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#Robert Gottschalk
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PRIDE is timeless
sources for photographs:
Bluebirds - Kitty Ely class of 1887 (left) and Helen Emory class of 1889, Mount Holyoke students, via vintagephoto.livejournal.com. Source for image.
Cats - Nusch Éluard and Sonia Mossé. Paris. 1935 Photographer: Man Ray. Source for image.
Chipmunks - Source for image.
Deer - Source for image.
Dogs - Source for image.
Foxes, dancing - Photograph by Thurston Hopkins, Tango in the East End, London, 1954. Source for image.
Foxes, dapper - Source for image.
Frogs - Photograph from a collection called “Hidden in the Open,” curated by Trent Kelley. Source for image.
Giraffes - “Tough Threads.” Ken Russell photographed Teddy Girls in London -1950s. Source for image.
Hedgehogs - Chuck Rowland & Harry Hay (Apr. 7, 1912 – Oct. 24, 2002), 1983. © Stephen Stewart, via @onearchives. Harry Hay was the visionary behind the queer liberation movement in the U.S. With his background in leftist politics, Hay merged the revolutionary idea of homosexuals as an “oppressed cultural minority” with the fundamentals of organizing. (verbiage by lgbt_history… read more here).
Lions - I found this image on the internet in 2017 and have not been able to relocate it since.
Octopus - Circa 1970 by Donna Gottschalk. Source for image.
Otters - Source for image.
Polar Bears - Source for image.
Rabbits, mm - Source for image.
Rabbits, ww - Source for image.
Raccoons - Photographed by Kay Tobin, circa 1977. Source for image.
Red Pandas - Mariana Romo Carmona and June Chan (b. June 6, 1956), New York City, 1988. Photo © Robert Giard Foundation. (read more about these activists here)
Seagulls - Source for image.
Skunks - Photograph from the etsy shop The Vintage Image Boutique.
Sloths - Castro Street Fair, San Francisco, California, August 17, 1980. Photo © Paul Fusco. (read more about this street fair here)
Snow Leopards - Gay Pride Day, NYC 1980 / © Stanley Stellar.
The Affectionate Animal series is a project I have worked on for years, illustrating vintage photographs of queer couples. All paintings are by me, Erin Darling. Here is a link to the series on my site.
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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Gambling Lady (Archie Mayo, 1934) Cast: Barbara Stanwyck, Joel McCrea, Pat O'Brien, C. Aubrey Smith, Claire Dodd, Robert Barrat, Arthur Vinton, Phillip Reed, Philip Faversham, Robert Elliott, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Willard Robertson, Huey White. Screenplay: Ralph Block, Doris Malloy. Cinematography: George Barnes. Art direction: Anton Grot. Film editing: Harold McLernon. Music: Bernhard Kaun. Costume design: Orry-Kelly. Barbara Stanwyck is invariably the best reason to watch any of her movies, and never more so than in Gambling Lady. Oh, her supporting cast is just fine: Joel McCrea is her reliable leading man and Claire Dodd makes the most of her rich-bitch foe. And the story, though familiar enough in its outlines and predictable enough in its resolution, keeps your attention, partly because the Production Code hadn't yet put a choke hold on depictions of the seamier side of life. Stanwyck plays Jennifer "Lady" Lee, an honest woman in a shady milieu: She's a professional gambler who refuses to cheat. It's a familiar Stanwyck character: tough but vulnerable, and she gets many chances to show both sides throughout the film. Her best moment, perhaps, comes at the film's climax, when the rich bitch triumphs, forcing Lady to lie to save McCrea's character, the wealthy Garry Madison, whom Lady has married, from jail. So we get Stanwyck putting on a façade of cynical laughter as she pretends she has never really loved Madison but was just in it for the money. We who know the truth can see the tears welling up inside Lady, but Stanwyck successfully keeps up the front before she makes her exit and collapses in grief. This is screen acting at its best, so that even if the plotting is contrived and the situation trite, Stanwyck wins us over, making more of the scene, in fact of the whole movie, than it really deserves.
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docrotten · 1 year
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DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (1920) – Episode 160 – Decades Of Horror: The Classic Era
“Damn It! I don’t like your tampering with the supernatural.” What if he just tinkers with it a bit? Join this episode’s Grue-Crew – Daphne Monary-Ernsdorff, Doc Rotten, and Jeff Mohr – as they make the Decades of Horror’s fourth encounter of a strange kind with Robert Louis Stevenson’s story as depicted in Paramount’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920).
