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hotvintagepoll · 5 months
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which streaming service has the most vintage movies? If you don't know, maybe your followers could answer? 🙏
Ooh hoo hoo you asked and I'll answer!!
I actually made a post like this for the hot men tournament, but I can't find it now so I'll do it again from scratch. The short answer is that I don't know of any one streaming service that has all the old vintage movies—but most streaming services have a "classics" genre category that can get you started. Here's a small selection of what you can find on different streaming services:
TUBI (free):
The Adventures of Robin Hood (Olivia de Havilland)
A Streetcar Named Desire (Vivien Leigh)
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (Jane Powell, Julie Newmar)
North by Northwest (Eva Marie Saint)
The Music Man (Shirley Jones)
The Women (Norma Shearer, Rosalind Russell, Joan Crawford, Joan Fontaine, Paulette Goddard, several other hotties in small parts)
The Philadelphia Story (Katharine Hepburn, Ruth Hussey)
Notorious (Ingrid Bergman)
Bell, Book, and Candle (Kim Novak, Elsa Lanchester)
The Talk of the Town (Jean Arthur)
Dark Victory (Bette Davis)
Stray Dog (Keiko Awaji)
Some Like It Hot (Marilyn Monroe)
Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow (Sophia Loren)
Dirty Girtie From Harlem USA (Francine Everett)
Passport (Madhubala)
Dark Passage (Lauren Bacall)
Sepia Cinderella (Sheila Guyse)
On The Town (Ann Miller, Vera-Ellen, Betty Garrett)
The Bandwagon (Cyd Charisse)
Devar (Sharmila Tagore)
Reet-Petite and Gone (June Richmond)
The Postman Always Rings Twice (Lana Turner)
KANOPY (free through some libraries):
Dial M for Murder (Grace Kelly)
His Girl Friday (Rosalind Russell)
Ball of Fire (Barbara Stanwyck)
Black Orpheus (Marpessa Dawn)
Flower Drum Song (Reiko Sato, Nancy Kwan, Miyoshi Umeki)
Marriage Italian Style (Sophia Loren)
The Rose Tattoo (Anna Magnani)
Tokyo Story (Setsuko Hara)
War and Peace (Audrey Hepburn, Anita Ekberg)
Salt of the Earth (Rosaura Revueltas)
Metropolis (Brigitte Helm)
The Red Shoes (Moira Shearer)
HOOPLA (free through some libraries):
The Court Jester (Angela Lansbury, Glynis Johns)
Sunset Boulevard (Gloria Swanson)
A Place in the Sun (Elizabeth Taylor)
Barefoot in the Park (Jane Fonda)
The Barefoot Contessa (Ava Gardner)
Wings (Clara Bow)
YOUTUBE (has a lot of older movies that have slipped through copyright/are still up for some reason):
Charade (Audrey Hepburn)
Story Weather (Lena Horne)
Gilda (Rita Hayworth)
Rebecca (Joan Fontaine)
This entire playlist of Indian cinema that I just found (Madhubala, Waheeda Rehman, Nargis, Meena Kumari, etc.)
And that's just a small sample. There is also always your local library for physical DVDs, the Internet Archive, and....other methods.....if you know exactly what you're looking for.
I haven't seen all of these movies, so don't consider them personal recommendations—these are just famous movies with our hotties in them, so please be careful if you have content warnings. Good luck and have fun!
EDIT 5/16: Added a few more movies to the different sections, but this is still just a small selection of what the different streaming services have. Good luck!
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americangirlstar · 3 years
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American Girl Birthdays - updated through 03/18/2023
I got inspired by @addywalkerstan​‘s quick analysis of AG birthdays and wanted to see 1) when every confirmed birthday was relative to each other, and 2) when the unconfirmed bdays could potentially be.
All of the Historical characters and a few Contemporaries have confirmed birthdays, either in the books or via American Girl’s social media. Here is my list of confirmed birth months and dates; under the cut will be speculation on the Unknowns.
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Confirmed Dates:
January 01 - Melody Ellison (1954)
February 12 - Courtney Moore (1976)
February 28 - Ivy Ling (1966)
March 03 - Marie-Grace Gardner (1843)
March 18 - Blaire Wilson (2009)
March 19 - Josefina Montoya (1815)
April 04 - Rebecca Rubin (1905)
April 09 - Addy Walker (1855)
April 10 - Maritza Ochoa (2008)
April 11 - Alice Nanea Mitchell (1932)
April 14 - Joss Kendrick (2010)
April 21 - Felicity Merriman (1765)
April 22 - Molly McIntire (1934)
May 01 - Julie Albright (1966)
May 05 - Claudie Wells (1913)
~May 06-08 - Tenney Grant (2005) [sources under the cut!]
May 07 - Maryellen Larkin (1945)
May 15 - Luciana Vega (2006)
May 19 - Kit Kittredge (1923)
May 22 - Nicki and Isabel Hoffman (1990)
May 26 - Samantha Parkington (1895)
May 28 - CĂ©cile Rey (1843)
June 08 - Kirsten Larson (1845)
July 14 - Evette Peeters (2008)
August 14 - Lea Clark (2005)
~August 15 - Kaya’aton’my (1755)
August 22 - Ruthie Smithens (1923)
August 25 - Makena Williams (2008)
September 13 - Kira Bailey (2010) AND Corinne Tan (2011)
September 17 - Grace Thomas (2005)
September 29 - Emily Bennett (1933)
September 30 - Kavi Sharma (2010)
October 08 - Saige Copeland (2003)
October 15 - Nellie O’Malley (1895)
October 22 - Caroline Abbott (1802)
November 5 - Elizabeth Cole (1765)
~November 8 - Isabelle Palmer (2004) [sources under the cut]
no confirmed birthdays for December
Isabelle Palmer Birthday: born Autumn 2004; she is nine in Isabelle, which takes place at the beginning of the school year, and she is ten in Designs by Isabelle, which ends around Winter Break. Isabelle states in Chapter 4 of Designs that her tenth birthday was the week before the book began. There are still “a few weeks” before the performance in December, so her birthday is late Autumn, likely late October–early November.
However, back in 2014, Isabelle’s actress Erin Pitt did make a post on November 8 2014, reading “Happy birthday Isabell![sic] I’m so glad I could spend that time with you.” [x] Not sure if she was referring to the girl she’s taking a picture with or the character, but considering Pitt was there with an Isabelle doll, Nov 8 is a likely date!
Speculated Dates:
Now, here’s how I’m going with speculation: I’m going to negate the time period in which the girls’ books take place, as their birthdays would have been mentioned. Gwen, Sonali and Logan could be exempt from this since they had no books from their POV, but this is speculation, not fact, so let’s go.
Lindsey Bergman - born 1991. Her book takes place during the school year, seemingly not winter, so likely Spring or Autumn. I wasn’t quite sure if her story took place during the beginning or end of the school year, which would help decode whether it was Spring or Autumn; if anyone knows send me a message. Otherwise, her birthday is likely in Summer or Winter. Though, personally, I think it would be cute if her birthday was September 01, since she was first released on that date in 2001.
Kailey Hopkins - born 1993. Her book takes place during the summer of 2003, so her birthday is likely during Spring, Autumn or Winter.
Marisol Luna - born 1995. Her book takes place from October 22-29 2005, so her birthday is not within those dates.
