#The Discotheque Affair
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text

MFU Scrapbook | Page 4.1
FIDDLING AROUND: David McCallum takes a job as a bass player in a nightclub used by Thrush as a front for storing files in an episode of "The Man From U.N.C.L.E." at 9 p.m. Friday, May 6, channels 5, 10, 20, and 25.
#The Man from U.N.C.L.E.#David McCallum#Illya Kuryakin#The Discotheque Affair#1960s#MFU scrapbook#original post
39 notes
·
View notes
Text
did they really have to sit on napoleon making those noises as he tries to get his arm out of his cast aslfkskfk
#illya looked into it#sandy looked uncomfortable#same girl same aslgjd#tmfu tv#the discotheque affair
2 notes
·
View notes
Note
Really weird question but I'm new to the series and you seem like a pro so maybe you can help me..
Is there an uncle episode which includes one of those wild 60s dance parties that are in almost every movie or series from that time? You know, with all those women go go dancing all over the place haha
i haven't seen all of the series yet, so i'm not completely an expert on this unfortunately 😭 but if i remember correctly the season 2 episode "the discotheque affair" has a scene like that!! hope this helps :]
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
carver/oakes slow burn enemies to lovers 24k
1 note
·
View note
Text
More women from UNCLE >:) So this one I kinda based on ‘The Discotheque Affair’ but instead of a bass player, Illya is a go-go dancer meant to keep tabs on Napoleon. While Napoleon is supposed to be getting intel, she’s become distracted by the floor show. Aftermath under the cut <3
#art#illya kuryakin#napoleon solo#tmfu#tmfu tv#napollya#the man from uncle#muncle#the man from uncle tv#my art
411 notes
·
View notes
Text
It was the mid-1980s when Paul Toh came of age as a gay man, decades before smartphones and dating apps made sex a lot more accessible right at your fingertips. Toh has been diagnosed with HIV since 1989.
Now semi-retired with his own business distributing antiretroviral therapy medication and HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), the 59-year-old said that in those days, cruising in public parks, toilets, and back alleys of dirty shophouses along pre-cleanup Singapore River for sex was par for the course.
Unsurprisingly, cruising in public made gay men easy targets for police officers. “They started going to these cruising grounds undercover, with the explicit intention of entrapping and arresting gay men,” Toh added.
Police raids in nightlife establishments with gay clientele also became common, with prominent gay discotheque Niche having its liquor license withdrawn by the police in 1989 and the Rascals incident of 30 May 1993, in which multiple patrons were arrested for not having their NRICs on them. This came to be remembered by veteran activists as Singapore’s Stonewall.
Fear about the spread of AIDS was part of the reason why police intensified their clamp down on queer spaces. In April 1987, Singapore experienced its first AIDS-related death. And one year later, the Director of Public Affairs of the Singapore Police Department said in a Straits Times article that “homosexual activities have been strongly linked to the dreaded AIDS disease,” making it an “added reason in the public interest for police to disallow homosexuals to convert places licensed for entertainment into places where they can congregate.”
Iris’ Work of Fighting Stigma
76-year-old health advisor Iris Verghese was among the first health workers to rise to the occasion when Singapore reported its first HIV/AIDS cases.
“I knew just as little about HIV/AIDS as everyone else,” said the retired nurse, who first joined Middle Road Hospital, a now-defunct treatment centre for sexually transmitted diseases, in 1974. As part of her job, Verghese was tasked with contact tracing people who had sexually transmitted infections.
The job brought Verghese to brothels and nightclubs in Geylang’s red-light district, which meant she was no stranger to serving society’s Others with kindness.
“A lot of it has to do with my faith.”
“I thought about my role models like Jesus and Mother Teresa—they didn’t care what illness you had. If they could hang out with people with leprosy, then who am I to refuse to care for those with HIV/AIDS?”
Verghese’s work is well-documented, and everyone has given her the accolades she deserves—from President Halimah Yacob to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Singapore to the Straits Times, which named her an everyday hero in 2019.