Decades of Horror: The Classic Era Episode 160 – Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel! Subscribe today! And click the alert to get notified of new content! https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
ANNOUNCEMENT Decades of Horror The Classic Era is partnering with THE CLASSIC SCI-FI MOVIE CHANNEL, THE CLASSIC HORROR MOVIE CHANNEL, and WICKED HORROR TV CHANNEL Which all now include video episodes of The Classic Era! Available on Roku, AppleTV, Amazon FireTV, AndroidTV, Online Website. Across All OTT platforms, as well as mobile, tablet, and desktop. https://classicscifichannel.com/; https://classichorrorchannel.com/; https://wickedhorrortv.com/
Dr. Henry Jekyll experiments with scientific means of revealing man’s hidden, dark side and releases a murderer from within himself.
  Director: John S. Robertson 
Writers: Robert Louis Stevenson (novella, 1886); Clara Beranger (scenario) (as Clara S. Beranger); Thomas Russell Sullivan (play) (uncredited)
Selected Cast:
John Barrymore as Dr. Henry Jekyll / Mr. Edward Hyde
Brandon Hurst as Sir George Carew
Martha Mansfield as Millicent Carew
Charles Lane as Dr. Lanyon
Cecil Clovelly as Edward Enfield
Nita Naldi as Miss Gina
Louis Wolheim as Music Hall Proprietor
Alma Aiken as Extra (uncredited)
J. Malcolm Dunn as John Utterson (uncredited)
Ferdinand Gottschalk as Old Man at table in music hall (uncredited)
Julia Hurley as Hyde’s Landlady with Lamp (uncredited)
Jack McHugh as Street Kid – Raises Fist to Mr. Hyde (uncredited)
Georgie Drew Mendum as Patron in music hall (uncredited)
Blanche Ring as Woman at table with old man in music hall (uncredited)
May Robson as Old woman outside of music hall (uncredited)
George Stevens as Poole – Jekyll’s Butler (uncredited)
Edgard Varèse as Policeman (uncredited)
The Classic Era Grue Crew takes in another silent scream with this 1920 version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, starring John Barrymore. The makeup-lite early versions of Hyde soon develop into something far more terrifying, augmented by Barrymore’s excellent acting and use of body language. Throw in a quality supporting cast and one of the freakiest dream sequences the crew’s ever seen, and you have a top-notch silent scream!
To check out the other Decades of Horror episodes focused on Stevenson’s novella check these out:
DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (1931) – Episode 122 – Decades of Horror: The Classic Era
DR. JEKYLL & SISTER HYDE (1971) – Episode 175 – Decades of Horror 1970s
THE STRANGE CASE OF DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (1968) – Episode 71 – Decades of Horror: The Classic Era
If silent films are your thing, check out these episodes of Decades of Horror: The Classic Era focused on silent screams:
THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI (1920) – Episode 13 
NOSFERATU (1922) – Episode 21
THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (1925) – Episode 42
THE CAT AND THE CANARY (1927) – Episode 60
HÄXAN (1922) – Episode 79
PHANTOM CARRIAGE (1921) – Episode 85
THE GOLEM (1920) – Episode 99
FAUST (1926) – Episode 145
At the time of this writing, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is available to stream from Tubi, Amazon Prime, Hoopla, Kanopy, Screambox, and Crackle. The film is also available as a DVD from multiple sources. Unfortunately, the Kino Classics Blu-ray is no longer available.
Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror: The Classic Era records a new episode every two weeks. Up next in their very flexible schedule, as chosen by Doc, is The Alligator People (1959) featuring Lon Chaney Jr., effects makeup by Dick Smith and Ben Nye, and the cinematography of the legendary Karl Struss!! Put your hip-waders on for this trip; they’re going to the swamp!
Please let them know how they’re doing! They want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans: leave them a message or leave a comment on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel, the site, or email the Decades of Horror: The Classic Era podcast hosts at [email protected] To each of you from each of them, “Thank you so much for watching and listening!”
Check out this episode!
