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Jean Shrimpton

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Jean Shrimpton ( 1942 - )



Jean Rosemary Shrimpton (born 7 November 1942) is an English model and actress. She was an icon of Swinging London and is considered to be one of the world's first supermodels. She appeared on covers such as Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, Vanity Fair, Glamour, Elle, Ladies' Home Journal, Newsweek, and Time magazines. She starred alongside Paul Jones in the 1967 film Privilege.

Jean Shrimpton - Wikipedia

Jean Shrimpton - Fashion Model Directory


A tribute to Marilyn - MM - Part Six: Art Works

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Marilyn Monroe - Art Works



There is always interest in Marilyn Monroe.



Increasingly more and more Art Works, based on her, drawn and otherwise, have surfaced.

Here are some of them.

Please Enjoy.



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Miriam Hopkins

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Miriam Hopkins ( 1902 - 1972)



Ellen Miriam Hopkins (October 18, 1902 – October 9, 1972) was an American actress known for her versatility in a wide variety of roles. Hopkins was born in Savannah, Georgia, and raised in Bainbridge, near the Alabama border. She attended Goddard Seminary in Barre, Vermont (which later became Goddard College in Plainfield, Vermont) and Syracuse University (in New York), but apparently did not matriculate.

Miriam Hopkins - Wikipedia

Miriam Hopkins - IMDb

Cloris Leachman

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Cloris Leachman ( 1926 - )


Cloris Leachman (born April 30, 1926) is an American actress of stage, film and television. She has won eight Primetime Emmy Awards—more than any other performer—and one Daytime Emmy Award. She co-starred in the 1971 film The Last Picture Show. Leachman's longest running role was the nosy, self-centered and manipulative landlady Phyllis Lindstrom on the 1970s TV series Mary Tyler Moore, and later on the spinoff series, Phyllis. She also appeared in three Mel Brooks films, including Young Frankenstein. She had a regular role on the last two seasons of The Facts of Life portraying the character Beverly Ann Stickle. In recent years, she had a recurring role as Lois's mother Ida Gorski on Malcolm in the Middle. She also starred in the roast of Bob Saget in 2008. Leachman was a contestant on Season 7 (2008) of Dancing with the Stars, paired with Corky Ballas. At the age of 82, she was the oldest contestant to dance on the series.


Cloris Leachman - Wikipedia

Cloris Leachman - IMDb

Edie Sedgwick

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Edie Sedgwick ( 1943 - 1971)



Edith Minturn "Edie" Sedgwick (April 20, 1943 – November 16, 1971) was an American actress, socialite, fashion model and heiress. She is best known for being one of Andy Warhol's superstars. Sedgwick became known as "The Girl of the Year" in 1965 after starring in several of Warhol's short films in the 1960s. She was dubbed an "It Girl," while Vogue magazine also named her a "Youthquaker."

Edie Sedgwick - Wikipedia

Edie Sedgwick - IMDb


Photo by Andy Warhol

Happy July 4th from Marilyn Monroe

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Happy July 4th from Marilyn Monroe














































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Dany Robin

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Dany Robin ( 1927 - 1995)



Dany Robin born Danielle Robin, 14 April 1927 – 25 May 1995) was a French actress of the 1950s and the early 1960s who was married to fellow actor Georges Marchal.

She performed with Peter Sellers in The Waltz of the Toreadors and co-starred opposite Kirk Douglas in the 1953 romantic drama Act of Love.

Robin co-starred with Connie Francis, Paula Prentiss, and Janis Paige in Follow the Boys (1963). Her last leading role was the agent's wife Nicole Devereaux in Alfred Hitchcock's Topaz (1969). Hitchcock said that Robin and Claude Jade, cast as Robin's daughter, would provide the glamour in the story.

She died with her husband, Michael Sullivan, during a fire in their apartment in Paris.

Dany Robin - Wikipedia

Dany Robin - IMDb

Gina Lollobrigida

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Happy 85th B-day Today!!!



Gina Lollobrigida (born July 4, 1927) is an Italian actress who was born Luigina Lollobrigida in Subiaco, Italy.

