When Austin Powers: International Man Of Mystery came out in 1997, the satirical spy movie introduced the world not just to lasting catchphrases like “Yeah, baby, yeah” and “Oh, behave,” but also its loud, kitschy late-1960s universe devised by production designer Cynthia Charette. Though it wasn’t until the franchise’s second film, Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, released 25 years ago on June 8, that the “shagadelic” world was fully realized by production designer Rusty Smith (who went on to work on Austin Powers in Goldmember).
If you can look beyond the narrative ridiculousness and some of the references to midcentury style in the Austin Powers series, there’s some legit modernist design education to be had, thanks to set decorators Bob Kensinger (International Man of Mystery) and Sara Andrews (The Spy Who Shagged Me and Goldmember). Take, for instance, the of Studio65’s , which resembles an oversize pair of lips, throughout the franchise. The avant-garde experimental collective of Italian architects and artists drew inspiration from Salvador Dali’s mid-1930s painting, , when they designed the loveseat for a fitness center in Milan in 1970. The sofa was produced by Italian furniture manufacturer Gufram and originally named Marilyn after the gym’s lipstick-loving owner, Marilyn Garosci, but it now goes by Bocca. It has since become a Pop art staple and was reissued by in 2004.
Though the Bocca sofa doesn’t play as key a role in the films as Austin’s round bed with its shiny satin sheets, , which finds Mike Myers’s Powers perched on the bright-red, sculptural loveseat while his spy partner Felicity Shagwell (Heather Graham) lays seductively along its back. It’s amazing how one piece of furniture can suggest sex, comedy, and playfulness, all in a quick glimpse.
Elsewhere in Austin’s shag pad, the furnishings and fixtures pay a somewhat chaotic tribute to the Swinging Sixties, with Andy Warhol-inspired Pop art, , and kaleidoscopic walls that echo the designs of noted psychedelic and Pop artist . At closer inspection, there are also some lasting modernist pieces sprinkled throughout. A red , created by industrial designers George Nelson and Irving Harper for in 1956, for example, sits next to a chrome lamp made either by or a of ’60s and ’70s atomic-style lighting fixtures.
All of that stands in stark contrast to Dr. Evil’s lair, which sits inside an active volcanic island. While Evil’s seat of choice was Danish designer Hans Wegner’s 1960 —which is also said to have been inspired by Surrealist paintings from the ’30s, in this case artworks by Picasso—the villain’s chair in the second movie is a sort of souped-up version of (also known as the 6250) by G Plan, a U.K. furniture manufacturer that really came into its own in the postwar modernism boom. Though the 6250 was arguably as the chair used by Ernst Stavro Blofeld in the 1967 James Bond movie You Only Live Twice, the design was first introduced to the public in 1962, when it was dubbed “the world’s most comfortable chair.” Dr. Evil’s version of the swivel and rock wing chair is cartoonishly overblown, with a high V-back and to enable dramatic turns.
Evil’s goons (and son) surround him in similar that are absurd, but also fit in with the sleek material palette of other popular chairs of the era, including the aforementioned Ox chair, the cult-classic , or Danish architect Arne Jacobsen’s , among others. While the Austin Powers films are often written off as a series of crude farces—and, to be clear, they are—they’re also visual documents suggesting a sense of time, place, and comedy. The franchise’s “shagadelic” universe was over the top, but it created its own aesthetic and language that pulled from modernist design classics.
Top photo courtesy Getty Images, from “Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me” (1999)