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kunstplaza · 11 days
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brookstonalmanac · 3 months
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Birthdays 7.3
Beer Birthdays
Tom Kehoe (1964)
Christian Ettinger (1973)
Max Finance (1985)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Dave Barry; writer, humorist (1947)
M.F.K. Fisher; writer (1908)
Mississippi John Hurt; blues singer (1893)
Franz Kafka; Czech writer (1883)
Tom Stoppard; playwright (1937)
Famous Birthdays
Robert Adam; Scottish architect (1728)
Amalia Aguilar; Cuban-Mexican film actress and dancer (1924)
Rae Allen; actress, singer, and director (1926)
Evelyn Anthony; English author (1928)
Paul Barrere; rock guitarist (1948)
Sándor Bortnyik; Hungarian painter (1893)
Laura Branigan; rock singer (1957)
Betty Buckley; actor (1947)
Vince Clarke; English singer-songwriter, keyboard player (1960)
George M. Cohan; actor, singer, songwriter (1878)
Michael Cole; actor (1945)
Johnny Coles, American trumpeter (1926)
John Singleton Copley; artist (1738)
Richard Cramer; actor (1889)
Tom Cruise; actor (1962)
William Henry Davies; Welsh poet and writer (1871)
Lisa De Leeuw; adult actress (1958)
Jesse Douglas; mathematician (1897)
Pete Fountain; clarinetist (1930)
Andy Fraser; English singer-songwriter and bass player (1952)
Thomas Gibson; actor (1962)
Charlotte Perkins Gilman; sociologist, writer, feminist (1860)
Ramón Gómez de la Serna; Spanish author and playwright (1888)
Albert Gottschalk; Danish painter (1866)
Larry "Bozo the Clown" Harmon; clown (1925)
Charlie Higson; English actor, singer (1958)
Philip Jamison; artist (1925)
Leos Janacek; Czech composer (1854)
Elle King; singer, songwriter, and actress (1989)
Alfred Korzybski; Polish-American mathematician (1879)
Johnny Lee; singer and guitarist (1946)
Doris Lloyd; English actress (1896)
Nicholas Maxwell; English philosopher (1937)
Didier Mouron; Swiss-Canadian painter (1958)
Olivia Munn; actor, comedian (1980)
Connie Nielsen; Danish-American actor (1965)
Tim O'Connor; actor (1927)
Carla Olson; singer-songwriter (1952)
Baard Owe; Norwegian-Danish actor (1936)
Eddy Paape, Belgian illustrator (1920)
Susan Penhaligon; English actress (1949)
Stephen Pearcy; singer-songwriter, and guitarist (1959)
Ralph Barton Perry; philosopher (1876)
Susan Peters; actress (1921)
Jethro Pugh; Dallas Cowboys DT (1944)
François Reichenbach; French film director (1921)
Ken Russell; English film director (1927)
George Sanders; Russian-born British actor (1906)
Richard Mellon Scaife; businessman (1932)
Harrison Schmitt; geologist, astronaut (1935)
Ruth Crawford Seeger; composer (1901)
Michael Shea; author (1946)
Kurtwood Smith; actor (1943)
Yeardley Smith; actor (1964)
Jan Smithers; actor (1949)
Poly Styrene; British musician (1957)
Kenzie Taylor; adult actress (1990)
Tommy Tedesco; guitarist (1930)
Norman E. Thagard; astronaut (1943)
Aaron Tippin; singer-songwriter, guitarist (1958)
Guillaume Cornelis van Beverloo; Belgian artist (1922)
John Verity,; English guitarist (1949)
Johnnie Wilder, Jr.; R&B/funk singer (1949)
Montel Williams; television host (1956)
Patrick Wilson; actor (1973)
Edward Young; English poet, dramatist (1683)
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brookston · 1 year
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Holidays 6.7
Holidays
Anniversary of the Memorandum of the Slovak Nation (Slovakia)
Battle of Arica Day (Chile)
Beatles Day
Betamax Day
Daniel Boone Day (Kentucky)
Father’s Day (Lithuania; Switzerland)
Festival of All Possible Worlds
Flag Day (Peru)
Fleur-de-Lis Day
International Supply Chain Specialists Day
International Tourettes Awareness Day
Journalist Day (Argentina)
June Bug Day
Kataklysmos (Flood Festival; Cypress)
Land O’Lakes Day
Lime Tree Day (French Republic)
Love Island Day (UK)
Mother’s Day (France; French Antilles)
National Alexandra Day
National Benjamin Day
National CAPHPACH Day (a.k.a. National Citizens Against Police Harassment Police Against Citizen Harassment Day)
National Elias Day
National Goonies Day
National Journalist Day (Argentina)
National Military Working Dog Day (Australia)
National Oklahoma Day
National RV Day
Prince Day
Prince Joachim Day (Denmark)
Sette Giugno (Malta)
Shirone Takogassen (Kite Fighting Festival; Japan)
Trial Technology Day
Union Dissolution Day (Norway)
VCR Day
Vivien Kellems Memorial Day
World Caring Day
World Day of Birth Rights
World Hemochromatosis Day
World Swift Day
Write to Your Father Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Bartender Day
National Chocolate Ice Cream Day
World Food Safety Day
World Poha Day
1st Wednesday in June
Clean Air Day (Canada) [1st Wednesday]
Global Exhibitions Day [1st Wednesday]
Global Running Day (a.k.a. National Running Day) [1st Wednesday]
National Tailors’ Day [1st Wednesday]
Power of Youth Day (UK) [1st Wednesday]
Independence Days
Erephisian Technocracy (f.k.a. Orbis; Declared; 2005) [unrecognized]
Norway (from Sweden, 1905)
Feast Days
Amazing Mumford (Muppetism)
Antonio Maria Gianelli (Christian; Saint)
Captain Jack Sparrow Impersonation Day (Pastafarian)
Chief Seattle (Lutheran Church)
Colmán of Dromore (Christian; Saint)
Commemoration Day of St John the Forerunner (Armenian Apostolic Church)
Damien Hirst (Artology)
Edtors’ Day (Church of the SubGenius)
Gottschalk (a.k.a. Godeschalc, Prince of the Western Vandals; Christian; Saint)
Landulf of Yariglia (Asti; Christian; Saint)
Lanfranc (Positivist; Saint)
Ludi Piscatorii (Ancient Rome)
Meriadoc (Christian; Saint)
Meriasek (Christian; Saint)
Paul I of Constantinople (Christian; Saint)
Paul Gauguin (Artology)
Robert of Newminster (Christian; Saint)
Marie-Thérèse de Soubiran La Louvière (Christian; Blessed)
Pioneers of the Episcopal Anglican Church of Brazil (Episcopal Church (USA))
Smilin’ Ed (Muppetism)
Vestalia begins (until 15th; Old Roman festival to Vesta, goddess of the hearth, home & family)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Butsumetsu (仏滅 Japan) [Unlucky all day.]
