The Times. London. Retrieved May 8, 2010.: "Each [of his shows] featured the bow tie-wearing chef raising plentiful glasses of red wine while sloshing ingredients into a pan and barking orders at his cameraman."
  109. Kirshnit, Frederick L., "Instruments of Mass Seduction III" article at "Concerto.net" Web site dated June 2, 2004, accessed January 18, 2007
  110. Stephen Metcalf, Sexy Food Nerds: Cooking geeks get hot on America's Test Kitchen, Slate.com, October 13, 2003: "As host of ATK, [Kimball] sports the standard-issue ATK apron, granny glasses, a doofy bow tie, and helmet hair."
  111. About Cook's Magazine at Cook's Illustrated
  112. Marked Man, by Peter Carlson, The Washington Post, Sunday, July 15, 2007
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  114. Nettelbladt, Sonja (October 29, 2013). "Stromae". Radar Magazine. In addition to his music, Stromae is also known for his artistic videos and sharp style, often dressed in colourful, clean-cut clothes and his trademark bow tie.
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  130. Robert J. Donovan (1977). Conflict and Crisis: The Presidency of Harry S. Truman, 1945-1948. WW Norton & Co. p. 257. Senator Tom Connally, reared on a Texas farm, affected broad-rimmed black hats, full-cut black coats, gold studs, and black bow tie, and let his silverly lockscurl down over his stiff white collar.
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  132. "Gov. picks William 'Mo' Cowan as John Kerry's replacement in Senate". New York Daily News. January 30, 2013. Retrieved March 3, 2013.
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  135. Stephen J. Dryden (1991). "America's Trade Warriors–Still Searching for the Right Weapon". Retrieved 2013-01-09. Herter's tweeds, bow ties, and towering height give him the air of an aloof patrician, but he was attuned to political realities, having served as a Massachusetts state legislator, congressman and governor.
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  142. "Wolfgang Schüssel, an Austrian abroad". The Economist. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 2015-12-05.
  143. Lopatka, Jan (2013-01-12). "Former PM to square off with prince for Czech presidency". Reuters. Retrieved 2013-01-13. Currently foreign minister in the centre-right cabinet, the bow-tied, pipe-smoking Schwarzenberg is personally untainted by graft scandals.
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  148. A 2003 Le Devoir article reads: "The bow that serves him as a tie has become the trademark of the péquiste (Parti Québécois member or politician) candidate in Mercier (electoral riding), Daniel Turp." Archived 2012-03-08 at the Wayback Machine
  149. Powell, Michael, "'Mr. Bow Tie' Becomes the Bull's-Eye", The Washington Post, August 7, 1998, Page A01
  150. BBC News | Obituaries | "Voice of Reason" Lord Wyatt dies aged 79
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  152. Gostin, Nikki, "A prude awakening" article in The Age, January 5, 2005, accessed January 18, 2007
  153. "How to Tie a Bow Tie With Richard Sherman".
  154. "Bruce Bowen Talks Bow Ties". Retrieved 2013-01-08. Stacey Mitch from Spurs.com caught up with former Spur and ESPN Analyst Bruce Bowen to talk about his famous Bow Ties and life after basketball
  155. Weber, Bruce, "Conversations/Frank Cashen; Mr. Mets Takes a Swing At the Baseball He Misses", article, The New York Times, November 22, 1992. Retrieved February 22, 2007. "[...]Mr. Cashen appears his familiar teddy bear-shaped self, down to his trademark bow tie."
  156. Daley, Robert (2005-04-15). The Cruel Sport: Grand Prix Racing 1959-1967. St. Paul, MN USA: MotorBooks International. p. xv. ISBN 978-0-76032-100-3. Retrieved 2013-02-04. The world champion that year was the Ferrari driver Mike Hawthorn, a tall, blond young man who always wore a bow tie when racing. Always. He considered this important. It was his style.
  157. Salmon, Dick (2007-05-01). Brm: A Mechanic's Tale. Dorchester, UK: Veloce Publishing. p. 58. ISBN 978-1-84584-082-2. Retrieved 2013-02-04. Invariably he would greet his friend Peter Collins with the words 'mon ami, mate' and was famous for his bow tie, which earned him the nickname 'Le Pappilon' (sic), meaning the butterfly.
  158. Magsaysay, Melissa (November 29, 2009), "Dhani Jones is leading a bow-tie revolution: The NFL linebacker hopes others will join his league of well-dressed gentlemen", Los Angeles Times
  159. Dishneau, David (1 March 2003). "Phelan and his bow tie say 'bye' after 49 years". USA Today.
  160. Nobles, Charlie. "NHL PLAYOFFS;Torrey Turns Florida Into Hot Hockey Property", The New York Times, May 23, 1996. Accessed November 16, 2008. "Bill Torrey sat back in his chair at the Florida Panthers' practice arena, trademark bow tie neatly in place, and let out a hearty laugh."