Jess McConnell - born 1996. Her book begins in January; Sarita is on school break, so it’s probably her winter break? So Jess was born anytime but mid-January.
Nicki Fleming - born 1997. Her series takes place from Spring to Autumn 2007, with a break over Summer and with the story ending around December 2. However, there is a break between November 2 and December 2, in which Nicki’s twin sisters age a month. Nicki’s specific age is not mentioned in the second book, so her birthday could be Summer, November 3-December 1, or later in Winter.
Mia St Clair - born 1998. Her first book takes place roughly in the autumn and ends in early January; her second book takes place the next autumn. So she’s likely a Spring, Summer or late Winter (late Jan-Feb) birthday.
Chrissa Maxwell, Gwen Thompson, Sonali Matthews - born 1999. Their story takes place during the Spring of 2009, around Valentine’s Day (February 14) and the beginning of the Autumn 2009 school year. The Minnesota 2009 school year ended at about June 30, 2009, and began again Tuesday August 25. So birthdays could be before February 14, during the Summer, late Autumn or Winter.
Lanie Holland - born 2000. Series takes place from Spring through Summer 2010, so her birthday is likely in Autumn or Winter.
Kanani Akina - born 2001. Series takes place over the Summer of 2011, so her birthday is likely in Spring, Autumn or Winter.
McKenna Brooks - born 2002. Her first book begins in September, with her gymnastics meet in November. Her second book begins two months before “March-fest,” which would put it in January. I doubt she has a December birthday as her aging up would have been mentioned, but it’s still possible. McKenna was born anytime between April–August or (unlikely) December.
Gabriela McBride - born 2006. Her series takes place June 23-November 11 2017. Her birthday could be any date but those.
Tenney Grant and Logan Everett - born 2005/2004 respectively. Theirs ended up being really complicated so see below.
Suzanne “Z” Yang - born 2004. Series takes place April 3 to Mid-Summer 2017, so her birthday could be January-April 2 or in Autumn/Winter.
Gwynn Tan - born 2015. Corinne’s first book takes place in the Winter, likely November as Corinne and Gwynn are in school and Winter Break is not mentioned. It does take place over several weeks, so perhaps November to early December? The second book takes place at the beginning of spring, so late March; we then have a camping trip that is at the beginning of Summer, and a three-month timeskip afterwards to the end of Summer. Gwynn could have been born January–early March, April–early May, mid-Summer or September–October.
Tenney and Logan information:
According to her journal, Tenney begins Saturday October 1 2016 and ends Monday November 14 2016, throughout which she is definitely twelve.
Tenney: In the Key of Friendship picks up March 4 2017 and ends May 2-5 2017; her journal stops at May 5 but the plot of In the Key ends at about May 2. Tenney is still twelve during this period (Chap.11 of In the Key)
Tenney Shares the Stage is still during the school year, and my research shows the 2016-17 school year ended in Nashville at ~May 25, so Shares the Stage is sometime in May. Logan is fourteen by this point (Chap.1)
A Song for the Season, meanwhile, takes place early November to December, with Chapter 1 being “already November”, and the tour taking place “six weeks” later, the “day after school lets out for winter break” and ending on Christmas. From what I can tell, Winter Holidays in Nashville schools went from roughly December 18 2017-January 2 2018. The six-week date was given to Tenney on a Wednesday, which would put that day at about November 8, and the beginning of the book was just a few days before, on a day before a school day, so I believe it was a Sunday, so that would be the 5th. Tenney and Logan’s ages are not stated in this book.
Logan’s birthday is not from November ~5 to December 25. Since he could be 13 in In the Key, it’s hard to tell if he was born anytime from March to May, but he was fourteen before ~May 6. He and Tenney were not friends by the third book so he likely wouldn’t have mentioned his birthday previous to it, however she did know he was fourteen by Shares the Stage, so I presume at some point she asked someone. So his birthday is before ~May 6, or sometime from roughly May 25–November 5.
Tenney’s birthday, meanwhile, may be easier to find. Because her journal was given to her for her birthday, as stated from a note at the beginning of the book. Tenney’s first entry is on the 9th, though it doesn’t mention her birthday, and neither does the end of her journal on the next May 5. Tenney’s birthday is somewhere between May 6-8. 
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fettesans · 3 years
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Top, screen captures from Fanny and Alexander, directed by Ingmar Bergman, 1982. Via. Bottom, Bruce Nauman, Failing to Levitate in the Studio, 1966, Black and white photograph, 20 x 24 inches. Via.
See also, Phillip Toledano, Julian Assange, for the New Yorker, June 2010.
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Can the computer screen act as the clear-cut barrier separating cyberspace from real space, the space of mental inhabitation from the physical space of corporeality. What if the boundary is more permeable than then smooth glassy finality of the screen?
Elizabeth Grosz, from Architecture from the Outside, 2001
For Deleuze (Difference and Repetition, 1968), all distinctions (mind and body, active and passive, actual and virtual) are collapsed or flattened into an even consistency  on the plane of immanence. As a consequence, there are no preexisting hierarchies between the real and its representations; screen world(s) and the material world are coextensive (and thus equally “real”) because both are images on the same place of immanence.
Kate Mondloch, from Screens: Viewing Media Installation Art, 2010.