Perilous Day (13th Century England) [19 of 32]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 26 of 60)
Premieres
Alexander’s Ragtime Band, recorded by Arthur Collins & Byron G. Harlan (Song; 1911)
Captain Fantastic and the Brown First Cowboy, by Elton John (Album; 1975)
City Slickers (Film; 1991)
Cloak & Dagger (TV Series; 2018)
Dark Phoenix (Film; 2019)
The Day of the Jackal, by Frederick Forsyth (Novel; 1971)
Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood (Film; 2002)
Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead (Film; 1991)
El Dorado (Film; 1967)
Face/Off (Film; 1997)
Fields of Gold, by Sting (Song; 1993)
Ghostbustrs (Film; 1984)
The Goonies (Film; 1985)
Grease (Broadway Musical; 1972)
Green Lantern: Emerald Knights (WB Animated Film; 2011)
The Hasty Hare (WB LT Cartoon; 1952)
High School Confidential (Film; 1958)
Horse’s Mouth, by Joyce Cary (Novel; 1950)
I Am Mother (Film; 2019)
The Johnny Cash Show (TV Series; 1969)
Jungle Fever (Film; 1991)
Kim Possible (Animated TV Series; 2002)
The Mummy (Film; 1999)
Perfect (Film; 1985)
Post, by Björk (Album; 1995)
The Producers (Film; 2002)
Purple, by Stone Temple Pilots (Album; 1994)
Rabbit Stew and Rabbits Too! (WB LT Cartoon; 1969)
The Rock (Film; 1996)
A Satire of the Three Estates, by David Lyndsay (Play; 1552)
The Secret Life of Pets 2 (Animated Film; 2019)
Simple Man, by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (Song; 1970)
Squatter’s Rights (Disney Cartoon; 1946)
Vincent, recorded by Don McLean (Song; 1971)
X-Men: Dark Phoenix (Film; 2019)
Today’s Name Days
Anita, Eoban, Gottlieb, Robert (Austria
Valeri, Valeria (Bulgaria)
Antun, Radoslav, Robert (Croatia)
Iveta (Czech Republic)
Jeremias (Denmark)
Robert, Robi (Estonia)
Robert, Robin, Roope, Suvi (Finland)
Gilbert (France)
Anita, Gottlieb, Raimund, Robert (Germany)
Panagis, Sebastian, Zinais (Greece)
Róbert (Hungary)
Geremia, Landolfo, Roberto, Sabiniano (Italy)
Arnis, Gaida, Gijs (Latvia)
Lukrecija, Radvydė, Ratautas, Robertas (Lithuania)
Robert, Robin (Norway)
Antoni, Ciechomir, Jarosław, Lukrecja, Paweł, Robert, Roberta, Wiesław, Wisław (Poland)
Teodot (România)
Róbert (Slovakia)
Isaac, Roberto (Spain)
Robert, Robin (Sweden)
Theodot (Ukraine)
Keenan, Melody, Nidia, Nydia, Nylene, Whitney (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 158 of 2024; 207 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 3 of week 23 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Huath (Hawthorn) [Day 24 of 28]
Chinese: Month 4 (Ding-Si), Day 20 (Bing-Shen)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 18 Sivan 5783
Islamic: 18 Dhu al-Qada 1444
J Cal: 8 Sol; Oneday [8 of 30]
Julian: 25 May 2023
Moon: 84%: Waning Gibbous
Positivist: 18 St. Paul (6th Month) [Lanfranc]
Runic Half Month: Odal (Home, Possession) [Day 13 of 15]
Season: Spring (Day 79 of 90)
Zodiac: Gemini (Day 17 of 32)
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karingottschalk · 2 years
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The Media History Digital Library Is a Great Place to Research the History of Film, Radio & Television Broadcasting & Recorded Sound
The Media History Digital Library Is a Great Place to Research the History of Film, Radio & Television Broadcasting & Recorded Sound
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letterboxd-loggd · 3 years
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Girl Missing (1933) Robert Florey
August 2nd 2021
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garadinervi · 5 years
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Fritz Gottschalk / Gottschalk+Ash, Cas classiques d’histoire et de la médecine: Robert Schumann, Hoffman-La Roche, Montréal, 1967 [Canada Modern Archive]
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kleanmagik · 6 years
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simplysummers · 3 years
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i'm kinda blind and very interested in history, could you list the authors and titles of the books on the post "Calling out to the AmRev fandom. I need your help." thanks
Hey there, anon! I’d be more then happy to do that for you!