Personal
Born: July 4, 1927 (1927-07-04) (age 85)
Subiaco, Italy
Ethnicity: Caucasian
Nationality: Italian

Body
Measurements: 94-53-90 (cm) / 37-21-35½ (inch)
Bra/cup size: C
Boobs: Natural
Height: 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in)
Body type: Average
Hair: Brunette Short, Curly

Esther Ralston

Pier Angeli

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Pier Angeli ( Anna Maria Pierangeli / 1932 - 1971 )



Pier Angeli (19 June 1932 – 10 September 1971) was an Italian-born television and film actress. Her American cinematographic debut was in the starring role of the 1951 film Teresa, for which she won a Golden Globe Award. Twenty years later, she had been chosen to play a part in The Godfather, but died before filming began.

She had romantic relationships with actors Kirk Douglas and James Dean before going on to marry Vic Damone.

Pier Angeli - Wikipedia

Pier Angeli - IMDb

RIP Marilyn - 50 years ago - Aug. 5, 1962 - her FBI Files Full of Gaps

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RIP Marilyn - 50 years ago - Aug. 5, 1962

Marilyn Monroe will always live on, in some sad ways BUT in many more happy ones...


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Code:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2181952/50th-anniversary-Marilyn-Monroes-death-Hollywood-star-feminist-masked-intelligence.html


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2180241/Marilyn-Monroe-The-magic-red-sweater-turned-Norma-Jeane-sex-symbol.html












The magic red sweater that turned 'Norma Jeane, string bean' into Marilyn Monroe the sex symbol

By Lois Banner

PUBLISHED: 16:03 EST, 28 July 2012 | UPDATED: 03:33 EST, 30 July 2012



She was discovered by chance on a wartime production line and propelled to Hollywood stardom - or so the myth goes.

But, as the 50th anniversary of her death approaches, we reveal Marilyn Monroe's 'natural beauty' was, in fact, the product of meticulous calculation. And her campaign began while she was still at school...
Typing cool: Marilyn strikes a pose in 1946. It was her 'magic red sweater' that helped catapult her into the limelight

Typing cool: Marilyn strikes a pose in 1946. It was her 'magic red sweater' that helped catapult her into the limelight

It all started with a red cardigan. The ‘sweater girl’ look, launched by Lana Turner in the 1937 film They Won’t Forget, was coming into vogue across America. But it hadn’t reached Emerson Junior High School, Los Angeles – until Norma Jeane Mortenson, or Marilyn Monroe as she was later to be known, found her own distinctive way.

Teenage girls in that era often wore a front-buttoned cardigan over a white blouse with a prim collar. Norma Jeane eliminated the blouse as well as the bra and camisole worn under it. She then took a red cardigan, turned it around, and buttoned it up the back. The sweater clung to her breasts; she called it her ‘magic sweater’.

And so began one of the most remarkable transformations in the history of Hollywood – a time-consuming and often quite inspired campaign to turn an abandoned girl, mocked by her classmates, into the sexual icon of the age.

The fact was that Norma Jeane didn’t think that she was beautiful, a point of view she retained even when she was celebrated as the most beautiful woman in the world.

Indeed, the years between the age of nine and 12 had been unhappy ones. She had already reached her adult height of 5ft 6in, making her much taller than her peers.


Flat-chested, with short and scraggly hair, she looked like a boy. Her school classmates made fun of her, calling her ‘Norma Jeane, string bean’ or ‘Norma Jeane, human bean’.

But by the summer that followed her 12th birthday, her breasts and hips had grown and she attracted boys. Realising her appeal, she devised a strategy.

After the ‘sweater’, came a pair of tight blue jeans. When the school head teacher warned her they were immodest, she wore a tight skirt instead.

Shocking the girls and intriguing the boys, she also wore a lot of make-up – a habit that would prove invaluable during her Hollywood years.

Her primping paid off. Emerson boys began walking her home and vying for her attention. When her name was mentioned in a class, the boys sometimes breathed a collective sigh. ‘Mmmm . . . ’

Even the girls noticed her, since she was winning the competition among them for boys – an important part of their culture.