  161. Jim Tressel reveals little about himself, Evansville Courier-Press, October 7, 2010
  162. Mascarenhas, Rohan (September 9, 2009). "Former N.J. power broker, philanthropist Finn Caspersen dies in apparent suicide". The Star-Ledger. Friends in New Jersey, who remembered Caspersen for his trademark bow tie and courtly demeanor...
  163. Punch Magazine, vol. 229, 1955, Jul–Dec, p.266. "The mage [...] received me in a suit of green checked plus fours and a huge tartan bow tie."
  164. Volk, Patricia (October 8, 2006). "The Sweet Smell of Excess". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-11-19.
  165. Bear Stearns: Like ‘Titantic,’ But Without Kate Winslet, New York magazine, May 28, 2008. Refers to his "trademark bow tie."
  166. News release from Beau Ties Ltd., dated October 3, 2006 and titled "Dr. C. Everett Koop, Former U.S. Surgeon General, and Beau Ties Ltd. Create Birthday Bow Tie"; from the news release: "Dr. C. Everett Koop, the former U.S. Surgeon General easily recognized by his omnipresent red bow tie, served from 1982 to 1989 under President Ronald Reagan [...]"
  167. "Howard Philips". Retrieved 2008-11-18. "He appeared as a blond-haired bowtie-clad know-it-all in the "Howard & Nester" comics series".
  168. Andrew F. Smith (2006), Encyclopedia of junk food and fast food, p. 227, ISBN 978-0-313-33527-3
  169. Is pictured wearing a pink bow tie on the cover of his book Hot Commodities : How Anyone Can Invest Profitably in the World's Best Market (2004; ISBN 1-4000-6337-X)
  170. "With Albert Schweitzer in Gabon". 1964–1965. Retrieved 2013-01-08. His dress is unvarying: white sun helmet on top, a neat black bow-tie, short sleeved white shirt, shapeless, often patched gray trousers and big brown shoes, which still get plenty of use.
  171. Smith, Fiona. "How James Strong got his bow tie". Business Review Weekly. Fairfax Media. Archived from the original on 26 January 2016. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
  172. Asbury, Edith (December 17, 1980). "Colonel Sanders Obituary". NY Times.
  173. The Wikipedia article for Billy Bunter shows the cover page of Floreat Greyfriars, with Billy Bunter in a polka dot bow-tie
  174. Bertram Cooper, Mad Men, AMC Networks website, accessed 15 October 2011. "A nattily bow-tied iconoclast, Bertram Cooper is a Founding Partner in the newly formed Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce advertising agency."
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  179. Ryan, Maureen (May 15, 2007), "7 things I'll miss about 'Gilmore Girls' after 7 seasons", Chicago Tribune, Richard [Gilmore] could have been a bow-tie wearing stuffed shirt.
  180. "Where Are They Now Special: The Cast of Sesame Street...: Will Lee aka Mr. Hooper". Comedy Central UK. Archived from the original on July 12, 2012. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  181. Purcell, Amy (March 27, 2009). "Where's Mr. Hooper When You Need Him?". The Grist Mill. Archived from the original (blog) on 2009-04-01. Retrieved 2012-05-10.
  182. "Additional Cast". SesameStreet.org. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  183. Mullaney, Andrea. "Dysfunctional detectives will get the job done", The Scotsman, December 10, 2007. Accessed November 19, 2008. "During all this entertaining tosh, up popped dear old David McCallum as Dr Donald 'Ducky' Mallard, sporting a huge bow tie and red braces as his contribution to the general quirkiness."
  184. Brother Mouzone; Played By Michael Potts, The Wire Cast and Crew, HBO website, accessed November 30, 2008
  185. Jerry Buck, Nessman Grew to Silver Sow, Associated Press story published in Wilmington Morning Star, July 27, 1981
  186. At least as portrayed in Murder on the Orient Express film and by actor David Suchet on television, Poirot wears a bow tie, whether or not he typically wears one in the original Agatha Christie novels
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  188. Hanna-Barbera website "Yogi Bear's bow-tie wearing best buddy ..."; retrieved November 17, 2008
  189. The bow ties are evident in images of Pixie and Dixie and Mr. Jinks at the Big Cartoon DataBase
  190. The Cartoon-O-Rama website picture gallery for the Magilla Gorilla cartoon shows the character wearing his typical bow tie
  191. Hanna, Bill, with Tom Ito (2000), A Cast of Friends, p 101. (Hanna describes the character this way: "The blue canine with the red bow tie, sleepy eyes and Southern drawl had made good. Huckleberry Hound was on his way to becoming television's first cartoon superstar.") Da Capo Press, ISBN 978-0-306-80917-0. Retrieved August 7, 2009
  192. Wikipedia article for Tom and Jerry shows the title card (Image:Tom Jerry Show.jpg) for the "Tom and Jerry Show" in 1975 with red bow tie on Jerry and cites three overall sources in the References section of the article: Adams, T.R. (1991); Tom and Jerry: Fifty Years of Cat and Mouse Crescent Books; Barrier, Michael (1999) Hollywood Cartoons: American Animation in Its Golden Age. Oxford: Oxford University Press; Maltin, Leonard (1980, updated 1987). Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-452-25993-2.