These are the majority of my amrev books, sparing a few tucked away under my bed, and maybe a couple I just missed off the shelf, the majority of them are amrev bios, with a few historical fictions and stories thrown in for good measure.
I’ve tried to priorities them all into certain categories of person/event/time, and they are listed left-to-right below each photo! Hope this helps!
General events:
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Founding Fathers (by Captivating History)
The Founding Fortunes (by Tom Shachtman)
The Glorious Cause (by Robert Middlekauff)
Valiant Ambition (by Nathaniel Philbrick)
Redcoats and Rebels (by Christopher Hibbert)
General Events:
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(From left to right)
The British are coming (by Rick Atkinson)
Rebels & Redcoats (by Hugh Bicheno)
1776 (by David McCullough)
Scars of independence (by Holger Hoock)
General events/key figures:
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American Revolutions - a continental history 1750 - 1804 (By Alan Taylor)
The Drillmaster of Valley Forge - The Baron de Steuben and the making of the American army (by Paul Lockhart)
Revolutionary Characters (by Gordon S. Wood)
George Washington’s secret six - the spy ring that saved the American revolution (by Brian Kilmeade and Don Yaeger)
Key figures (Laurens, Arnold and Hale.):
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Duty and Inclination (by Rebecca Dupont)
John Laurens and the American revolution (Gregory D. Massey)
Benedict Arnold (by Robert Zubrin)
The Martyr and the Traitor (by Virginia DeJohn Anderson)
Alexander Hamilton centric:
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Alexander Hamilton (by Ron Chernow)
Alexander Hamilton - Adultery and Apology (forwarded by Robert P Watson)
Hamilton and Peggy - a revolutionary friendship (by L.M Elliott)
Hamilton’s choice (by Jack Casey)
George Washington centric:
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Washington - A life (by Ron Chernow)
Washington’s Crossing (by David Hackett Fischer)
Adopted Son - Washington, Lafayette and the friendship that saved the revolution (by David A. Clary)
Martha Washington - An American life (by Patricia Brady)
Eliza Schuyler Hamilton Centric:
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(The second and third book on this list are supposed to be historical fiction, but just take the accuracies with a grain of salt, if you will)
The Founding Mothers (by Thomas Jacobs)
I, Eliza Hamilton (by Susan Holloway Scott)
My Dear Hamilton (by Stephanie Dray and Laura Kamoie)
Marquis De Lafayette Centric:
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Hero of Two Worlds (by Mike Duncan)
Lafayette (by Harlow Giles Unger)
Lafayette comes to America (by Louis R. Gottschalk (this book was a bitch to find in Europe, I tell ya.))
The Marquis - Lafayette reconsidered (by Laura Auriccho)
Political texts:
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Common Sense, Rights of Man and other essential writings (by Thomas Paine)
The federalist papers (by John Jay, James Madison and Alexander Hamilton)
The penguin guide to the American constitution (by Richard Beeman)
The Declaration of Independence - with short biographies of its signers. (No designated author.)
Key figures (Hamilton, Adams and Jefferson.):
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The Patriots (by Winston Groom)
Hamilton (by Tony Williams)
Thomas Jefferson - the art of power (by John Meacham)
John Adams (by David McCullough)
Aaaand that’s all I have on hand for now, Anon! I sure hope this helped you out! (I’m also blind as hell so I struggle to see authors and titles on photos alone also! So I get you completely!)
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kemetic-dreams · 4 years
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                              African rhythmic retention
The Black Codes outlawed drumming by slaves, which meant that African drumming traditions were not preserved in North America, unlike in Cuba, Haiti, and elsewhere in the Caribbean. African-based rhythmic patterns were retained in the United States in large part through "body rhythms" such as stomping, clapping, and patting juba dancing.
In the opinion of jazz historian Ernest Borneman, what preceded New Orleans jazz before 1890 was "Afro-Latin music", similar to what was played in the Caribbean at the time.A three-stroke pattern known in Cuban music as tresillo is a fundamental rhythmic figure heard in many different slave musics of the Caribbean, as well as the Afro-Caribbean folk dances performed in New Orleans Congo Square and Gottschalk's compositions (for example "Souvenirs From Havana" (1859)). Tresillo (shown below) is the most basic and most prevalent duple-pulse rhythmic cell in sub-Saharan African music traditions and the music of the African Diaspora.