Plague, a 15-minute short film by Singaporean filmmaker Boo Junfeng, captures the emotional gravity of the care work performed by Verghese and health workers like herself.
The emotionally-stirring film is inspired by Verghese’s work with HIV/AIDS patients in the ’80s and offers a look into the life of Jamie, a patient who stopped coming to the clinic for treatment and counselling.
In the film’s climax, set in the patient’s HDB flat, Verghese tries to dissuade Jamie from inflicting internalised stigma. Jamie insists on using disposable plastic cups and utensils and cleaning every surface he touches for fear of passing the virus to his loved ones.
Wanting to prove that HIV/AIDS is not transmissible through saliva, Verghese takes Jamie’s plastic cup and drinks from it. She then hands him a regular glass, beckoning for him to drink from it, only for him to swipe it away, breaking the glass and cutting himself in the process.
Thus comes the true test of Verghese’s dedication to her profession as she steels herself to the drastically heightened risk. Now that her patient is bleeding, she is dealing no longer just with saliva, but with blood carrying the virus.
In our interview, Verghese recalled many incidents like these. One that stuck with me was her counselling session with Singapore’s first HIV patient, a young gay professional, in 1985. “As I listened to him and gave him a hug, he broke down and cried,” she said. “He said he felt so good afterwards.”
Safe Sex Outreach in the 80s
“Things were very different in the ’80s and ’90s,” said Professor Roy Chan, Founding President of Action for AIDS Singapore (AfA). AfA is a non-government organisation founded in 1988 to fight HIV/AIDS infection in Singapore.
“There was no internet then. When we set up AfA, we had to rely on word of mouth, phone calls, faxes, pagers, and so on. Mobilisation was not as easy then, but we overcame the obstacles we faced. It was very much more hands-on in those days,” Chan recalled.
Chan set up AfA as a non-governmental organisation in 1988 to respond to the needs of people living with HIV/AIDS, regardless of their sexual orientation or gender identity, as well as to advocate for greater action and awareness around HIV/AIDS.
AfA was also one of the first community groups in Singapore that served the needs of LGBTQ+ individuals—namely men who have sex with men—disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS.
“Back then, people didn’t have as much access to the internet as we do today, meaning that accurate information on HIV/AIDS was much harder to come by, making education efforts vital,” Chan recalled. “On the flip side, no internet meant the gay nightlife scene was more vibrant than what it is today.”
Since the gay community in the 1980s and 1990s did not have the internet and mobile phone apps to meet other people online, they had to go to physical spaces to fulfil their need for connection, whether it was nightlife establishments or cruising grounds.
Gay clubs were hence crucial in AfA’s outreach programs on safe sex practices back in the ’80s—even if it meant risking the possibility of police raids.
Back then, there were very few places in Singapore where gay men felt safe enough to gather in abundance, making gay clubs a viable hub for outreach and education.
AfA’s outreach efforts endure today in the form of the Mobile Testing Van initiative on weekends. The van, parked outside popular gay nightlife spots in Singapore, aims to bring HIV testing closer to the public, bridging the fear and stigma of walking into a stand-alone clinic to get tested.
The Consequence of Outreach
The people brave enough to put themselves out there to serve a larger cause were but a small minority, especially given the cultural milieu of the time.
“There was so much that was unknown about HIV/AIDS even among the medical community, much less the general public,” said Verghese.
“Even at Middle Road Hospital, two doctors resigned, and twenty-five nurses asked to be transferred out.”
AfA’s awareness campaigns and fundraiser drives drew a lot of publicity—and no doubt some backlash.
Still, beneath all the headlines and the star power lent by high-profile celebrity allies was the silence surrounding individual HIV/AIDS cases.
“It was all very hush-hush. People didn’t want to talk about it. No one wanted to know who died of AIDS,” Verghese shared when I asked if the atmosphere in the 90s was similar to that depicted in films and drama series such as The Normal Heart and Pose.