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newmanspaul · 4 years
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OLD HOLLYWOOD STARS & THEIR ZODIAC SIGNS
Aries: Gregory Peck, Spencer Tracy, Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, William Holden, Doris Day, Anthony Perkins, Debbie Reynolds, Ann Miller, Billie Holiday, Karl Malden, Warren Beatty, Marlon Brando, Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Lon Chaney, Steve McQueen, Ed Begley, Melvyn Douglas, Alec Guinness, Leslie Howard, Jayne Mansfield
Taurus: Jimmy Stewart, Fred Astaire, Bing Crosby, Audrey Hepburn, Katharine Hepburn, Don Rickles, Orson Welles, Tyrone Power, Rudolph Valentino, Gary Cooper, Henry Fonda, Shirley MacLaine, Shirley Temple, Anthony Quinn, James Mason, Ella Fitzgerald, Lionel Barrymore, Phil Silvers, Jack Klugman, Harold Lloyd, Mary Astor, Simone Simon, Margaret Sullavan, Eve Arden
Gemini: Judy Garland, Bob Hope, Dean Martin, Errol Flynn, Laurence Olivier, Marilyn Monroe, John Wayne, Tony Curtis, Rosemary Clooney, Douglas Fairbanks, Burl Ives, Al Jolson, Stan Laurel, Vincent Price, Basil Rathbone, Rosalind Russell, Hattie McDaniel, Priscilla Lane, Josephine Baker, Jeanette MacDonald, Peggy Lee
Cancer: Ginger Rogers, Eva Marie Saint, Natalie Wood, Olivia de Havilland, Barbara Stanwyck, Lena Horne, Jimmy Cagney, Milton Berle, Yul Brynner, Peter Lorre, Red Skelton, Jane Russell, Gina Lollobrigida, Leslie Caron, Farley Granger
Leo: William Powell, Myrna Loy, Mae West, Clara Bow, Norma Shearer, Esther Williams, Walter Brennan, Robert Mitchum, Louis Armstrong, Peter O’Toole, Jack Haley, Bert Lahr, Alfred Hitchcock, Maureen O’Hara, Lucille Ball, Shelley Winters, Dolores del Rio
Virgo: Lauren Bacall, Gene Kelly, Sophia Loren, Claudette Colbert, Greta Garbo, Donald O’Connor, Ingrid Bergman, Peter Lawford, Fredric March, James Coburn, Fred MacMurray, Peter Sellers, Raquel Welch, George Chakiris, Vera Miles
Libra: Jean Arthur, Carole Lombard, Montgomery Clift, Rita Hayworth, Deborah Kerr, Charlton Heston, Mickey Rooney, Lillian Gish, Groucho Marx, Buster Keaton, Bela Lugosi, George C. Scott, Lenny Bruce, Walter Pidgeon, Greer Garson, Joan Fontaine, Brigitte Bardot, June Allyson, Julie London
Scorpio: Richard Burton, Rock Hudson, Vivien Leigh, Burt Lancaster, Gene Tierney, Grace Kelly, Claude Rains, Joel McCrea, Johnny Carson, Burgess Meredith, Hedy Lamarr, Eleanor Powell, Veronica Lake
Sagittarius: Frank Sinatra, Kirk Douglas, Sammy Davis Jr, Edward G. Robinson, Rita Moreno, Lee Remick, Boris Karloff, Lee J. Cobb, Ricardo Montalban, Irene Dunne, Agnes Moorehead, Gloria Grahame, Betty Grable, Julie Harris
Capricorn: Cary Grant, Humphrey Bogart, Ava Gardner, Marlene Dietrich, Loretta Young, Ethel Merman, Eartha Kitt, Janet Leigh, Lew Ayres, Ray Bolger, Sal Mineo, Danny Kaye, Oliver Hardy, Oscar Levant, Ray Milland, Elvis Presley, Jane Wyman, Kay Francis, Barbara Rush
Aquarius: Kathryn Grayson, James Dean, Paul Newman, Clark Gable, Jimmy Durante, Jack Benny, Lana Turner, Kim Novak, Ronald Colman, Ernest Borgnine, Randolph Scott, Vera-Ellen, Donna Reed, Jack Lemmon, John Barrymore, George Burns, Arthur Kennedy, Cesar Romero, Jean Simmons, Zsa Zsa Gabor
Pisces: Jerry Lewis, Elizabeth Taylor, Jean Harlow, Nat King Cole, Sidney Poitier, Cyd Charisse, Lee Marvin, Jackie Gleason, Edward Everett Horton, David Niven
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papermoonloveslucy · 3 years
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TOO MANY HUSBANDS
April 21, 1947
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The Gulf Screen Guild Theater present  Wesley Ruggles’ Too Many Husbands, which was a 1940 Columbia Pictures release.
Produced and Directed by: Bill Lawrence
Music by: Wibur Hatch
Synopsis ~ Vicky Lowndes (Lucille Ball) loses her first husband, Bill Cardew (Bob Hope), in a boating accident in which he is presumed drowned. The lonely widow is comforted by Bill's best friend and publishing business partner Henry Lowndes (Frank Sinatra). Six months later, she marries him. Six months after that, Bill shows up, after having been stranded on a uninhabited island and then rescued. Vicky has a tough choice to make.
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The Screen Guild Theater (aka The Screen Guild Players), was one of the most popular drama anthology series during the Golden Age of Radio. At this point it is being sponsored by Gulf Oil. From its first broadcast in 1939, up to its farewell in 1952, it showcased radio adaptations of popular Hollywood films. Many Hollywood names became part of the show, including Bette Davis, Bing Crosby, Clark Gable, Judy Garland, Frank Sinatra, and many more. The actors’ fees were all donated to the Motion Picture Relief Fund, an organization that provides aid to retired actors. Screen Guild Theater was heard on different radio networks, beginning with CBS from 1939 to 1948, NBC from 1948 to 1950, ABC from 1950 to 1951, and back to CBS until its last episode on June 29, 1952. Throughout its run, a total of 527 episodes were produced.
The radio show brought movies to radio for thirty minutes each Monday evening on CBS. The show aired for 242 programs beginning with “Yankee Doodle Dandy” starring James Cagney and ending with “My Reputation.” In between were all time classics such as “Casablanca” with Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman, “Sergeant York” with Gary Cooper and “Holiday Inn” with Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire, and Dinah Shore.
The Screen Guild Players previously broadcast an adaptation of “Too Many Husbands” on March 8, 1942 starring Hedy Lamar, Bob Hope, and Bing Crosby. On September 4, 1944 yet another version was aired by the Players, starring Donna Reed, Frank Sinatra, and Bill Goodwin. 
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Too Many Husbands (1940) was produced and directed by Wesley Ruggles, with a screenplay by Claude Binyon. The film stars Jean Arthur, Fred MacMurray and Melvyn Douglas, and is based on the 1919 play Home and Beauty by W. Somerset Maugham, which was retitled Too Many Husbands when it came to New York.  The story is a variation on the 1864 poem Enoch Arden by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. In the UK, the film was released as My Two Husbands. The film was nominated for an Oscar for Sound Recording. Too Many Husbands was remade as a musical, Three for the Show (1955), with Jack Lemmon and Betty Grable. 
Two of the film’s background players, Bert Stevens and James Conaty, were later seen in as extras on “I Love Lucy.” Sam McDaniel (brother of Oscar-winner Hattie McDaniel of Gone With the Wind), plays a porter, just as he will do on “I Love Lucy,” becoming the first black actor to have lines on the series. Star Fred MacMurray will appear with Lucille Ball in “Lucy Hunts Uranium” in 1958. 
RADIO CAST
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Lucille Ball (Vickie) plays the role originated in the film by Jean Arthur. In April 1947, Ball was awaiting the release of two films: Lured and Her Husband’s Affairs.  
Bob Hope (Bill) plays the role originated in the film by Fred MacMurray. Hope had just released the film My Favorite Brunette. Hope and Ball would do four films together, staring in 1949 with Sorrowful Jones. 
Frank Sinatra (Henry) plays the role originated in the film by Melvyn Douglas. Sinatra had just released the film It Happened in Brooklyn on April 7, 1947. Primarily a singer, this is the only time he acts opposite Lucille Ball. 
Truman Bradley (Announcer) was selected by Henry Ford to be the announcer for the “Ford Sunday Evening Hour”. With his distinctive, authoritative voice, he soon became a radio actor as well as a narrator in numerous movies. Bradley was the radio announcer for shows by Red Skelton, Burns and Allen, and Frank Sinatra. 
Peter, the Butler is played by an uncredited performer. 
‘TOO MANY’ TRIVIA!
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The title is easily confused with the title of Lucille Ball’s radio series “My Favorite Husband,” and her films Too Many Girls, and Her Husband’s Affairs. 
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Lucille Ball also appeared with Screen Guild Players in “Tight Shoes” (April 12, 1942), “Nothing But the Truth” (May 3, 1943), and “A Night To Remember” (May 1, 1944). 
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From late 1942 to July 1947 Lady Esther Cosmetics sponsored the show which had been previously sponsored by Gulf Oil. It was first known as the “Lady Esther Presents the Screen Guild Players” and then became "The Lady Esther Screen Guild Theater.” 