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Tresillo is heard prominently in New Orleans second line music and in other forms of popular music from that city from the turn of the 20th century to present."By and large the simpler African rhythmic patterns survived in jazz ... because they could be adapted more readily to European rhythmic conceptions," jazz historian Gunther Schuller observed. "Some survived, others were discarded as the Europeanization progressed."
In the post-Civil War period (after 1865), African Americans were able to obtain surplus military bass drums, snare drums and fifes, and an original African-American drum and fife music emerged, featuring tresillo and related syncopated rhythmic figures.
This was a drumming tradition that was distinct from its Caribbean counterparts, expressing a uniquely African-American sensibility. "The snare and bass drummers played syncopated cross-rhythms," observed the writer Robert Palmer, speculating that "this tradition must have dated back to the latter half of the nineteenth century, and it could have not have developed in the first place if there hadn't been a reservoir of polyrhythmic sophistication in the culture it nurtured.
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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Greta Garbo and John Barrymore in Grand Hotel (Edmund Goulding, 1932) Cast: Greta Garbo, John Barrymore, Joan Crawford, Wallace Beery, Lionel Barrymore, Lewis Stone, Jean Hersholt, Rafaela Ottiano, Ferdinand Gottschalk, Robert McWade, Purnell Pratt. Screenplay: Béla Balász, William Absalom Drake, Edgar Allan Woolf, based on a novel by Vicki Baum and a play by William Absalom Drake. Cinematography: William H. Daniels. Art direction: Cedric Gibbons. Film editing: Blanche Sewell. Costume design: Adrian. Music: Charles Maxwell The criticism most often made of Grand Hotel is that its performances are hammy. Greta Garbo's face, even in medium shots, is never at rest, eyebrows arching, nostrils flaring, lips curling and pouting. John Barrymore poses shamelessly, always managing to find a way to lift his chin the better to display his celebrated profile. Joan Crawford, whose best feature was her eyes, manages to open them so wide you'd think she was playing opposite an optometrist instead of Wallace Beery and the Barrymore brothers. One conventional explanation for all of this preening and camera-hogging is that it's inherent to an all-star cast in which every star wants to shine brightest. Another is that all of the stars had been in silent films, where the absence of sound puts a premium on telegraphing emotions visually, and 1932 was still early enough that actors weren't fully accustomed to letting the dialogue do the work. But I think director Edmund Goulding deserves most of the blame. Compare, for example, the performance given by Garbo under the direction of George Cukor four years later in Camille: She has learned to let the dialogue and the camera do most of the work, so the tics and mannerisms have vanished. Cukor also directed the Barrymore brothers in Dinner at Eight just a year after Grand Hotel, and while their hamming is still a bit excessive, Cukor knows how to integrate it into another all-star ensemble. And no director got better performances out of Crawford than Cukor did in her sharply contrasting roles in The Women (1939) and A Woman's Face (1941). But I come not to praise Cukor or really to bury Goulding, except to note that for many years, Grand Hotel was the only best picture Oscar winner without a corresponding nomination for its director. Still, it's a very entertaining movie, cramming a lot of characters into a small space and providing some real intrigue and even action -- it's the only film I can recall in which someone is beaten to death with a telephone. It looks good, too, for its age: Cedric Gibbons's art deco sets are spiffy and Adrian's gowns and negligees and frocks are sexy.
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Queer Artists and Activists pt.1
Keith Harings
American pop and graffiti artist, 1980s
Robert Mapplethorpe
American photographer, 1970s
Andy Warhol
American film director, visual artist and photographer, 1960s
Frida Kahlo
Mexican painter, 1930s
Robert Rauschenberg
American painter and graphic artist, 1950s
Felix Gonzalez-Torres
Cuban visual artist, 1980s
David Hockney
English painter, printmaker, designer, and photographer, 1960s
Catherine Opie
American fine art photographer, 1980s
Lucian Freud
British painter, 1940s
Beauford Delaney
American modernist painter, 1930s
James Baldwin
American novelist, poet, and activist, 1940s
Mickalene Thomas
African-American visual artist, 1990s
Zanele Muholi
South African artist, photographer and visual activist, 1990s
Leigh Bowery
Australian performance artist and fashion designer, 1980s
Donna Gottschalk
American photographer, 1970s
Francis Bacon
British painter, 1920s