The shows portrayed the HIV/AIDS crisis in the disease’s epicentre in New York as being a time of deaths and countless funerals attended by surviving gay men.
One exception to this veil of silence was Paddy Chew, the first Singaporean person to come out publicly as being a person living with HIV/AIDS.
Chew—well-known for his one-man autobiographical play Completely With/Out Character—told Verghese and her husband that he wanted no crying at his funeral.
“He asked me to arrange his funeral such that his ashes will be thrown into the sea from a Singapore Armed Forces boat,” said Verghese. She and Chew’s close friends were instructed to be dressed in their party best, with helium balloons that were to be released out at sea.
“There was one helium balloon that drifted away from the other balloons. To me, that felt like it was Paddy’s soul saying goodbye to us one last time.”
A Tale of Two HIV Diagnoses
Perhaps by coincidence—or not, since Verghese was one of the very few nurses dedicated to caring for HIV/AIDS patients at the time—Toh’s then-partner was also one of Verghese’s patients.
“My then-partner Freddie and I handled our HIV diagnoses very differently, but of course, we also came from very different backgrounds and life experiences,” said Toh.
“I found out about my status because an ex-lover of mine had come down with pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP). I flew to Sydney for a diagnosis so that I wouldn’t be registered in the local system here if I was found to be positive.”
On the other hand, Freddie found out about his HIV-positive status because he was a regular blood donor. Not only was his diagnosis inevitably recorded in the national registry, but Freddie also ran into legal trouble. He was charged in court for false disclosure of his sexual activity.
“Because of how the entire trial turned out, Freddie was sentenced to imprisonment for twice the expected duration. It affected his entire outlook in life, feeling like he was being framed by a bigger power with an agenda, with the whole world against him,” said Toh, who cared for Freddie until he passed in 2008.
Toh, on the other hand, took his diagnosis as an opportunity to re-evaluate his life and make the most of the eight years that the doctor told him back in 1989 he had left to live.
“When I received my diagnosis, the only thing in my mind was this: it is the quality of life that matters, not the quantity.” And so, the two spent the next few years of their lives travelling the world, making their remaining years as meaningful as they could be.
Anything for a Chance at Life
Maximising his remaining years did not stop at travel for Toh. Having managed to get his hands on antiretroviral therapy in Sydney in the form of azidothymidine (AZT), he went on to look for more effective forms of medication while the technology was being developed in real-time. Toh wanted to help other HIV patients like himself.
In 1994, Toh joined the Asia Pacific Network of People with HIV/AIDS (APN+), a regional network advocating for the improvement of the lives of people with HIV/AIDS in the Asia-Pacific region, later becoming a Board member and secretariat.
“North America and Europe were progressing swiftly in their battle against HIV/AIDS thanks to the work of activists there putting pressure on their governments and the medical community to channel funding towards the research and development of suitable treatment for HIV/AIDS,” said Toh.
“In Asia, however, it’s a different story. We had to be street smart in our advocacy while also looking elsewhere for allies.”
This meant looking to donors in the West who could be persuaded to recognise the importance of HIV/AIDS advocacy in Asia.
“I was very lucky to have the opportunity to be one of the first few Asians who had access to HAART, said Toh.
HAART (Highly active antiretroviral therapy) is a triple-combination of antiretroviral drugs discovered in 1996 by Professor David Ho. Toh had been invited to attend the 11th International Conference on AIDS in Vancouver, Canada, where the discovery of this triple cocktail was announced.
Within three months of beginning HAART treatment in 1996, Toh saw his health improving tremendously, with his CD4 count—a measure for the immune system of PLHIV—increasing exponentially and his viral load becoming undetectable within the fourth month.
Although Toh already had a supply of free antiretroviral medication from his healthcare provider in Sydney, he continued to look elsewhere for alternative sources for patients who were unable to afford the patented medication.
“Unlike Taiwan, Hong Kong, and South Korea, where medication for HIV/AIDS was provided to patients for free, Singapore was the only Asian Tiger which did not do so,” said Toh.
