Limelight (produced lahym-lahyt)
(1) In the lighting systems of live theatre, prior to the
use of electricity, a lighting unit for spotlighting the front of the stage,
producing illumination by means of a flame of mixed gases directed at a
cylinder of lime and having a special lens for concentrating the light in a
strong beam.
(2) The light produced by such a unit (and subsequently
by lights using other technology.
(3) In theatre slang (1) a lighting unit (also clipped to
“limes”), especially a spotlight & (2) by extension, attention, notice, a
starring or central role, present fame (source of the general use of the word).
(4) The center of public attention, interest,
observation, or notoriety.
1826: The
construct was lime + light. Lime (in
this context) was from the Middle English lyme,
lym & lime, from the Old
English līm, from the Proto-Germanic līmaz, from the primitive Indo-European sley- (smooth; slick; sticky; slimy). It was cognate with the Saterland Frisian Liem (glue), the Dutch lijm, the German Leim (glue), the Danish lim (from
the Old Norse lím) and the Latin limus (mud). In chemistry, the word described any
inorganic material containing calcium (usually calcium oxide (quicklime) or
calcium hydroxide (slaked lime). In
literary or poetic use, it was used of any gluey or adhesive substance, usually
in the sense of “something which traps or captures someone” and sometimes as a
synonym for birdlime. It was used as a
verb to mean (1) to apply to some surface a coasting of calcium hydroxide or
calcium oxide (lime) & (2) to smear with birdlime or apply limewash.
Light (in this context) was from the Middle English light, liht, leoht, lighte, lyght, &
lyghte, from the Old English lēoht, from the Proto-West Germanic leuht, from the Proto-Germanic leuhtą, from the primitive Indo-European
lewktom, from the root lewk- (light). It was cognate with the Scots licht (light), the West Frisian ljocht (light), the Dutch licht (light), the Low German licht (light) and the German Licht (light) and related also to the Swedish ljus (light), the Icelandic ljós (light), the Latin lūx (light), the Russian луч (luč) (beam of light), the Armenian լույս
(luys) (light), the Ancient Greek
λευκός (leukós) (white) and the Persian
رُخش (roxš). The early uses (in
this context) all were related to the electromagnetic
radiation in the spectrum visible to the human eye (ie what we still commonly
call “light”). Typically, the human eye
can detect radiation in a wavelength range around 400 to 750 nanometers and as
scientific understanding evolved, the shorter and longer (ultraviolet light and
infrared light) wavelengths, although not visible, were also labeled “light” because,
as a matter of physics, they are on the spectrum and whether or not they were
visible to the naked eye was not relevant.
“Light” in the sense of illumination was literal but the word was also
productive in figurative and idiomatic generation (the “Enlightenment”; “leading
light”; “negative light”; “throw a little light on the problem”; “bring to
light”; “light the way” et al). Limelight
is a noun & verb, limelighting is a verb, limelighted & limelit are
adjectives and limelighter is a noun; the noun plural is limelights.
Lime (chemical formula: CaO) is composed primarily of
calcium oxides and hydroxides (typically calcium oxide and/or calcium hydroxide)
and the origin of the word lies in its early use as building mortar (because of
its qualities of sticking or adhering).
It was the interaction of lime with other substances which lent the concrete
mixed in Ancient Rome (known to engineers as “Roman concrete”) unique
properties that made it remarkably durable and long-lasting (though despite the
legend, it was no more “sticky” that other concrete using the same quantity of
lime). A critical ingredient in Roman
concrete was a type of volcanic ash called pozzolana
(abundant in the environs of Rome) which was mixed with lime and small rocks or
rubble to create a paste that could be molded into various shapes and sizes. What created uniqueness was the chemical reaction
between pozzolana and lime when the
mix was exposed to water, this creating a mineral called calcium silicate
hydrate, the source of Roman concrete’s durability and strength. Unusually, it was able to harden underwater
and for centuries resist the effects of saltwater (indeed such exposure
triggered a kind of “self repair reaction), making it ideal for building
structures like harbors and aqueducts and in a happy coincidence, the easy
accessibility of pozzolana meant Roman
concrete could be produced at a lower cost than other building materials.