Leonor Fini
Argentinian-Italian surrealist painter, designer and illustrator, 1930s
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tabloidtoc · 3 years
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People, May 3
Cover: Prince William and Prince Harry: Brothers United in Grief
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Page 3: Chatter -- Steven Yeun on being asked about the Oscars never having had an Asian American Best Actor nominee before, Jessica Biel on her and Justin Timberlake's kids Silas and Phineas bonding, Viola Davis on finding success later in life, Justin Bieber on growing from previous drug use and other mistakes, John Stamos on understanding why the Olsen twins Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen didn't return to Fuller House, Catherine Zeta-Jones on her and husband Michael Douglas discouraging their kids from pursuing acting
Page 4: 5 Things We're Talking About -- Courteney Cox puts her inner Monica on display, there's a bubble tea shortage, Downton Abbey returns, Indiana Jones chooses wisely, Serena Williams aces a TV deal
Page 6: Contents
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Page 8: The Academy of Country Music Awards -- Carrie Underwood, CeCe Winans
Page 9: Mickey Guyton, Thomas Rhett, Maren Morris and her husband Ryan Hurd, Elle King showed off her growing baby bump on the red carpet with pal Miranda Lambert
Page 10: Stars on Set -- Adam Driver sported a pair of statement glasses as he biked around Rome while filming the fashion biopic House of Gucci, Patrick Dempsey stayed in character while filming the thriller series Devils in Rome, Gabrielle Union flashed a peace sign as she left the L.A. set of the upcoming reimagined Cheaper by the Dozen
Page 11: Nicole Kidman embodied Lucille Ball while shooting the new Aaron Sorkin film Being the Ricardos, Reese Witherspoon brought her dog Minnie Pearl to work while filming the next season of The Morning Show in L.A., Anya Taylor-Joy wore a black jumpsuit to film a Tiffany & Co. commercial under NYC's Manhattan Bridge, Niall Horan and British pop star Anne Marie goofed off in a vintage convertible while shooting a music video in Essex, England
Page 12: StarTracks -- Pretty Little Liars star Brant Daugherty and actress wife Kim welcomed their first child together -- a son named Wilder David, Saweetie performed at the Triller Fight Club: Jake Paul vs. Ben Askren boxing match in Atlanta, Christian Bale showed off his newly shaved head during a run on the beach in Sydney where he's filming Thor: Love and Thunder, The X-Files stars Gillian Anderson and David Duchovny reunited in a selfie shared on Instagram with her dog Stella who photobombed the longtime friends
Page 14: Jennifer Lawrence and her husband Cooke Maroney made a rare public appearance together to grab an early dinner in NYC, Ricky Martin performed at the Latin American Music Awards in Sunrise, Florida, Julia Roberts as the new ambassadress for luxury brand Chopard
Page 17: Scoop -- Controversy after Colton Underwood comes out
Page 18: Pete Davidson's romance with Bridgerton's Phoebe Dynevor
Page 19: Heart Monitor -- Ashley Benson and G-Eazy back on?, Christian Siriano and Brad Walsh divorcing, Harry Connick Jr. and Jill Goodacre happy anniversary, Travis Barker and Kourtney Kardashian heating up
Page 23: Scarlett Johansson on life and love in lockdown
* Baby Boom -- J Balvin and Valentina Ferrer are expecting a baby together, Tan and Rob France on the way to being parents through a surrogate
Page 25: Ken Jeong fighting the pandemic and Asian hate
* Scott Foley on his big new moves
Page 26: Open House -- Jimmy Fallon's quirky and colorful NYC penthouse
Page 29: Wedding -- Raven Gates and Adam Gottschalk -- after postponing their wedding three times, the Bachelor in Paradise couple tie the knot in an intimate ceremony
Page 30: Passages, a Harry Potter star dies at 52 -- acclaimed British actress Helen McCrory, who played Narcissa Malfoy, died of cancer at her home, surrounded by a wave of love from friends and family, said her husband Damian Lewis
Page 31: Anguish and renewed pleas for change after a fatal traffic stop -- yet another unarmed Black man, Daunte Wright, is killed by a police officer in Minneapolis, sparking more protests nationwide
* Why I Care -- as chairman of the Motion Picture Television Fund (MPTF), award-winning producer Jeffrey Katzenberg helps raise millions to support colleagues in the entertainment industry
Page 32: Stories to make you smile -- a baby girl and her puppy double up on cuteness, a 12-year-old raises money to buy laptops for kids in need
Page 35: People Picks -- Shadow and Bone
Page 36: Home Economics, One to Watch -- Kung Fu's Olivia Liang
Page 37: Things Heard & Seen, Life in Color with David Attenborough
Page 38: The Mitchells vs. the Machines, Couples Therapy
Page 39: A Black Lady Sketch Show, Eric Church -- Heart & Soul, Q&A with Chelsea Frei