“Meanwhile, pharmaceutical companies in developing countries like Brazil, India, and Thailand were manufacturing their own generic antiretroviral medication in spite of patent laws, making it more affordable.”
While still not free, MOH announced in 2020 that HIV medication would become subsidised.
Singapore’s Very Own ‘Buyers Club’
With patented HIV/AIDS medication in the ’80s continuing to be inaccessible to many who needed it, buyers clubs—similar to the one featured in the 2013 film Dallas Buyers Club—would soon emerge worldwide, including Singapore.
“The funny thing was that Australia had easy access to HIV/AIDS medication, so there was a lot of stock available in Sydney,” said Verghese. A family vacation down under in 1987 turned into an informal research trip for her to network and gather the information that she needed to perform her job optimally.
During her trip, she met HIV researcher Dr David Cooper, who brought her to Albion Street Centre (now known as The Albion Centre), which specialises in HIV/AIDS management.
Through her newfound contacts, Verghese managed to get her hands on some of the unused stocks of medication in Sydney back to Singapore for her support group.
“We even got the help of the Singapore Airlines flight attendants to pool together their unused baggage allowance to bring this medication back,” she recounted with a laugh.
Antiretroviral medication was not the only asset that Verghese brought back. She learned a lot about the virus from the professionals she met in Sydney, allowing her to move faster than the national response and gather the information needed to tend to her patients.
A Ground Up Initiative
“George Yeo was actually very impressed with what we were doing,” recounted Verghese. “He wanted to meet with the community to learn more about our efforts and arranged a closed-door meeting with us.”
The meeting was the culmination of months of sending letters to Yeo, the Minister of Health at the time. The dialogue session was held to discuss the government’s rule that mandated the bodies of AIDS sufferers to be buried or cremated within twenty-four hours of dying.
This rule was finally lifted in December 2000, after four years of advocacy by AfA.
They argued that the policy was outdated, having been implemented in the mid-1980s when hardly anything was known about HIV/AIDS.
“I think we’ve certainly had to prove ourselves as an organisation over the years,” Chan said. “There might have been concerns among some who thought of us as a gay rights organisation, or misconceptions that AfA worked solely on issues that concern gay people.”
“But we’ve proven ourselves over the years to be a serious and effective organisation tackling HIV/AIDS and sexual health with clear metrics of success, and the results and continued support from the government speak for themselves,” added Prof Chan.
Toh, who served as AfA’s Executive Director from 2007-2009, concurs.
“Actually, not many people know this, but MOH has been quite supportive of AfA over the years. Even during my term, they would hold closed-door discussions with us, intently wanting to work with us on eliminating HIV/AIDS,” said Toh. He reckoned that MOH did not want to be publicly seen as supporting something considered by society as ‘morally corrupt’ no matter how beneficial it is to wider society.
The Fruits of Our Predecessors’ Labour Are Not Handed on a Silver Plate
The history of HIV/AIDS and its role in fomenting community-building among the LGBTQ+ community has always been a topic of fascination for me.
I can only imagine what it must have been like to see everyone in your social circles and communities succumbing, one by one, to an unknown disease.
Covid-19 provided the closest representation of the tumultuous and uncertain time in the ’80s.
In the midst of writing this, however, the comparison became a much closer one. Monkeypox is now affecting men who have sex with men more than the rest of the general population.
“It’s not the same thing,” Chan said, cautioning against making blanket comparisons between monkeypox and HIV/AIDS.
“For starters,” he intoned, “monkeypox is not an unknown disease. We’ve known about monkeypox for decades, so it is nothing close to HIV back in the ’80s.”
Admittedly, life is easier for a gay man like me, who came of age at a time when HIV/AIDS is no longer considered a significant threat.
With common knowledge of medication as well as preventative measures like safer sex and pre and post-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP and PEP), it is easy for me and my peers to take for granted the freedoms that we now enjoy, thanks to decades of advocacy and destigmatisation.