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As is his penchant, Hope ad libs during the script. While hugging Vickie upon his return from the ‘dead’, he says “Let’s just stay like this till ‘Take it or Leave It’ comes on the air!”  “Take It or Leave It” was a radio quiz show, which ran from April 1940 to July 1947 on CBS. It switched to NBC in 1947, and in September 1950, the name of the program was changed to “The $64 Question.”  Hope often flubs his dialogue, but covers with comedy. 
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Bill (or maybe it is Bob ad libbing) mentions Dorothy Dix. Author Elizabeth Meriwether Gilmer (1861-1951) was widely known by the pen name Dorothy Dix. As the forerunner of today’s popular advice columnists, Dix was America’s highest paid and most widely read female journalist at the time of her death. Her advice on marriage was syndicated in newspapers around the world with an estimated audience of 60 million readers.
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Bill (or maybe it is Bob ad libbing) wonders why Vickie married Henry: “Did you lose a question on “Truth or Consequences?” “Truth or Consequences” was a game show originally hosted on NBC radio by Ralph Edwards (1940–1957), although it also was later seen on television. 
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Bill (or maybe it is Bob ad libbing) says that the mattress on the bed that he and Henry have to share feels like it has been stuffed with Grape-Nuts. Grape-Nuts is a breakfast cereal developed in 1897 by C. W. Post. Post originally developed the product as a batter that came from the oven as a rigid sheet, which was then broken into pieces and run through a coffee grinder to produce the "nut"-sized kernels.
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The first commercial break advertises Lady Esther’s four-purpose face cream.  In these live commercials, the spokeswoman in known as Lady Esther, although she was not the actual Esther Cohen that the cosmetics line was named for. 
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Bob Hope ad-libs about his “Pepsodent contract”.  Hope hosted “The Pepsodent Show” from September 1938 to June 1948. The program also featured Jerry Colonna along with Blanche Stewart and Elvia Allman as well as a continuously rotating supporting cast and musicians which included Desi Arnaz and his orchestra.
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Henry tells Bill he should leave and join the Foreign Legion. Bill replies that he’ll meet him halfway by going to the library and reading Beau Geste. Beau Geste is an adventure novel by P. C. Wren, which details the adventures of three English brothers who enlist separately in the French Foreign Legion following the theft of a valuable jewel from the country house of a relative. Published in 1924, the novel has been adapted for the screen several times: 1926, 1939, and 1966. 
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Henry asks Bill (Bob) if he can spell “pithecanthropus" and defines it a the missing link between man and ape. Bob (Bill) replies “C.R.O.S.B.Y”!  Bing Crosby was a singer that partnered with Hope on dozens of films, particularly their “road” films.  In April 1947, Crosby had just appeared in a cameo role in Hope’s newest film, My Favorite Brunette. By the end of 1947, The Road to Rio will be released.  Coincidentally, in the 1942 Screen Guild production, Crosby played Henry, the role taken here by Sinatra. 
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Just before Vickie breaks it to Henry that she’d rather be married to Bill, Henry (or maybe it is Crosby) sings “Time After Time” (1946), a romantic ballad by Sammy Cahn and Jule Styne, written for Sinatra to introduce in the 1947 film It Happened in Brooklyn, which had premiered two weeks earlier.  In return, in the very next scene, Bob Hope warbles a few notes of “Thanks for the Memory”, his signature song. 
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At the end, Lucille Ball thanks the Motion Picture Relief Fund and it’s country house. In 1940, Jean Hersholt, then-president of the Motion Picture Relief Fund, found 48 acres of walnut and orange groves in the southwest end of the San Fernando Valley to build the Motion Picture Country House. The dedication was on September 27, 1942. The Motion Picture Hospital was dedicated on the grounds of the Country House in 1948.
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The final commercial, once again delivered by ‘Lady Esther’ is for Lady Esther Bridal Pink Face Powder. 
‘TOO MANY’ CLOSING CREDITS
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The announcer (Truman Bradley) promotes next week’s program, Stork Bites Man, starring Jackie Cooper, Anita Louise, and Gus Schilling.  
Stork Bites Man was a United Artists film that would not be released until June 1947. It also starred Cooper and Schilling. 
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Columbia Pictures is credited as the producer of The Guilt of Janet Ames, starring Rosalind Russell and Melvyn Douglas. Coincidentally, Douglas starred in the film version of Too Many Husbands. 
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The music was arranged and conducted by Wilbur Hatch, who also did the same for “My Favorite Husband” and “I Love Lucy.” 
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Lucille Ball appeared courtesy of Metro Goldwyn Mayer, producers of The Sea of Grass starring Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, and Robert Walker.  
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Bob Hope appears through the courtesy of Pepsodent, and can currently be seen in the Paramount picture, My Favorite Brunette.
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Frank Sinatra appears through the courtesy of Old Gold cigarettes, and can currently be seen in the MGM musical It Happened in Brooklyn, also starring Katharyn Grayson, Peter Walker, and Jimmy Durante.
The announcer reminds listeners that part of the country goes on Daylight Saving Time, and that the show will be heard one hour earlier.  
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What’s Old is New Again Challenge
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First, I want to say thank you to everyone who had gotten me to this milestone. I love you all and you’ve made the last year wonderful! <3
So I know my last challenge had a similar theme but for my 10,000 Follower milestone, your prompts will be quotes from Old Hollywood actresses. So the challenge isn’t to include these word for word in your story but to use them as inspiration. These stories do not have to take place in a specific era and you only need to be creative. How you use these quotes is entirely up to you. Don’t feel restricted by the quotes.
What kind of story do I write?
This is a dark! blog but we will change it up and you will not be restricted to dark! characters. This is an MCU leaning challenge so keep that in mind by I am open to other fandoms upon consideration.
If you do write a dark!fic,  a reminder that it doesn’t need to include noncon but the characters should be darker than their canon counterparts (how you do that is up to you.) However this challenge will not include underage, bestiality, or incest relationships. (if you write Peter Parker, make it an adult Peter and not high school Peter)
You can write reader, pairing, OC, or whatever you’re most comfortable with. Include all necessary warnings, please and thank you.
How do I get involved?
You will choose from the quotes listed below and send in the following
your character(s) of choice (dark or otherwise)
your chosen quote
After you have sent in your ask/message, I will add you to my list. For each quote, I will accept up to two users based on the response to the challenge.
What do I do when I finish?
When you’ve finished your fic, send an ask and tag me in your fic and include the tag #roosoldhollywood
All fics will be included in a masterlist that I will include on this blog 😊
When do I have to get this done by?
June 20th
If you have any questions, feel free to ask and I look forward to reading all of your creations!
