Dictionary Definition
fop n : a man who is much concerned with his
dress and appearance [syn: dandy, dude, gallant, sheik, beau, swell, fashion
plate, clotheshorse]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- a UK /fɒp /fQp/
Translations
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
- For the meanings of the acronym FOP, see FOP (disambiguation).
The fop (also known as a fribble, popinjay,
fashion-monger, or clotheshorse) is a stock
character who appears from time to time in fiction. He is a person who
makes a habit of fastidiously overdressing and putting on airs,
aspiring to be viewed as an aristocrat (if he is not
already one). A fop is also referred to as a 'beau', as in the
Restoration
comedies The
Beaux' Stratagem (1707) by George
Farquhar, The Beau
Defeated (1700) by Mary Pix, or the
(real-life and subsequently fictionalized) Regency
character of Beau
Brummell. In English,
the word fop is older, but the meaning of an overdressed,
frivolously fastidious man may not be; Shakespeare's
King
Lear contains the word, in the general sense of a fool, and before him, Thomas
Nashe, in Summer's Last Will and Testament (1592, printed
1600): "the Idiot, our Playmaker. He, like a Fop & an Ass must
be making himself a public laughing-stock." Osric in Hamlet has a great
deal of the fop's affected manner, and much of the plot of Twelfth
Night revolves around tricking the puritan Malvolio into
dressing as a fop.
One of the first full-blown appearances of the
stereotype on the
stage is Molière's well
known play from
1671, Le
Bourgeois Gentilhomme. This play takes for granted the social
structure of France at the time. Its central premise concerns M.
Jourdain, a bourgeois,
a member of the middle
class, attempting to remake himself as an aristocrat and a "gentleman". The play's
comedy comes from the
title character's ridiculous overdressing, and clueless statements.
One famous passage has Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme expressing surprise
that he has been speaking prose all his life,
unawares.
Characterizations of the fop also appear in many
Restoration
comedies, including The Relapse
(1696) by John
Vanbrugh and George
Etherege's The Man
of Mode, or Sir Fopling Flutter (1676). Vanbrugh planned The
Relapse around particular actors at Drury Lane,
writing their stage habits, public reputations, and personal
relationships into the text. One such actor was Colley
Cibber himself, who played the luxuriant fop Lord Foppington in
The Relapse.
"Fop" was widely used as a derogatory epithet to
tar
a broad range of persons by the early years of the eighteenth
century; many of these might not have been considered showy
lightweights at the
time, and it is possible that its meaning had been blunted by this
time.
In the first decade of the twentieth century,
fictional heroes began to
pose as fops in order to conceal their true activities. Sir Percy
Blakeney of The
Scarlet Pimpernel is a well known example of this tendency; Sir
Percy cultivates the image of being an overdressed and ineffectual
social butterfly, the last person anyone would imagine being
capable of dashing heroism. A similar image is cultivated by
Zorro's
secret identity, Don Diego de la Vega. This continued with the pulp
fiction and radio heroes of the 1920s and 30s and expanded with the
coming of comic books.
The fashion and socializing aspects of being a fop are present in
some interpretations of Batman's second
identity Bruce Wayne.
These became clichéd.
fop in Spanish: Petimetre
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Beau Brummel, arbiter of fashion, beau, blade, blood, boulevardier, buck, clotheshorse, clubman, clubwoman, coxcomb, dandy, deb, debutante, dude, exquisite, fashion plate,
fashionable, fine
gentleman, fribble,
gallant, jack-a-dandy,
jackanapes,
lady-killer, lounge lizard, macaroni, man-about-town,
masher, mondain, mondaine, puppy, socialite, spark, sport, subdeb, subdebutante, swell, swinger, taste-maker,
tone-setter, trend-setter