But as Prof Chan said, “It is important not to be complacent. The freedoms and advancements we have today were not handed on a silver platter. Earlier generations had to fight very hard for all of these things.”
203 notes
·
View notes
Text
Look, social media aus are very dumb but fun to do fklxkdk Illya would make short videos (mostly) about fashion, and Napoleon would be very unsubtle about being a Spy


I am formally apologizing to the uncle fandom for tiktoker Illya Kuryakin, I have no regrets (also @quijicroix is part responsible, being my evil advisor)
Here are the posts in details, and the profile pics :)


[COMMISSIONS]
No process this time, just me yapping for way to long about every choice and refs that went into this dumb au below vvv
Illya is younger than Napoleon (I usualy headcanon him at around 25 and Napoleon 35ish), so I think their use of social media would be quite different : hence Illya on Tiktok and Napoleon on Instagram. Also it's not the 60s so Illya can be like 10% less reppressed :)) but as a debuff Napoleon now has the technology to call him a nerd
Illya's page started as a cover for some affair, but he ended up kinda enjoying doing it in his free time. It's like a hobby for him, a way to experiment with fashion ! It's what made him want to pursue fashion design as a career after his curent spy job. And also I think he gets more and more nervous the more followers he gets, because as a spy having a chance to get recognise in the street is really bad dkdldlos Napoleon teases him endlessly that he became a tiktoker (as he should)-
Did I, at one point in the project, had to scrap the thirst trap idea to keep the fashion nerd vibes ? Yes I did, but just know he uses the "twink" tag :)
• The first post is a ref to the discotheque affair, not the best episode and a great miss for not including a disco Illya outfit, so I made him one to match the other :D
• The second is to the Hot number, but he gets to wear the thrush pattern !
• The third one is what made me do all of this ! Because, if you're not french, you might not know about one of my favorite yearly twitter threads : Met Gala outfits as INSEE graphs by Clara Dealberto ! Don't care about the met gala, but this is very funny :) and such a Illya Kuryakin thing to do kdkdkd
• fourth one isn't fashion related, it's a ref to popart and the "he has Dostoïevski eyes" line that made us laught a lot
• A little Fiddlesticks for the dog post, because it's a banger episode. Plus a nod to he dog expert from it, with whom Illya had palpable sexual tension fkfkfkl I like to think they kept contact ;) (shoutout to this fic (Intensity by AconitumNapellus) who absolutely get the vision, 10/10 guy to "cheat" on your boyfriend with)
• and the final one is a make over because of course it is
As for Napoleon, being older and less invested in this, an instagram made sense. But crutialy, I get such strong modern oss117 vibes from Napoleon (the way he shoots his gun, the goofy faces, the awkward stance everytime he enters a place, the inexplicable in universe rizz...) dkfkldls modern oss117 was a parody of both 60s james bond and older oss117 movies, but I'm now convinced they also whatched some uncle while doing these, it's just so obvious- anyway all this to say, in the second movie oss117 has to pose as a photographer and gets way too invested in his cover (it's his thing don't question it), and at the end of the movie we get to see all the photography he took during his mission..... Let me tell you how hard it was to resist him having an instagram full of blurry women on the street (canon 60s napoleon would have done it I'm sorry)- but what I kept was the pretty "badly" shot pics of random things, tho you sometimes get the odd decent pic taken by Illya. And he gets to be in a duck floatie as a treat and nod to oss <3
• Pinned post is because it became frustrating for him having to respond to people asking him if it was his real name or if he was a far right french man simping for Bonaparte
• first post is not a ref, but if my very sexy flat car was burning in the desert I would take a pic (ft Illya despairing) kdkdkd
• Duck floatie is a oss117 ref
• selfie with a beautiful woman (ft his finger), no ref I just love drawing women
• also Fiddlesticks for the cute Napoleon fox !! And to kinda link the two profiles :)