Quotes are listed below the cut! 
strikeout means no longer available
Prompts:
"Must I always wear a low cut dress to be important?" - Jean Harlow
"For it was not into my ear you whispered, but into my heart. It was not my lips you kissed, but my soul." - Judy Garland
"I was born with a tremendous need for affection, and a terrible need to give it." - Audrey Hepburn
“No one ever expects a great lay to pay all of the bills." - Jean Harlow
"I'm a woman of very few words, but lots of action.” - Mae West
“I'm so gullible. I'm so damn gullible. And I am so sick of me being gullible.” - Lana Turner
“If you obey all the rules, you miss all the fun.” — Katherine Hepburn
“I never said, 'I want to be alone.' I only said, 'I want to be left alone.' There is all the difference.” - Greta Garbo
"I will not retire while I've still got my legs and my make-up box." - Bette Davis
“It's not the having, it's the getting.” - Elizabeth Taylor
“Love is disgusting when you no longer possess yourself.” - Pola Negri
“A woman isn't complete without a man. But where do you find a man - a real man - these days?” - Lauren Bacall
“As Daddy said, life is 95 percent anticipation.” - Gloria Swanson
"I do not know how to kiss or I would kiss you. Where do the noses go?" - Ingrid Bergman
“When you lie down with dogs, you get up with fleas." - Jean Harlow
"I can live without money, but I cannot live without love." - Judy Garland
“It’s a pity nobody believes in simple lust anymore.” - Ava Gardner
“A gentleman is simply a patient wolf. – Lana Turner
“I’d rather regret the things I have done than regret the things I haven’t done.” — Lucille Ball
“I fell off my pink cloud with a thud.” - Elizabeth Taylor
“Marriage is a great institution, but I'm not ready for an institution." - Mae West
"I'd marry again if I found a man who had fifteen million dollars, would sign over half to me, and guarantee that he'd be dead within a year." - Bette Davis
“At night, when the sky is full of stars and the sea is still you get the wonderful sensation that you are floating in space.” - Natalie Wood
“I don’t bite, you know, unless it’s called for.” - Audrey Hepburn
“If you're going to do something wrong, do it big, because the punishment is the same either way.” - Jayne Mansfield
“The ceremony took six minutes. The marriage lasted about the same amount of time though we didn't get a divorce for almost a year.” - Hedy Lamarr
“It's the good girls who keep diaries; the bad girls never have the time.” Tallulah Bankhead
“A woman's dress should be like a barbed-wire fence: serving its purpose without obstructing the view.” - Sophia Loren
“Most girls don't know what to do with what they've got.” - Jayne Mansfield
“I do everything for a reason. Most of the time the reason is money.” - Ava Gardner
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catalinatimes · 4 years
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TERROR AT A WEDDING WHILE MYSTERY FIRES PLAGUE THE TOWN
Sunday, June 21st, 7:41AM 
CATALINA ISLAND, CA — Last night, Micah Davenport, a thirty year old male, was arrested and charged with arson and felony assault for disturbing the most talked-about wedding on the island.
“It was awful,” Morgan Bergman recounts. “All of a sudden, he appears, yelling about fires and how much he’s in love with one of the brides, and after that, it was pure chaos. I got my mom and got out of there as quickly as I could.”
Micah claims to have started several fires on the island to declare his love for Tinsley Lester, whose father owns much of the property on the island. She was married to Cassandra Mapleview that night, but according to sources, they are looking to dissolve their marriage.
Simultaneously, much of the island was on fire, including large parts of Ventura and isolated locations in Avalon and Lafayette Square. Though Davenport has admitted to starting all of the fires, local PD are skeptical. The Catalina Marina has also been trashed, cutting off the island’s only way of getting to the mainland, and the large tourism industry they rely on.
If anyone has any information on the fires, please contact the Catalina Island Police Department at (310) 510-0714.
PLOT DROP:
TRIGGERS: Fighting / Physical Assault, Heart Attack, Infidelity, Arson, Fire.
At 11:30PM, right as the wedding ends, Tinsley’s ex-boyfriend, Micah Davenport (software engineer for IBM, 30), shows up to the wedding drunk, claiming he’d burnt down a couple of buildings to declare her love for her, and claimed that Tinsley had been cheating on Cassandra the entire time.
The man is immediately arrested by Evie Morris and Daphne Palmer-Slade, who’d been attending the wedding as friends, not before Micah dumps an entire bottle of champagne over Detective Morris’s head, and pushes Detective Palmer-Slade into a table.
Cassandra immediately confronts Tinsley, which turns physical.
In the scuffle, Eleanor Hirsch and Elizabeth Kennedy try to pull them off of each other — not before Eleanor is punched right in the eye and Elizabeth falls and hits her head.
Officer Austin Cabot intervenes, removing the two women from hurting each other.
Marcus Mapleview, in an attempt to defend his sister, attempts to throw his shoe at Bronwyn Lester, which ends up hitting Rory Hirsch in the head instead. Billie Murphy, in an attempt to stop Marcus from throwing things, gets elbowed in the nose.
Vance Lester, taking advantage of the chaos, slashes the tires of most of the Mapleview guests, including:
Aaron Hirsch
Elena Perez
Marion Stewart
Sage Beckett
Cassius Mapleview, in shock from the whole ordeal, suffers a heart attack and collapses.
Immediately, Lucian Carter and Wolfe Harwen rush over to help the man, but Daniel Mapleview, mistaking them for people involved with the Lesters, charges at them with an empty vase.
In the commotion, Diana Cornswallet nee Mapleview tries to escape with Digby Lester — they are the ones having the affair, but right as they get to the exit, Gregory Cornswallet stops the two and punches Digby in the nose.
Hayden Stewart, Maya Baxter and Jack Adler are dragged into the fight with Digby and Gregory, while Diana, Lydia Beckett, and Tyson Hart attempt to break it apart.  
Fires were set to both of the brides’ homes, which quickly spread to other areas in the Ventura, including:
The Carlson estate
Halliwell Funeral Support
Tristan Hartley-Steele’s home
Ryan Moore’s home
Pearson, Specter, Litt and Associates
The front lobby of the Catalina Island Medical Center
Ventura Coffee Roasting Co.
However, many other establishments around the island were also set on fire, including:
Robin’s Barbecue, owned by Elijah Hinkley
Coyote Joe’s
Scoop’s
The Locker Room
The two ferries in the Catalina Marina were also trashed, making it impossible for residents and visitors to commute to and from the island.
Law enforcement is skeptical that Micah Davenport is solely responsible for the fires, as it is virtually impossible for one man to set fire to that many buildings in such a short amount of time.
OOC INFORMATION: 
Woo! Plot drop! I’ve attempted to include everyone into the drop that requested to be in it, so please take a look over and read it all! Though we’ve woven the characters into this storyline, what happens to your muses afterwards is completely up to you. (i.e. how much damage your home / business sustained, the extent of your muse’s injuries, if they are even injured, etc.) If you’re uncomfortable with anything that I’ve written above, please let us know so we can remove or re-work the drop! As always, if anyone has any questions about this, please don’t hesitate to let us know. Happy writing!
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dannyreviews · 5 years
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Cinema Legends Between 95-105 + Years Old Still Alive (as of 6/1/2019)
An overdue update:
Mario Sequi - director, screenwriter (b. 1910 or 1913)?
Ruthie Tompson - animator (b. 1910)
Renée Simonot - dubbing actress (b. 1911)
Urho Harkola - actor (b. 1911)
Katsumi Tezuka - actor (b. 1912)
Viola Smith - musician, actress (b. 1912)
Milton Quon - animator (b. 1913) † 6/22/2019
Julie Gibson - actress (b. 1913) † 10/2/2019
Pappukutty Bhagavathar - actor, singer (b. 1913)
Aldo Rossi - screenwriter, director (b. 1913)
Norman Lloyd - actor, producer, director (b. 1914)
Alfredo Varelli - actor (b. 1914)
Norman Spencer - producer (b. 1914)
Mary Ward - actress (b. 1915)
Giuseppe La Torre - cinematographer (b. 1915)
Rita Livesi - actress (b. 1915)
Olivia De Havilland - actress (b. 1916)
Kirk Douglas - actor (b. 1916)
Eric Bentley - screenwriter, playwright (b. 1916)
Elisa Stella - actress (b. 1916)
Beverly Cleary - novelist, screenwriter (b. 1916)
Jean Erdman - choreographer (b. 1916)
Ivy Baker - costume designer (b. 1916)
Anna Maria Bottini - actress (b. 1916)
Roberto Bruni - actor (b. 1916)
Lily Vincenti - actress (b. 1916)
Sumiko Mizukubo - actress (b. 1916)?
