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Steve McQueen’s Gray Plaid Suit as Thomas Crown

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Steve McQueen as Thomas Crown in The Thomas Crown Affair (1968)

Last Friday would have been Steve McQueen’s 83rd birthday. To celebrate Steve and honor an early request from a BAMF Style follower…

Vitals

Steve McQueen as Thomas Crown, millionaire criminal mastermind

Boston, June 1968

Film: The Thomas Crown Affair
Release Date: June 19, 1968
Director: Norman Jewison
Costume Designer: Alan Levine
Tailor: Douglas Hayward

Background

Steve McQueen was racking up several iconic tough guy looks by 1968, with both The Great Escape and Bullitt under his belt. Now, as millionaire playboy Thomas Crown, he would be playing more of a romantic lead and would need the wardrobe to match.

On many other actors, McQueen’s Thomas Crown suits would look too dandy or foppish, but McQueen pulls off these nearly over-the-top looks with gusto. His attitude gives his character a cheekier side that says, “I’ll wear whatever I want just to tell you I’m filthy rich.”

Mister Crew described Thomas Crown’s look as giving off a “sartorial bravado”, as well as providing an excellent breakdown of his suits in the film. It’s only fitting that, if the film had to be remade, the remake starred Pierce Brosnan, who likely exited the womb wearing a sharp tailored three-piece suit.

What’d He Wear?

McQueen’s legendary first suit worn as Thomas Crown is a medium gray three-piece suit with a muted glen plaid check pattern. The gray suit has hints of blue, complemented by the blue lining, shirt, and tie. Saville Row’s Douglas Hayward, a “tailor to the stars” during this era that also lent his hand to a few Roger Moore suits during the later years of his James Bond tenure, created the suit with classic British tailoring in mind, giving McQueen a look very contemporary for swinging London.

The jacket is single-breasted with slim (but not too slim) notch lapels and a two-button front. The jacket is very distinctive with Hayward’s sartorial touches, including a long vent on each side and fishtail-styled cuffs with one button on each sleeve.

Always be the best dressed guy at work… especially if you’re moonlighting as a bank robber.

The fit of the jacket, and most suit jackets in the film, is very complimentary to McQueen’s build, with roped sleeveheads and a well-suppressed waist to present a strong silhouette.

There is a straight flapped hip pocket on each side and a dove gray silk handkerchief rakishly puffed in his breast pocket, known as an “Astaire” style for obvious reasons.

Welcome home, Mr. Crown.

Crown’s waistcoat is, like most of his in the film, single-breasted with no lapels. It fastens down the front with five dark horn buttons. The cut is straight across the bottom, as was fashionable at the time, especially among fictional spies as seen in Thunderball and on Get Smart. The straight, high cut emphasizes McQueen’s leg length, making him appear slightly taller than his 5’10” height. The vest also has two lower hip pockets and a blue silk lining to match that of his jacket.

When we first meet Crown, he is checking his gold Patek Philippe hunter-case pocket watch, a simple but elegant timepiece worn on a thick gold chain through the fourth button of his waistcoat in the “double Albert” style with a fob drop. The fob itself is a gold Phi Beta Kappa fraternity key. As a Dartmouth graduate, this would make Crown a chapter brother of Daniel Webster and Nelson Rockefeller.

This has a lot more class to it than pulling out your iPhone during a meeting just to check the time.

McQueen takes a smoke break during production in Cambridge Cemetery.

Crown wears flat front suit trousers with a medium-high waist that appropriately rises to just under the bottom of the waistcoat, presenting a clean “gig line” straight down the waistcoat and the trouser fly.

The trousers have either a fitted waistband or side adjuster tabs, which would be a reasonable choice given the suit’s English tailoring. They have frogmouth front pockets and plain-hemmed bottoms with a short break.

Crown sports rather unique shoes, a pair of black calf leather semi-brogue derby shoes with single lace eyelets at the top of the high vamps and perforated cap toes. The single lace is tied at the top of the vamp, making the shoe look longer and presenting a loafer-like effect. He appears to be wearing them with black dress socks.

This unique pair of shoes would later make a return appearance with one of his dark navy suits.

Crown wears a silky sky blue shirt with a large spread collar and double (French) cuffs, fastened with large round mother-of-pearl cufflinks.

Crown wears a French blue twill-ribbed silk tie, knotted with a dimpled half Windsor knot.

Persol sunglasses were a McQueen staple both in real life and as Thomas Crown, specifically the Persol 714 folding model with tortoise frames and blue-tinted lenses custom made for McQueen by optician Dennis Roberts. Fans can pick up their own pair at various sites online, including EyeGoodies. However, these will typically put a bite on your wallet.

Custom-tinted sunglasses are a nice way of saying to the world, “I specifically chose my manner of avoiding eye contact.”

For the final touch, Crown dons a pair of drab slate-blue leather gloves when handling his ill-gotten gains in the cemetery.

For that extra BAMF touch, have a set of gloves on hand for dirty money transactions.

Go Big or Go Home

What to do after a long day of working and/or arranging a multi-million dollar bank robbery?

Get an extra chilled, extra dry martini and sit back, relaxing with a cigar.

Many guys prefer to store beer in their bar fridge, but Steve McQueen takes it up a notch and has a fully-prepared dry martini waiting for him.

Crown drives a “mason black” 1967 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow fixed head coupe. The Rolls, chassis #CRX2672, was a left-hand drive model ordered by Hollywood producer Jerry Bresler with enhancements such as a lower steering column, Firestone whitewall tires, electric aerial, electric windows, Sundym glass, air conditioning, a driver’s door mirror, a hazard warning device, a companion box between the seats, and inertia-reel safety belts in the front seats. Naturally, Crown has a set of personalized Massachusetts plates: “TC 100”.

How to Get the Look

Tailored by the legendary Doug Hayward, this distinctive suit looks damn good Steve McQueen, and it could be tempting to make a copy of your own down to the last cuff button. However, the best lesson to take from Thomas Crown’s distinctively detailed gray plaid suit is to find what fits and flatters you—both your physique and your personality.

Steve McQueen in The Thomas Crown Affair (1968)

Do Yourself a Favor and…

Check out the movie.

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