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John Mollo (1931–2017)

Author of Uniforms of the American Revolution in Color

12+ Works 255 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

John Mollo was born in London in 1931. He was educated at Charterhouse, and did his National Service with the Light Infantry. Since then his film credits as costume designer/military advisor have included The Charge of the Light Brigade, The Adventures of Brigadier Gerard, Nicholas and Alexandra, show more Barry Lyndon, Star Wars (for which he received an Academy Award), Alien, The Empire Strikes Back, Outland, Gandhi (for which he received a second Academy Award), Greystoke, King David, Revolution, Cry Freedom, Chaplin, Sharpe (TV), Jungle Book and Horatio Hornblower (TV). show less

Works by John Mollo

Associated Works

Star Wars [1977 film] (1977) — Costume Designer — 748 copies, 9 reviews
The Empire Strikes Back [1980 film] (1980) — Costume Designer — 576 copies, 5 reviews
Gandhi [1982 film] (1982) — Costume Designer — 306 copies, 4 reviews
The Charge of the Light Brigade [1968 film] (1968) — Historical Adviser — 42 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
It is ridiculously difficult to determine what the American army wore during the American Revolution. For a military miniaturist or miniature wargamer working in the period, one is faced with a choice: paint 'em up the way they were supposed to look, or put 'em in a mix of civvies hunting shirts and bits of uniform.

Mollo's handy and inexpensive little book gives a snapshot into what revolutionary soldiers-American, British, Hessian, Tories and Indians were supposed to look like. It is show more broader and more inclusive than many other sources. It has errors, but honestly the entire record-based on captured deserters, or uniforms ordered and delivered to the States (but perhaps not the soldiers)-is open to question. Mollo's book is a great beginner's resource that can later be filled out with additional, and more costly, resources. show less
An overview of uniform details, shapes and the influences surrounding their evolution from the 17th century to the eve of WWI. Largely concerned with the great armies of Europe. A lot of interesting things could be learned from this book. It has numerous photographs of artifacts and uniforms that really help the reader appreciate the changes. It was written by an expert for other enthusiasts however, as much of the terminology and some of the background history is assumed to be common show more knowledge. Not the greatest writer in the world and the text can get very tedious and repetitive when discussing minor changes in a short period of time for all the branches of the army for all the countries. Interesting enough over all for military enthusiasts. show less
½
Love the photos, rather than drawings. Really nice for military nuts, but those of us who like looking at 'fashion' also appreciate this book.

Would have been nice to have seen some horse furniture, but that's probably a minor quibble.

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Statistics

Works
12
Also by
4
Members
255
Popularity
#89,876
Rating
4.2
Reviews
3
ISBNs
14
Languages
1

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