Harriet Frank Jr. - screenwriter (b. 1917)
Vera Lynn - singer, actress (b. 1917)
Earl Cameron - actor (b. 1917)
Marsha Hunt - actress (b. 1917)
Suzy Delair - actress (b. 1917)
Lise NĂžrgaard - novelist, screenwriter (b. 1917)
Anne Hegira - actress (b. 1917)
Don Marion Davis - actor (b. 1917)
Fabien Collin - director (b. 1917)
Bob Cunningham - actor (b. 1917)
Antonio Gradoli - actor (b. 1917)
Lucy Jarvis - producer (b. 1917)
Artur Brauner - producer (b. 1918) † 7/7/2019
Baby Peggy - actress (b. 1918)
Ivy Bethune - actress (b. 1918)
Dusty Anderson - actress (b. 1918)
Doreen Turner - actress (b. 1918)
Jeanne Manet - actress (b. 1918)
Nino Borghi - production designer (b. 1918)
Jean Moussette - director, editor, cameraman (b. 1918)
Adriana Sivieri - actress (b. 1918)
René de Obaldia - playwright, screenwriter (b. 1918)
Tao Porchon-Lynch - actress (b. 1918)
Ida Schuster - actress (b. 1918)
Branka Veselinovic - actress (b. 1918)
Maurice Marks - actor, stuntman (b. 1918)
Dave Bartholomew - musician, lyricist (b. 1918) † 6/23/2019
Sid Ramin - composer (b. 1919) † 7/1/2019
Nehemiah Persoff - actor (b. 1919)
Walter Bernstein - screenwriter (b. 1919)
Marge Champion - actress, dancer (b. 1919)
Joachim Tomaschewsky - actor (b. 1919)
Caren Marsh - dancer, actress (b. 1919)
Grace Albertson - actress (b. 1919)
Betty Brodel - singer, actress (b. 1919)
Sheila Mercier - actress (b. 1919) † 12/13/2019
Alfie Scopp - actor (b. 1919)
Helen Shingler - actress (b. 1919) † 10/8/2019
Doris Merrick - actress (b. 1919)
Armin Dahlen - actor, director (b. 1919)
Jean Barker - editor (b. 1919)
Helge Robbert - cinematographer, director (b. 1919)
June Spencer - actress (b. 1919)
Max Berliner - actor (b. 1919) † 8/26/2019
Helmuth Ashley - director, cinematographer (b. 1919)
Orlando Drummond - actor, voice actor (b. 1919)
Guido Gorgatti - actor (b. 1919)
Doris Merrick - actress (b. 1920)
Don Kennedy - actor (b. 1920)
Franca Valeri - actress (b. 1920)
Jack Edwards - actor (b. 1920)
Norma Barzman - screenwriter (b. 1920)
Sergio MendizĂĄbal - actor (b. 1920)
A. E. Hotchner - novelist, screenwriter, playwright (b. 1920)
Gudrun Parker - producer, director (b. 1920)
Doudou Babet - actress (b. 1920)
Joan Ellacott - costume designer (b. 1920)
Vera Bergman - actress (b. 1920)
Susan Miller - actress (b. 1920)
Nicolette Bernard - actress (b. 1920)
Claude Accursi - screenwriter (b. 1920)
Francis Rigaud - director, screenwriter (b. 1920)
Ann Triola - actress, singer (b. 1920)
AgnĂšs Delahaie - producer (b. 1920)
Edward Lewis - producer, screenwriter (b. 1920) † 7/27/2019
Hilda Bernard - actress (b. 1920)
Josip Elic - actor (b. 1921) † 10/21/2019
Ruth de Souza - actress (b. 1921) † 7/27/2019
Jack Rader - actor (b. 1921)
Geoffrey Chater - actor (b. 1921)
Bill Butler - cinematographer (b. 1921)
Walter Mirisch - producer (b. 1921)
Tom Felleghy - actor (b. 1921)
Patricia Marmont - actress (b. 1921)
Carlo Lastricati - assistant director (b. 1921)
Grisha Dabat - screenwriter (b. 1921)
Herbert Kofer - actor (b. 1921)
Dobroslav SrĂĄmek - sound editor (b. 1921)
Yu Lan - actress (b. 1921)
Zygmunt Nowak - sound editor (b. 1921)
Miriam Nevo - actress (b. 1921)
John Aldred - sound mixer (b. 1921)
George Lefferts - producer, screenwriter (b. 1921)
Wally Campo - actor (b. 1921)
Derek Granger - producer (b. 1921)
Herbert Westbrook - art director, production designer (b. 1921)
Simone Berthier - actress (b. 1921)
Betty White - actress (b. 1922)
Ray Anthony - musician, actor (b. 1922)
Carl Reiner - actor, director, screenwriter (b. 1922)
Margia Dea - actress (b. 1922)
Helen Mowery - actress (b. 1922)
Bill Macy - actor (b. 1922) † 10/17/2019
Joan Copeland - actress (b. 1922)
Tony Charmoli - dancer, choreographer, director (b. 1922)
Charles Csuri - animator (b. 1922)
Norman Lear - producer (b. 1922)
Micheline Presle - actress (b. 1922)
Ivry Gitlis - violinist, actor (b. 1922)
Janis Paige - actress (b. 1922)
Bert I. Gordon - director (b. 1922)
Françoise Javet - editor (b. 1922)
Ebrahim Golestan - director (b. 1922)
Ethmer Roten - film score musician (b. 1922)
Angel Wagenstein - screenwriter (b. 1922)
Gershon Kingsley - film composer (b. 1922) † 12/10/2019
Jacqueline White - actress (b. 1922)
Paula Valenska - actress (b. 1922)
Ivan King - art director (b. 1922)
Maurice Delbez - director (b. 1922)
Christian Alers - actor (b. 1922)
Mona Lisa - actress (b. 1922) † 8/25/2019
Chandrashekhar - actor (b. 1922)
John Shirley - editor (b. 1922)
Dilip Kumar - actor (b. 1922)
Alan Scott - actor (b. 1922)
Qin Yi - actress (b. 1922)
Doreen Brownstone - actress (b. 1922)
Mariya Portnaya - animator (b. 1922)
Enrico Bomba - producer, director (b. 1922)
Agustina Bessa-Luís - playwright, screenwriter (b. 1922) † 6/3/2019
Terence Kelly - actor (b. 1922)
Vladimir Etush - actor (b. 1922)
Rudolf Kovac - production designer (b. 1922)
Peter Berkos - sound editor (b. 1922)
Marcel Berbert - producer (b. 1922)
Raffaele La Capria - screenwriter (b. 1922)
Robert Fletcher - costume designer (b. 1922)
Jacqueline Duc - actress (b. 1922)
Martha Stewart - actress (b. 1922)
Eleonora Morana - actress (b. 1922)
Sydney Bettex - production designer (b. 1923)
Larry Storch - actor (b. 1923)
Valentina Cortese - actress (b. 1923) † 7/10/2019
Rosita Fornes - actress (b. 1923)
Franco Zeffirelli - director (b. 1923) † 6/15/2019
Gloria Henry - actress (b. 1923)
Gene Reynolds - actor, screenwriter, producer, director (b. 1923)
Stan Waterman - producer, cinematographer (b. 1923)
Donald Elson - actor (b. 1923)
Paul Muller - actor (b. 1923)
JaromĂ­r JanĂĄcek - editor (b. 1923)
Elizabeth Sellars - actress (b. 1923) † 12/28/2019
Jimmy Lydon - child actor, producer (b. 1923)
Michael Medwin - actor, producer (b. 1923)
Val Bettin - actor (b. 1923)
Ralph Senensky - director (b. 1923)
Edward Ryan - actor (b. 1923)
Rhonda Fleming - actress (b. 1923)
Werner Lenz - cinematographer (b. 1923)
Glynis Johns - actress (b. 1923)
Nicholas Parsons - actor (b. 1923)
JĂłzef Hen - screenwriter, novelist (b. 1923)