The term “limelight dress” was coined to describe a garment designed to attract the eye, making the wearing the “centre of attention” in the manner of a stage performer in the limelight: Rita Ora (left), Ariel Winter (centre) and Lindsay Lohan (right) illustrate the motif. It's become something less easy to achieve because of the emergence in the past two decades of the "nude dress" and it may be that a more modest cut, if well executed, might work better for clickbait purposes, just because of the novelty. Of late, “limelight” has also been used in mainstream fashion to refer to dresses made with neon-like fabrics which resemble a color under a bright light.
Limelight was the common name for
the Drummond light (or calcium light), a lamp of then unprecedented luminosity created
by the burning of calcium oxide (lime). The
process of creating light by burning lime augment by oxygen & hydrogen had
been invented in the early 1920s and, generating an intense white light, it was
developed in 1925 for use in mining and surveying by Scottish army engineer
Captain Thomas Drummond (1797-1840) and soon adopted for lighthouses although
it became famous from the use in live theatre where directional spot-lights
were used to illuminate the principal actors on stage and although the technology
has moved on, in theatre, film & television production, catwalks etc, “limelight”
is still often used to describe both the physical lighting equipment and the
effect produced. In popular
entertainment, limelight came into use in the UK in the mid-1830s and, cheap to
produce and easily exported, were soon in use around the world, even the
military finding them useful, the army to assist the targeting of artillery (an
early example of applying technology to fire-control systems) and the navy found
they were vastly more effective than any other spotlight. Limelights remained in widespread use until
replaced by electric devices in the late nineteenth century but in some
far-flung outposts of the British Empire, they were still in use even after
World War II (1939-1945).
Lindsay Lohan (1) in the limelight, on stage with Duran Duran, Barclays Center in New York, April 2016 (left) and (2) in the glare, arriving at LA Superior Court, Los Angeles, February 2011 (right) during her "troubled Hollywood starlet" phase. Although the glare doesn’t carry quite the cachet of the limelight, Ms Lohan illustrated how the catwalk was but a state of mind, pairing a white bandage dress (it’s not clear if wearing the color the Bible associates with purity influenced the judge but channelling the fashion choice of the 24 elders in Revelation 4:4 and the pope may have helped) with a pair of Chanel 5182 sunglasses. Speculatively, it’s at least possible a strut under the limelight on the catwalk wouldn’t have had the same simulative commercial effect as the stroll to an arraignment, the the US$575 Glavis Albino dress from Kimberly Ovitz's (b 1983) pre-fall collection selling-out worldwide that very day.
From the idea of the character on stage being highlighted by the limelight came the figurative use of the phrase “in the limelight” (noted since 1877) to refer to anyone on whom attention is focused. This begat the related phrases “steal the limelight”, “bask in the limelight” & “hog the limelight”, all from the world of theatre but later adopted as required just about anywhere (in sport, corporate life etc). “In the limelight” tends to be used only positively; those who are the focus of attention for reasons such as being accused of committing crimes or some transgression which might lead to cancellation are usually said to be “in the glare”.
1970 Plymouth Hemi 'Cuda in Limelight (left) and 2023 Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat Redeye Jailbreak in Sublime (right.
Like the other manufacturers, Chrysler had some history in the coining of fanciful names for colors dating from the psychedelic era of the late 1960s when the choices included Plum Crazy, In-Violet, Tor Red, Limelight, Sub Lime, Sassy Grass, Panther Pink, Moulin Rouge, Top Banana, Lemon Twist & Citron Yella. Although it may be an industry myth, the story told is that Plum Crazy & In-Violet (lurid shades of purple) were late additions because the killjoy board refused to sign-off on Statutory Grape. Plymouth called their lime green Limelight while Dodge used Sub Lime. The lurid shades so associated with the era vanished from the color charts in the mid-1970s, not because of changing tastes but in response to environmental & public health legislation which banned the use of lead in automotive paints; without the additive, production of the bright colours was prohibitively expensive. Advances in chemistry meant that by the twenty-first century brightness could be achieved without the addition of lead so Dodge revived psychedelia for a new generation although Sub Lime became Sublime. There was still a price to be paid however, Sublime, Red Octane, Sinamon Stick and Go Mango all costing an additional US$395 while the less vivid shades listed at US$95.