Page 41: Books
Page 42: Cover Story -- Prince William and Prince Harry united in grief -- after a difficult year apart, the brothers come together to honor their grandfather Prince Philip
Page 50: Jennifer Lopez and Alex Rodriguez -- why they couldn't make it work -- after four years together, the power couple are officially split. What went wrong, and what's next for the stars
Page 52: Vanished: Help Us Find These Kids -- the families of these missing children desperately hope to find them, and authorities could be just one clue away from bringing them home
Page 59: Tom Jones -- life is more precious every day -- the music legend opens up about healing after losing his wife of 59 years to cancer, and why he never wants to slow down
Page 62: Julianna Margulies -- what I know now -- from a tumultuous childhood to fame and fortune (and crushing on George Clooney along the way), the wife, mom and Emmy winner, now out with a memoir, reflects on her lucky life
Page 66: Cindy McCain -- love, loss and life after John -- three years after John McCain's death, his widow shares the ups and downs of life at his side, and how she's finally coming into her own
Page 70: Michael B. Jordan -- I'm in a great place -- halfway into his reign, the Sexiest Man Alive is living his action-movie dream, and he's in love
Page 75: Why I'm Grateful for the Vaccine -- a double dose of destiny -- their 1955 polio vaccinations made the local news. Now they're married, and celebrating their COVID-19 vaccines
Page 77: Mother's Day Gift Guide -- celebrity moms choose perfect presents to give (and get) -- Kate Hudson
Page 78: Ayesha Curry
Page 80: Amanda Kloots
Page 83: Spring's Big Jewelry Trend -- beaded pieces are everywhere right now
Page 88: One Last Thing -- Elizabeth Perkins
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brookstonalmanac · 1 year
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Birthdays 7.3
Beer Birthdays
Tom Kehoe (1964)
Christian Ettinger (1973)
Max Finance (1985)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Dave Barry; writer, humorist (1947)
M.F.K. Fisher; writer (1908)
Mississippi John Hurt; blues singer (1893)
Franz Kafka; Czech writer (1883)
Tom Stoppard; playwright (1937)
Famous Birthdays
Robert Adam; Scottish architect (1728)
Amalia Aguilar; Cuban-Mexican film actress and dancer (1924)
Rae Allen; actress, singer, and director (1926)
Evelyn Anthony; English author (1928)
Paul Barrere; rock guitarist (1948)
Sándor Bortnyik; Hungarian painter (1893)
Laura Branigan; rock singer (1957)
Betty Buckley; actor (1947) Vince Clarke; English singer-songwriter, keyboard player (1960)
George M. Cohan; actor, singer, songwriter (1878)
Michael Cole; actor (1945)
Johnny Coles, American trumpeter (1926)
John Singleton Copley; artist (1738)
Richard Cramer; actor (1889)
Tom Cruise; actor (1962)
William Henry Davies; Welsh poet and writer (1871)
Lisa De Leeuw; porn actor (1958)
Jesse Douglas; mathematician (1897)
Pete Fountain; clarinetist (1930)
Andy Fraser; English singer-songwriter and bass player (1952)
Thomas Gibson; actor (1962)
Charlotte Perkins Gilman; sociologist, writer, feminist (1860)
Ramón Gómez de la Serna; Spanish author and playwright (1888)
Albert Gottschalk; Danish painter (1866)
Larry "Bozo the Clown" Harmon; clown (1925)
Charlie Higson; English actor, singer (1958)
Philip Jamison; artist (1925)
Leos Janacek; Czech composer (1854)
Elle King; singer, songwriter, and actress (1989)
Alfred Korzybski; Polish-American mathematician (1879)
Johnny Lee; singer and guitarist (1946)
Doris Lloyd; English actress (1896)
Nicholas Maxwell; English philosopher (1937)
Didier Mouron; Swiss-Canadian painter (1958)
Olivia Munn; actor, comedian (1980)
Connie Nielsen; Danish-American actor (1965)
Tim O'Connor; actor (1927)
Carla Olson; singer-songwriter (1952)
Baard Owe; Norwegian-Danish actor (1936)
Eddy Paape, Belgian illustrator (1920)
Susan Penhaligon; English actress (1949)
Stephen Pearcy; singer-songwriter, and guitarist (1959)
Ralph Barton Perry; philosopher (1876)
Susan Peters; actress (1921)
Jethro Pugh; Dallas Cowboys DT (1944)
François Reichenbach; French film director (1921)
Ken Russell; English film director (1927)
George Sanders; Russian-born British actor (1906)
Richard Mellon Scaife; businessman (1932)
Harrison Schmitt; geologist, astronaut (1935)
Ruth Crawford Seeger; composer (1901)
Michael Shea; author (1946)
Kurtwood Smith; actor (1943)
Yeardley Smith; actor (1964)
Jan Smithers; actor (1949)
Poly Styrene; British musician (1957)
Tommy Tedesco; guitarist (1930)
Norman E. Thagard; astronaut (1943)
Aaron Tippin; singer-songwriter, guitarist (1958)
Guillaume Cornelis van Beverloo; Belgian artist (1922)
John Verity,; English guitarist (1949)
Johnnie Wilder, Jr.; R&B/funk singer (1949)
Montel Williams; television host (1956)
Patrick Wilson; actor (1973)
Edward Young; English poet, dramatist (1683)
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