Bob Barker - game show host (b. 1923)
Mike Nussbaum - actor (b. 1923)
Vatroslav Mimica - director (b. 1923)
Kim Yaroshevskaya - actress (b. 1923)
Barbara Chilcott - actress (b. 1923)
Ruth Geller - actress (b. 1923)
Billy Watson - child actor (b. 1923)
Sam Gray - actor (b. 1923)
Patrick Gordon - actor (b. 1923)
Bernard Gersten - producer (b. 1923)
William Kraft - film composer (b. 1923)
Jo-Carroll Dennison - actress (b. 1923)
Norman Klenman - screenwriter (b. 1923)
Anne Vernon - actress (b. 1924)
Carole Cook - actress (b. 1924)
Noreen Nash - actress (b. 1924)
Leslie Phillips - actor (b. 1924)
Eric Pleskow - producer (b. 1924) † 10/1/2019
Zizi Jeanmarie - dancer, actress (b. 1924)
Sheldon Harnick - lyricist (b. 1924)
Jane Morgan - actress, singer (b. 1924)
Priscilla Pointer - actress (b. 1924)
Andro Lustic - actor, screenwriter (b. 1924)
Leza Holland - director, screenwriter (b. 1924)
Espen SkjĂžnberg - actor (b. 1924)
Gerard Schurmann - film composer (b. 1924)
Jutta Hering - editor (b. 1924)
Jan Chaloupek - editor (b. 1924)
Peg Murray - actress (b. 1924)
Bob Markell - producer, art director (b. 1924)
Lucine Amara - opera singer, actress (b. 1924)
11 notes · View notes
astrognossienne · 7 years
Text
if i were...
if i were a month: june if i were a day: sunday. ‹if i were a planet: saturn. ‹if i were a god or goddess: persephone or inanna. ‹if i were a sea animal: frilled shark. ‹if i were a piece of furniture: chaise longue. ‹if i were a gemstone: blue moon diamond. ‹if i were a flower: calla lily. if i were a kind of weather: a sultry southern night with a full moon and the stars twinkling. ‹if i were a colour: the colours of the skin, the soil, and the sea. ‹if i were an emotion: serenity. ‹if i were a fruit: dragonfruit and mango. ‹if i were a sound: the primal sounds of sex. ‹if i were an element: air. ‹if i were a place: a private island. ‹if i were a scent: patchouli. ‹if i were a song: “she’s not there” by the zombies. if i were a body part: skin. ‹if i were a pair of shoes: black louboutin stilettos. if I were a direction, I’d be south.    if I were a liquid, I’d be wine.   if I were a tree, I’d be an oak.       if I were a musical instrument, I’d be a guitar.    if I were a time of day, I’d be twilight. if I were a historical figure, I’d be elizabeth I.    if I were a vegetable, I would be a cucumber.    if I was a berry, I’d be a blackberry. if I were a movie, I would be directed by adrian lyne or ingmar bergman.   if I were a book, I would be written by ayn rand. if I were a food, I would be salade niçoise. if I were a material, I would be black silk.    if I were a taste, I would be icy mint, lime, and cucumber water with jalapeño. if I were a word, I would be machiavellian.   if I were an object, I would be a bottle of chanel n°5. if I were a facial expression, I’d be a slight, bemused smile if I were a subject in school, I would be history.    if I were a cartoon character, I would be ariel from the little mermaid. if I were a shape, I’d be a pyramid.    if I was a sin, I’d be greed. if I was a sound, I’d be raindrops on windows. if I was a car I’d be a shiny black 1967 chevy camaro rs/ss. if I was a natural disaster I’d be a hurricane. if I was a season I’d be summer. if I was a virtue I’d be courage. if I was a mode of transportation I’d be a train. if I was an item of clothing I’d be a satin trimmed saint laurent blazer. if I was a phase of the moon, I’d be the eclipse. if I were a number, I’d be the number 1.
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valoansarlingtontx · 5 years
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Trump backers applaud Warren in heart of MAGA country
Contents
Badly broken podimetrics raises $13.4 million
Expand innovative solution
Texas rep. jack bergman:
Tulsi gabbard: burn pits
Tech community college grads
Liberia plans run
This was rock-solid Obama country and, as the 2018 midterm. post on Medium outlining her public lands agenda. Warren also said she would reinstate an Obama-era Interior Department rule that the.
Me in Oct 2018. "Warren remains a formidable political presence..but most important: Warren is one of the few Democrats who consistently calls Trump out on his lies in a way that catches the public’s attention & can leave him on the defensive in 2020."
Bill seeks to waive state college application fees for vets Yes, Rep. Ocasio-Cortez, The VA Is badly broken podimetrics raises .4 million to expand innovative solution for Diabetes Complications Smart Mat Technology to Predict Development of Diabetic. – Podimetrics Raises $13.4 Million to Expand Innovative Solution for Diabetes Complications Investment will accelerate the company’s business development among VA hospitals and commercial payers somerville, Mass., May 9, 2019 — Podimetrics, a care management company with theAlexandria Ocasio-Cortez Responds to GOP Congressman Who. – In a recent video recorded at one of his campaign events this weekend, Republican rep. ron desantis was seen saying, "You look at this girl Ocasio-Cortez or whatever she is, I mean, she’s in a.Bill seeks to waive state college application fees for vets VA Loans in Yoakum texas rep. jack bergman: Our veterans gave their best, and deserve the best in returnOfficials celebrate opening of new veterans apartments in Gary Powered by the Tampa Bay Times, tampabay.com is your home for breaking news you can trust. Set us as your home page and never miss the news that matters to you. Sources: ComScore, Nielsen.
Trump backers applaud Warren in heart of MAGA country Warren didn’t come to rural West Virginia primarily in search of votes. The tiny state likely won’t decide the nomination, and is all but certain to back Trump in the general election.
Trump backers applaud Warren in heart of MAGA country:. Subject: Trump backers applaud Warren in heart of MAGA country. Anonymous: Anonymous wrote:Former Republicans who are conservatives do not equal Trump supporters. They are their own special breed.
