From Here To Eternity is on TCM. (Working from home today.) Frank Sinatra is getting ready for a night on the town, and he’s covering himself with talcum powder.
Was talcum powder used as (I assume) an anti-perspirant? I’m guessing it was, as there was no exposition in the film. What’s the straight dope?
Powdered talc can absorb moisture and oils and have an astringent effect to some extent and is included as an ingredient in some anti-perspirant products. Example: Sanex Dermo Invisible Anti-Perspirant Deodorant. Ingredients: Aqua, Aluminium Chlorohydrate, Glycerin, PPG-15 Stearyl Ether, Steareth-2, Cyclopentasiloxane, Steareth-21, Parfum, Talc, Dimethicone, BHT. Axe Dark Temptation Antiperspirant Deodorant: Aluminum Zirconium Tetrachlorohydrex GLY(17.8%), Cyclopentasiloxane, PPG-14 Butyl Ether, Stearyl Alcohol, Hydrogenated Castor Oil, PEG-8 Distearate, Talc, Fragrance (Parfum), BHT — Note that everything except the first one are considered inactive ingredients.
However the stuff you see athletes rubbing all over their hands to fight sweaty palms is in fact magnesium carbonate, not to be confused with talc.
In the 1950s you could obtain liquid aluminum chloride from the drugstore and apply that. Men would spritz it on their T-shirts before going out.
Errol Flynn would apply cocaine to his pubic hair as an aphrodisiac. I’ve never read where Frank Sinatra did that. Instead he used something he learned from George Raft: jewelry in the bottom of the desert dish.
I use it, and it’s mostly corn starch these days, not talc. There are different granularities. My wife likes the J&J stuff, I prefer CVS that seems to be somewhat coarser. Corn starch is a very effective odor absorbent.
I do not recognize the exact product in the clip, but I doubt it; it resembles (possibly scented) talcum powder that he used not necessarily as an anti-perspirant but to absorb excess moisture after his shower, then you can see him towel off the mess.
I don’t know if it absorbs odors but it can block your sense of smell temporarily, or possibly long term if you snort enough of it. I wouldn’t recommend using it for that purpose for a variety of reasons. Especially if you have any plane trips or border crossings coming up.
I want to make it clear that I am asking for a factual answer to why Frank Sinatra was using talcum powder in the scene. Note that I’m assuming talcum powder. Without expostulation, it’s confusing 70 years on.
Sorry for the skyjack Johnny. Yes, people did use talcum powder to absorb sweat. IIRC in To Kill a Mockingbird Scout describes how “ Ladies bathed before noon, after their three-o’clock naps, and by nightfall were like soft teacakes with frostings of sweat and sweet talcum.”
Talcum powder, made of talc or cornstarch, is not an antiperspirant according to the dictionary definition since it doesn’t reduce the amount of perspiration, it just absorbs the moisture and odors. But many people use the word to mean anything that reduces the odor of perspiration.
Having worked on an anti-perspirant brand for several years – that’s exactly the case. Many (maybe even most) people use the terms “anti-perspirant” and “deodorant” interchangeably, even though they are two different functions. And, in the U.S., any product which is sold as an anti-perspirant is considered to be an OTC drug, by the FDA.
So… Is Frank Sinatra, in the scene, using the powder as an anti-perspirant, or deodorant? Was this a ‘known thing’ in 1941 (when the film takes place)?
Not as a “true” anti-perspirant (which actually serves to block sweat glands, thus reducing or eliminating perspiration), but as several have noted, it may have had the effect of absorbing some perspiration. It was also probably scented, which could have had a deodorant function.