As graduation approached, she was elected the school’s Oomph Girl of 1941.

Norma Jeane had other skills at school, too. She began to show an appealing wit, often directed at herself. Despite her poor grades, she was a good writer and she contributed articles to the school newspaper, including one on the ideal dream girl for men.

She often struggled to get her words out – she stuttered – but this did not end her aspirations to be an actress. She would go to the movies and then act out the roles in her bedroom, practising body movements and facial expressions in front of a mirror until she got every gesture right.

She noticed that many film actresses had previously been models, so that would be her route too: she would first be a model and then act in films.

In December 1944, she was working at the Radioplane factory where the first aerial drones were made when a film crew visited to make a training movie. David Conover, a pin-up photographer, was among them. When he saw Norma Jeane he was immediately attracted, and asked if he could photograph her.

He told her to put on a sweater, since he was taking ‘morale-boosting’ photos and the shape of her body needed to show. Needless to say, she obliged.

Within two years she was a leading West Coast pin-up model and a contract player at Twentieth Century-Fox studios. It took her six more years and a change of name to achieve stardom, but she demonstrated creativity, guts, and a major ability at manipulation in achieving it. Those early lessons at Emerson School were paying off.


Unfortunately there was sadness





An astute observer of human behaviour, Marilyn knew men liked the little-girl look, while it stirred women’s maternal feelings. But she could drop the childlike persona in a heartbeat to become the sexy Marilyn of the pin-ups.

The Hollywood fan magazines at the time were calling for a more extreme sex symbol to compete with sultry Italian actresses such as Gina Lollobrigida who were invading Hollywood.

Marilyn saw her future: she created the synthetic sex symbol which would give her all the stardom she could have wished for, but would exact a terrible price. There was little that she could do to alter her legs, too short for the fashion ideal, her hips were broad and, from some angles, she looked double-chinned.

Make-up, lighting and camera angles hid some of these deficiencies. But then it was decided that her gum lines were too visible, so she was told to lower her upper lip when she smiled.
Marilyn was told to lower her upper lip when she smiled because her gums were too visible

Marilyn was told to lower her upper lip when she smiled because her gums were too visible

She practised lowering it in front of a mirror until she got it right, but she never managed to eliminate the quivering upper lip that is apparent in her films.

During the early Fifties she had surgery to remove the bump on the end of her nose and insert a plate in her chin to give it more definition. It wasn’t wholly successful but Marilyn was also becoming masterful at self-publicity.

She went to Hollywood cocktail parties because journalists attended them, and a clever self-presentation might get a line in a gossip column.

Part of her strategy was to arrive late and make an entrance. She wore a black or bright-red dress, moulded to her body, cut very low, nearly exposing her nipples.

She felt she had to do it. ‘Going out socially,’ Marilyn wrote, ‘was the hardest part of my campaign to make good.’

Marilyn used her body to attract reporters. She frequently didn’t wear knickers, purportedly so they didn’t spoil the line of her tightly fitted dresses, but she knew it also gave men tantalising flashes of naked flesh. According to columnist Joe Hyams: ‘She would knock your knees under the table; vamp you from time to time.’

To charm journalist Jim Henaghan, she stood up and turned around so that her buttocks faced him. She asked him if her skirt was tight enough. Henaghan thought: ‘This little animal is learning.’

She was also picking up on-camera tricks. Lauren Bacall was annoyed by Marilyn’s habit of looking at her forehead rather than her eyes: looking up made the eyes seem larger.

A perfectionist, Marilyn spent hours at the make-up table. Part of the bump on her nose remained even after surgery, so she covered it. She had freckles on her skin and hair on the sides of her face that she also concealed with make-up. She put on fake fingernails to cover up the ragged edges of the ones she had bitten.

To make her lips larger and more lustrous, she applied four layers of lipstick and drew her lip line outside its natural shape.
... and the truth about THAT photo

She put Vaseline on her lips to make them look wet. It was part of what her clothes designer, William Travilla called her ‘f***-me’ look, especially when she held her lips in an O, as she often did.