• and finaly Spy with my face ! He tried taking a picture of his date (I'll let you decide who it was), but oops front facing camera kdkdkdk
Can you tell I had a lot of fun doing this ? I love this show way to much omfg
PS : if you've never seen the recent oss117 movies, you should they funny ! But oh god some jokes are terrible- the first one is the best, minus one gay joke frankly not great. They nail the gay joke in the second one but oh god... They do not always win the 'is our character a piece of shit or is the movie problematic' gamble so be aware of that. And the 3rd one is shit don't bother
PPS : I don't use Tiktok, I tried my best to emulate the feeling of it but be aware I have no idea what I'm doing dkkdld
#I really like doing little tmfu sketches !#I gave my magnum opus to this fandom but rn I'm happy just doing goofy shit :)#illya kuryakin#napoleon solo#napollya#and a hint of#illya kuryakin x guido panzini#social media au#tmfu#tmfu tv#the man from uncle#illya kuryakin fanart#napoleon solo fanart#art#my art#digital art#fanart#tmfu fanart#sketches#david mccallum#robert vaughn
156 notes
·
View notes
Text
I want to say Napoleon Solo should have been at the club but the one time he did go to the club (the Discotheque Affair) he did not have a good time
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
(Mandate 1979) Speaking with such refreshing candor is Joe Porcelli, a handsome Italo-American whose admirable personal authenticity allows him to let things literally all hang out.
“Let's just say that my family knows I model. Period. I'm not the same person I was several years ago. I used to live in Washington and was very laid back and subdued. I found out I really didn't like that. I'm a New Yorker now and, like the song says, 'l Love New York.”
Joe is just about everything but a candlestick maker. This ex-Pennsylvanian somehow manages to find time to indulge himself in his favorite pastimes: horseback riding, traveling and playing the guitar. When he's not doing one of his favorite things, he's busy as a baker, a waiter, a bartender, an auto mechanic, a hairdresser or a computer operator.
Joe also spoke frankly about his current lifestyle in saying, “I was married for a while. I have a daughter. I guess the the marriage failed was ... well, what do you think? I'm here now posing for a gay magazine."
This 23-year-old Virgo added, "l have a lover now and we've been together for over two years. Affairs? Sure. There's no way to get around it. Of course promiscuity can affect a relationship like ours but I don't disapprove of it. Like I said, you can't avoid it. At least I can't. The most important thing for me with my lover is companionship and to be able to enjoy life together for a long time. That's what we're doing."
New York's special atmosphere is something Joe seems to draw strength from. “I used to live on Riverside Drive on the upper west side but now I'm in the East Village. It's really unique. The buildings, the people, everything. Of course it’s expensive but I hink it's worth it."
Some four nights a week you can find Joe in a West Street discotheque and when he's not getting off on Grace Jones and Donna Summer, he's home listening to "classical music too. And I really enjoy Sylvester, Diana Ross. Liza Minnelli." That's quite catholic collection of singers but for this jack-of-all-trades it seerns appropriate. Joe Porcelli, a Mandate man for all seasons.” — Joe Porcelli (1956 - 1989) #whatisrememberedlives
______________________________________________________________
(Mandate 1979)
Falando com uma sinceridade tão refrescante está Joe Porcelli, um bonito ítalo-americano cuja admirável autenticidade pessoal lhe permite deixar as coisas literalmente todas penduradas.
"Digamos apenas que a minha família sabe que sou modelo. Ponto final. Já não sou a mesma pessoa que era há vários anos atrás. Eu vivia em Washington e era muito, muito tranquilo e contido. Descobri que realmente não gostava disso. Agora sou um nova-iorquino e, como diz a música, 'Eu amo Nova Iorque. ”
Joe é praticamente tudo menos um fabricante de castiçais. Este ex-Pennsylvaniano de alguma forma consegue arranjar tempo para se deliciar com os seus passatempos favoritos: andar a cavalo, viajar e tocar guitarra. Quando não está a fazer uma das suas coisas favoritas, está ocupado como padeiro, empregado de mesa, barman, mecânico de automóveis, cabeleireiro ou operador de computadores.
