Deeply, deeply scary readings by the ever-maternal Bette, Olivia, and Joan.
This One's for the Children
Labels:
1960s,
Bette Davis,
fashion,
glamour,
hair,
Hollywood Palace,
Joan Crawford,
Olivia de Havilland
Is it Over Yet?
It has most definitely been One Of Those Weeks.
In which case, all we can do is channel Thombeau, and try to Keep it together, Minnelli!
Labels:
1970s,
Elizabeth Taylor,
hair,
interiors,
Liza Minnelli,
smoking
From Mrs. Miniver to Auntie Mame
Oh, how we wish there was preserved video of this performance!!! As much as we adore Roz Russell, and revere the film, one can only imagine the superbly silky heights that Miss Greer Garson achieved when she took over the role from Russell on Broadway. Imagine that deliciously plummy voice reeling off those one liners! Garson's appearance on What's My Line? during her run as Mame Dennis is as close as we'll get to having been there. Listen to the wild crowd reaction as Garson enters, in costume!
Garson won rave reviews for her performance; and, from the looks of this photograph taken a few years later, she and Russell maintained a mutual admiration society of Mames (who mingle with Merle).
Labels:
1950s,
1960s,
Broadway,
furs,
glamour,
Greer Garson,
Merle Oberon,
Rosalind Russell,
smoking,
theatre,
What's My Line
Very Vera
Apparently, if you were named "Vera" in the Golden Age of Hollywood, you were guranteed fabulosity, if not superstardom.
Labels:
1940s,
1950s,
1960s,
furs,
glamour,
gloves,
hats,
Jean Louis,
Vera Hruba Ralston,
Vera Miles,
Vera Zorina,
Vera-Ellen
The Private World of Dorothy Dandridge
"Dorothy Dandridge, circa 1962, seems to be a woman who knows, not only where she has been, but precisely where she is going... Gone are most of the traits of nervousness and uncertainty that many observed in earlier years..."
Within a year of this lavishly illustrated, fawningly-written article, Dorothy Dandridge would be bankrupt, her beautiful home foreclosed upon, and her brain-damaged daughter placed in state care. In less than four years, increasingly despondent and addicted to both pills and alcohol, Dorothy Dandridge would be dead from an overdose of antidepressants. She was 42 years old.
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