  193. Skalman, Adam. "Cartoons paved the way for gays on TV", Daily Bruin, October 9, 2001. Accessed November 19, 2008. "Snagglepuss: I don’t know how many of you remember this guy.... Imagine the Wildean urbanity of Rupert Everett in the wardrobe of a Chippendale’s dancer: starchy white cuffs and collar and a perfectly knotted bow tie."
  194. "Maniac Mansion". Retrieved 2008-11-19."He wears a white shirt, a black bow-tie and black pants".
  195. In discussing the early days of the strip, 75 Years of Blondie (University of Florida Special Collections, 2005) states (on page 2) that Hiho Hennepin, Dagwood's rival for Blondie's affections, "was a shorter prototype of Dagwood right down to the trademark bow tie they both sport."
  196. This "logo" or publicity image Image:Blondie Logo 2007.png shows Bumstead in typical red bow tie; an image at the King Features Web site describing Bumstead Archived 2008-02-15 at the Wayback Machine also uses an image with him in the same red bow tie; Google Image search of "Dagwood Bumstead" on January 17, 2007 shows the comic character as well as television character wearing bow ties
  197. Image:Seuss-cat-hat.gif
  198. This comic book cover Image:Donald Duck - Lost in the Andes Coverart.png and this still Image:Donald duck debut.PNG from an early cartoon "The Wise Little Hen", show what clearly looks like a bow tie, although it may be another kind of tie worn with the character's typical sailor suit
  199. "Plush Count Duckula". Retrieved 2008-11-19.
  200. These two Web pages, one for Conan Edogawa, the other for Jimmy Kudo, both show the character wearing a bow tie; since the tie is shown on the character on the main page for that character, it seems extremely likely that the bow tie is typical wear for that character (accessed January 17, 2007): Case Closed Jimmy Kudo page Archived 2010-01-05 at the Wayback Machine; Case Closed Conan Edogawa page Archived 2009-07-07 at the Wayback Machine
  201. Archived 2007-02-18 at the Wayback Machine David Shulman Autographs Catalog Web site, Web page titled "Entertainment: Including Cinema & Theatre", accessed January 18, 2007. The store was selling an autograph of Jimmy Stewart; part of the description: "In black marker, he has drawn the rabbit’s elongated face, under which he has also drawn Harvey’s signature striped bow tie"
  202. Press Association, Is it a bird? Is it a plane? … No, it's the 2011 International Birdman competition, The Guardian, 14 August 2011. Description of a contestant whose costume was "inspired by movie character Carl Fredricksen from the 2009 CGI film Up," states: "She wore a grey wig, a suit and a bow-tie bought from a charity shop."
  203. "Most promotional images show him with a blue bow tie". Archived from the original on 2009-02-09. Retrieved 2008-05-18.
  204. Balina, Marina (2008). Russian Children's Literature and Culture. Routledge. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-415-97864-4. "The gentleman cat sports a bow tie".
  205. Anne Brydon, S. A. Niessen (1998). Consuming Fashion. Berg. p. 769. ISBN 978-1-85973-964-8.
  206. "marvel legends matched with build a figure". Archived from the original on 2008-06-07. Retrieved 2008-11-19. "Franklin "Foggy" Nelson: also from Guardian Devil; comes with removable suit jacket, big-ass bow-tie".
  207. "The Superman Super Site – Jimmy Olsen". Retrieved 2008-11-19."Jimmy is usually depicted as a bow tie-wearing young red-haired man".
  208. Archived 2007-01-17 at the Wayback Machine Berkeley Breathed Web site, Web page titled "Favorite Strips", Opus is wearing a red bow tie in each; according to Wikipedia article Opus the Penguin he has been known to switch to a regular tie when running for public office
  209. See any of the pictures in the Wikipedia article Penguin (comics) where he sports a bow tie, except in the 1992 movie, as the article notes
  210. Jack Point, International Catalogue of Superheroes website
  211. Image:Waylon Smithers 1.png portrays Smithers in his typical bow tie
  212. Image:Moe Szyslak.png Moe usually wears a bow tie while he's working at Moe's Tavern and often even when he's not
gollark: What if we apply *artificial* selection by killing everyone who either has too much or not enough money?
gollark: (the seriousness of my messages is inversely proportional to the quantity of ™ symbols)
gollark: (that is not a serious message)
gollark: So you admit that it can literally never fail™™™.
gollark: we live in a SOCIETY™
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