Joe também falou francamente sobre o seu estilo de vida atual ao dizer: "Eu fui casado por um tempo. Eu tenho uma filha. Acho que o casamento falhou foi... Bem, o que é que achas? Estou aqui agora posando para uma revista gay. "
Este virginiano de 23 anos acrescentou: "Eu tenho um amante agora e estamos juntos há mais de dois anos. Assuntos? Claro, claro. Não há como contornar isso. Claro que a promiscuidade pode afetar uma relação como a nossa, mas eu não desaprovo isso. Como eu disse, não podes evitar. Pelo menos não posso. O mais importante pra mim com meu amante é companheirismo e poder aproveitar a vida juntos por muito tempo. É isso que estamos a fazer. "
A atmosfera especial de Nova Iorque é algo de que o Joe parece tirar forças. “Eu costumava viver em Riverside Drive no Upper West Side, mas agora estou em East Village. É realmente único. Os prédios, as pessoas, tudo. Claro que é caro, mas acho que vale a pena. "
Algumas quatro noites por semana você pode encontrar Joe em uma discoteca da West Street e quando ele não está saindo com Grace Jones e Donna Summer, ele está em casa ouvindo "música clássica também. E eu realmente gosto do Sylvester, Diana Ross. Liza Minnelli. " Essa é uma coleção bastante eclética de cantores, mas para este valete de todos os ofícios parece apropriado.
Joe Porcelli, um mandato para todas as temporadas.
— Joe Porcelli (1956 - 1989)

Joe Porcelli for Honcho Magazine | August 1980
333 notes
·
View notes
Text
California - Phantom Planet
Call On Me - Eric Prydz
Can’t Fight The Moonlight - LeAnn Rimes
Can't Get Over - September
Can’t Get You Out Of My Head - Kylie Minogue
Can't Stop Loving You - Phil Collins
Cartoon Heroes - Aqua
Catch - Kosheen
Caught In The Middle - A1
Ch!pz In Black (Who You Gonna Call) - Ch!pz
Chariot - Gavin DeGraw
Chasing Cars - Snow Patrol
Chelsea Dagger - The Fratellis
Chemistry - Semisonic
China In Her Eyes - Modern Talking
Clint Eastwood - Gorillaz
Clocks - Coldplay
Clumsy - Fergie
Come Along - Titiyo
Complicated - Avril Lavigne
Comptine D'un Autre Ete - Yann Tiersen
Cool - Gwen Stefani
(Crack It) Something Going On - Bomfunk MC’s
Crank It Up - Ashley Tisdale
Crazy - Gnarls Barkley
Crazy In Love - Beyoncé feat. JAY-Z
Crush - David Archuleta
Cry - Kym Marsh
Cry - Mandy Moore
Cry For You - September
Crying In The Discotheque - Alcazar
-
Dance With Me - Debelah Morgan
Dancing In The Moonlight - Toploader
DARE - Gorillaz
Denial - Sugababes
Désenchantée - Kate Ryan
Destroy Everything You Touch - Ladytron
Dilemma - Nelly feat. Kelly Rowland
Dip It Low - Christina Milian
Dirrty - Christina Aguilera
Disco’s Revenge (Freemasons Remix) - Gusto
Do What You Like - French Affair
Doesn't Really Matter - Janet Jackson
Don’t Blame Your Daughter (Diamonds) - The Cardigans
Don’t Cha - Pussycat Dolls
Don't Know Why - Norah Jones
Don't Let Me Get Me - P!nk
Don't Matter - Akon
Don’t Phunk With My Heart - Black Eyed Peas
Don't Stop Movin' - S Club
Don’t Stop The Music - Rihanna
Don't Tell Me - Madonna
Dove (I'll Be Loving You) - Moony
Dragostea Din Tei - Haiducii
Dragostea Din Tei - O-Zone
Dream On - Depeche Mode
Dream To Me - Dario G
Dreamer - Ozzy Osbourne
Drops Of Jupiter - Train
0 notes
Photo
"The Man from UNCLE" The Discotheque Affair
#The Man from U.N.C.L.E.#Illya Kuryakin#David McCallum#Napoleon Solo#Robert Vaughn#The Discotheque Affair#C.I.P.O.L
66 notes
·
View notes
Text


MFU Scrapbook | Page 6
Nominations For "Emmy" Awards Are Announced