She would darken the mole on her face near her mouth to draw attention to them and used eyebrow pencil to darken her eyebrows and make them heavy and straight.

‘Whitey’ Snyder, her personal make-up artist, said she knew techniques that she kept secret even from him: one was to put white make-up on her eyelids to make her eyes seem larger.

Although it could take up to three hours to get her look right, if she found the slightest flaw she would take it all off and start again.

She used special creams and often went for facials at Elizabeth Arden’s in New York. To intrigue her fans, in her early movie career she changed her shade of blonde for each film.

‘Some girls prefer to change hats,’ she said. ‘I just prefer to change my hair colour.’

That hair remained difficult. She had it straightened and then re-permed into soft curls. Her widow’s peak gave her problems, because its roots didn’t take dye well. The lock of hair that often falls casually over her eye in photos was teased into place to hide those roots.
With typical Marilyn aplomb she once said: 'I like to be really dressed up or really undressed. I don¿t bother with anything in between'

With typical Marilyn aplomb she once said: 'I like to be really dressed up or really undressed. I don¿t bother with anything in between'

After about 1949 there are no photographs of her with her naturally kinked brown hair. Being blonde had become central to who Marilyn was.

She liked dresses that were strapless or with a low V-neckline, and she wore them with dangling diamond earrings to draw attention to her bust and face. She often said she didn’t wear jewellery, but she meant necklaces.

Even then she wore pearls, a standard fashion accessory, because they have a reflective lustre that softens the face.

As she moved into her elegant phase in the mid-Fifties, she often wore black. In 1954 she said she loved to wear clinging black dresses and black gloves up to her shoulder.

It was a look that combined elegance with eroticism. The long gloves, adopted by striptease artists in the Thirties, could take time to get off.

With typical Marilyn aplomb she said: ‘I like to be really dressed up or really undressed. I don’t bother with anything in between.’

She even chose her shoes for maximum effect. After 1951, when stiletto heels arrived, Marilyn made them part of her signature style because she knew men found them sexy and they made her legs look longer.
Making of Hollywood icon: Marilyn Monroe... actress, singer and model

Making of Hollywood icon: Marilyn Monroe... actress, singer and model

Some Hollywood writers accused her of knowing nothing about fashion, but in 1952 she hit back: she was too buxom, she said, to wear Parisian fashions. Like most women, she didn’t have a boys’ figure, as did the Parisian models. In ordinary life Marilyn dressed casually: T-shirts, capri pants and pedal pushers.

When she was broke, in her younger years, she bought blue jeans at army-surplus stores, wore them into the sea, and then let them dry to the shape of her body, giving a tight fit.

That moment when she was spotted on the factory production line might have been a stroke of good fortune, but it would have happened anyway, if not that day, then on another.

Even when she was on the threshold of global fame in Hollywood, Marilyn knew how to get what she wanted.

In her own words, she summed up her approach: ‘As soon as I could afford an evening gown, I bought the loudest I could find. It was a bright-red, low-cut gown and it infuriated half the women in the room because it was so immodest.

‘I was sorry in a way to do this, but I had a long way to go, and I needed a lot of advertising to get there.’

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/ar...#ixzz22MZEot00



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Simone Renant

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Simone Renant ( 1911 - 2004 )



Simone Renant (19 March 1911 – 29 March 2004) was a French film actress. She appeared in 43 films between 1934 and 1983. She was born in Amiens, France and died in Garches, France.

Simone Renant - Wikipedia

Simone Renant - IMDb

Angie Dickinson

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Angie Dickinson ( 1931 - )



Angie Dickinson (born September 30, 1931) is an American actress. She has appeared in more than fifty films, including Rio Bravo, Ocean's 11, Dressed to Kill and Pay It Forward, and starred on television as Sergeant Suzanne "Pepper" Anderson on the 1970s crime series Police Woman.

Angie Dickinson - Wikipedia

Angie Dickinson - IMDb

Wynne Gibson

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Wynne Gibson ( 1905 - 1987 )



Wynne Gibson (July 3, 1905 – May 15, 1987) was an American actress of the 1930s.

Early in her career she had a small part in a film but had no special interest in appearing before the camera. It was the stage that interested her and she began her stage career in chorus and was soon playing leads. She toured Europe then returned to America and tried for a dramatic part but failed and returned to musical comedy.

Paramount signed her when about to film Nothing But the Truth (1929), starting her success which continued in some 50 films between 1929 and 1956 although many were B movies. Gibson was a long-time companion of former Warner Brothers actress Beverly Roberts. Gibson died in 1987 of a cerebral thrombosis in Laguna Niguel, California, after suffering an attack in the home she shared with Roberts.

Wynne Gibson - Wikipedia

Wynne Gibson - IMDb

Wynne Gibson - IBDb



Ahna Capri

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Ahna Capri ( 1944 - 2010 )



Anna Marie Nanasi (July 6, 1944 – August 19, 2010), better known by her professional name Ahna Capri, was Budapest, Hungary-born American film and television actress best known for her role as Tania (secretary of the Han) in the classic martial-arts movie Enter the Dragon.


Ahna Capri - Wikipedia

Ahna Capri - IMDb



Allyn King

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Allyn King ( 1899 - 1930 )



Allyn S. King (1899-1930) was an American Broadway actress who began her career in vaudeville and later as a Ziegfeld Follies performer. Allyn King's suicide in 1930 was the end result of her long struggle to satisfy the demands put on her by directors and producers to remain abnormally slim.

Allyn King - Wikipedia

Allyn King - IMDb

Allyn King - IBDb

Pola Negri

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Pola Negri (1897 - 1987 )



Pola Negri (3 January 1897 – 1 August 1987) was a Polish stage and film actress who achieved worldwide fame for her tragedienne and femme fatale roles from the 1910s through the 1940s during the Golden Era of Hollywood film. She was the first European film star to be invited to Hollywood, and became a great American star. She also started several important women's fashion trends. She is known for being one of the most popular stars of the silent film era, and her varied career included work as an actress in silent and talking films, theater, and vaudeville; as a singer and recording artist; as an author; and as a ballerina.


Pola Negri - Wikipedia

Pola Negri - IMDb

Anita Stewart

Anouk Aimée

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Anouk Aimée ( 1932 - )



Anouk Aimée (born 27 April 1932) is a French film actress, having appeared in 70 films since 1947, when she began her film career at age 14. In her early years she studied acting and dance besides her regular education. Although most of her films were French, she also made a number of films in Spain, Great Britain, Italy and Germany, along with some American productions.

Among her films are Federico Fellini’s La Dolce Vita (1960), after which she was considered a "rising star who exploded" onto the film world. She subsequently acted in Fellini's 8 1/2 (1963), Jacques Demy’s Lola (1963), George Cukor’s Justine (1969), Bernardo Bertolucci’s Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man (1981) and Robert Altman’s Ready to Wear (1994). Because of her acting in A Man and a Woman (1966), for which she was Oscar nominated, the film "virtually reignited the lush on-screen romance in an era of skeptical modernism," and brought her international fame.

She was noted for her "striking features" and beauty, and considered "one of the hundred sexiest stars in film history," according to a 1995 poll conducted by Empire Magazine. In her style of acting, she often portrayed a femme fatale with a melancholy aura. In the 1960s, Life magazine wrote that "after each picture her enigmatic beauty lingered" in the memories of her audience, and called her "the Left Bank's most beautiful resident."

She won the 1967 Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Drama and the Award for Best Actress at the 1980 Cannes Film Festival. In 2002 she received an honorary César Award, France's national film award.

Anouk Aimée - Wikipedia

Anouk Aimée - IMDb

Bebe Daniels

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Bebe Daniels ( 1901 - 1971 )



Bebe Daniels (January 14, 1901 - March 16, 1971) was an American actress, singer, dancer, writer and producer.

She began her career in Hollywood during the silent movie era as a child actress, became a star in musicals like 42nd Street, and later gained further fame on radio and television in Britain. In a long career, Bebe Daniels made over 230 films.


Bebe Daniels - Wikipedia

Bebe Daniels - IMDb

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