NEW YORK (AP) — The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences announced today 225 nominations of its "Emmy" awards in 23 categories and 12 "areas of achievement." Nominations ranged from Batman, a popular adaptation of a comic book hero, to Christopher Plummer's performance of Hamlet. Among the nominations were: Outstanding dramatic series — Bonanza, the Fugitive, I Spy, The Man from U.N.C.L.E. and Slattery's People. Outstanding dramatic programs — The Ages of Man, Eagle in a Cage, Inherit the Wind, and Rally Round Your Own Flag, Mister. Outstanding performance by a leading actor in a dramatic series — Bill Cosby and Robert Culp of I Spy; Richard Krenna of Slattery's People; David Janssen of the Fugitive, and David McCallum of The Man From U.N.C.L.E. Outstanding performance by a leading actress in a dramatic series — Anne Francis of Honey West, Barbara Perkins of Peyton Place, and Barbara Stanwyck of the Big Valley. Outstanding musical program — Color Me Barbra; Frank Sinatra, A Man and His Music; and New York Philharmonic Young People's Concerts. Outstanding single performance by an actor in a leading dramatic role — Ed Begley and Melvyn Douglas in Inherit The Wind, Trevor Howard in Eagle Cage, Christopher Plummer in Hamlet and Cliff Robertson in The Game. Outstanding single performance by an actress in a leading dramatic role — Eartha Kitt in an episode of I Spy, Margaret Leighton in a multipart Dr. Kildare drama, Simone Signoret in A Small Rebellion and Shelley Winters in Back to Back. In almost 25 nominations in news and documentary programming and achievement, ABC and CBS each received 11 nominations, and ABC two. CBS News, however, pulled out of the Emmy competition two seasons ago when Fred W. Friendly, then CBS president, said he was unhappy about the qualifications of those choosing the winners. Although Friendly is no longer with CBS News, the network division still will not participate in the competition. Blue ribbon panels, whose identities are not made public, will view the nominated programs and vote to select winners of the awards, which will be announced and presented on May 22 in a CBS special program.
IMAGE CAPTION:
ABOVE: FIDDLING AROUND BELOW: U.N.C.LE. agent Illya Kuryakin (David McCallum) takes a job as a bass player in a nightlub used by Thrush as a front for storing files, in "The Discotheque Affair" work's on NBC Television Network's The Man From U.N.C.L.E." colorcast Friday, May 6.
Channels Listed
3-WCIA-TV (CBS) Champaign § KSD-TV (NBC) St. Louis 17-WAND-TV (ABC) Decatur 20-WICS.TV (NBC) Springfield
7 notes
·
View notes
Photo




Napoleon and Illya in The Discotheque Affair.
#the man from uncle#the discotheque affair#napoleon solo#illya kuryakin#robert vaughn#david mccallum#queue t qc
35 notes
·
View notes
Text
Just discovered that my screencaps and comments for "The Discotheque Affair" have been tagged NSFW. WTF, Tumblr??
5 notes
·
View notes
Photo

Illya, probably having a great time.
82 notes
·
View notes
Photo
I suppose you'll be what you might call a secret agent.
Illlya, pls
And his glance on Waverly. Illya, you are not even a tenth subtle as you think.
И Вэйверли такой: Свалите с глаз моих. (Waverly: Get out of my sight) Napoleon: Ah? What?
(Well, we can't judge him. Illya is very distractive)
Waverly: How this two are our best agents?

#look at my sons so gay for each other#как вэйверли до сих пор фэйспалмами не убился#детский сад вторая группа#мыотдяди#2.05. The Discotheque Affair
35 notes
·
View notes