Trump backers applaud Warren in heart of MAGA country It was a startling spectacle in the heart of Trump country: At least a dozen supporters of the president – some wearing MAGA stickers – nodding their heads, at times even clapping, for liberal firebrand Elizabeth Warren.
Alex Thompson of Politico – It was a startling spectacle in the heart of Trump country: At least a dozen supporters of the president – some wearing MAGA stickers – nodding their heads, at times even clapping, for liberal firebrand Elizabeth Warren. The sighting alone of a Democratic presidential candidate in this town of fewer.
KERMIT, W. Va. – It was a startling spectacle in the heart of Trump country: At least a dozen supporters of the president – some wearing MAGA stickers – nodding their heads, at times even clapping, for liberal firebrand Elizabeth Warren.
T-rump backers applaud Elizabeth Warren in heart of MAGA country KERMIT, W. Va. – It was a startling spectacle in the heart of Trump country: At least a dozen supporters of the president – some wearing MAGA stickers – nodding their heads, at times even clapping, for liberal firebrand Elizabeth Warren.
Preview: Bombshells & Brews aids women veterans City reaches accord on Kilbourn Tower settlement – In 2003, the City of Milwaukee turned over a small parcel of green space at the corner of Prospect and Kilbourn Avenues to aid in the construction of Kilbourn Tower. Many neighbors showed up to.Film fest explores veterans’ wellness Legislation seeks to restore state benefits to LGBTQ veterans dishonorably discharged Podimetrics Completes $13.4 Mln Funding for Disease-Detecting Foot Mat Rep. tulsi gabbard: burn pits, the Agent Orange of our generation For all the hoopla surrounding iowa sen. joni ernst’s military service, one must remember that her Democratic predecessor, Tom Harkin, lied about his own military career. decades ago, in 1979,Ivy tech community college grads told to celebrate, support others Mayor who was refugee from liberia plans run for US Senate Governor’s executive order helps military spouses, veterans find work, training Courtesy WA Governor’s Office. OLYMPIA, Washington – Governor Jay Inslee signed an executive order monday that builds upon the state’s efforts to support military spouses and veterans with employment and training opportunities as families transition to civilian life in Washington state.Poll: VA the least-liked federal agency — FCW 3 days ago · For the fourth time running, the Department of veterans affairs ranks as the least-liked federal agency in a Gallup poll. The U.S. Postal Service was picked as the most-liked for the third.ST. LOUIS (AP) – A Missouri man has been sentenced to 20 years in prison after admitting that he beat his brother to death with a hammer. Keandre Washington, of Northwoods, was sentenced Monday for. · The Update lists not only which colleges have openings for freshmen and transfer students but also has an update on housing availability and financial aid opportunities. The list is updated frequently and will be available until june 30. vist www.nacacnet.org and type in College Openings Update in the search box.Legislation seeks to restore state benefits to LGBTQ veterans dishonorably discharged (Reuters) – Podimetrics, the maker of a smart foot mat that detects warning signs of diabetic foot ulcers, said on Thursday it raised $13.4 million in a funding round led by a group of investors, including venture capital firm Scientific Health Development. The company said the proceeds will be used to reach out to more.The sophomore feature from Ted Geoghegan is a far cry from the haunted house tropes of his debut, “We Are Still Here,” but it explores a much more realistic. at the 2017 Fantasia International Film.
But the debates on a theater stage in Detroit, Michigan, the heart of the country’s auto industry. either-or outcomes with Trump. Debate topics Tuesday night’s debate includes both Warren and.
Kentucky WWII Veteran to Receive French Legion of Honor Vermont VA hospital to host ‘Blessing of the Bikes’ McALLEN, Texas (AP) – Hundreds of children are waiting away from their parents inside a border patrol holding facility in South Texas, with groups of 20 or more children to a single cage. There are.A 95-year-old World War II veteran in Kentucky will be awarded the French Legion of Honor, that country’s highest distinction. The Kentucky Department of Veterans Affairs says Alvin H. Perry of Wilmore will receive the medal June 6 at the Thomson-Hood Veterans Center in Wilmore for his participation.
The post Trump backers applaud Warren in heart of MAGA country appeared first on VA Loans Arlington TX.
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nofomoartworld · 7 years
Text
Hyperallergic: Art Movements
Rendering of one piece in the multi-part Public Art Fund project “Ai Weiwei: Good Fences Make Good Neighbors” (courtesy Ai Weiwei Studio)
Art Movements is a weekly collection of news, developments, and stirrings in the art world.
Ai Weiwei will install over 100 fences around New York City in October as part of a project commissioned by the Public Art Fund. In a press release, the Public Art Fund described the project as a response to “the international migration crisis and [the] tense sociopolitical battles surrounding the issue in the United States and worldwide.” The project is entitled, “Good Fences Make Good Neighbors,” a reference to Robert Frost’s poem “Mending Wall.”
Multiple artists were injured during clashes with Chinese security officials in Beijing’s Songzhuang district. Around 100 artists attempted to prevent the demolition of the home and studio of artists Shen Jingdong and Cao Zhiwen. Government officials cited illegal construction as grounds to demolish the property.
Mikhail Novikov, the deputy director of construction projects at Saint Petersburg’s State Hermitage Museum, was placed under house arrest on charges of suspected fraud by Moscow’s Lefortovsky District Court.
Tehran’s Ag Galerie withdrew from AIPAD’s Photography Show due to President Trump’s travel ban on six predominantly Muslim countries. A notice explaining the gallery’s absence is on display in its vacant booth.
Christie’s cancelled its June postwar and contemporary art auctions in London. The announcement follows the auction house’s recent decision to close its showroom in South Kensington and scale back its operations in Amsterdam.
Thomas Krens, the former director of the Guggenheim Foundation, criticized the Foundation’s plans to open a museum in Abu Dhabi, despite having brokered the 2006 deal to open the satellite museum there. In an interview with the In Other Words podcast, Krens suggested that the museum should be postponed or downsized. “The world financial crisis of 2008 and the Arab Spring has changed the equation radically [
] It may not be such a good idea these days to have an American museum, essentially with a Jewish name, in a country [that doesn’t recognize Israel] in such a prominent location, at such a big scale.” The construction of the museum on Saadiyat Island has been mired in controversy, with groups such as Gulf Labor and Human Rights Watch calling attention to the widespread abuse of laborers working on the island’s cultural construction projects.
Leonardo da Vinci, “Adoration of the Magi” (1481), oil on wood, 243 x 246 cm (via Wikipedia)
The Uffizi Gallery unveiled Leonardo da Vinci’s “Adoration of the Magi” following a six-year restoration.
Workmen for the Chicago company Methods and Materials Inc. began to dismantle Alexander Calder’s monumental mobile, “Universe,” from the lobby of Willis Tower. The work is currently the subject of a legal dispute regarding its ownership.
The Turner Prize lifted its rule that eligible artists must be under 50 years old.
Thomas Gainsborough’s “Mr. and Mrs. William Hallett” (1785) went back on display at the National Gallery in London, just over a week after it was slashed with a screwdriver by a 63-year-old man.
A report by the BBC describes how Syrian archaeologists are using a clear traceable liquid, which is made visible under UV light, to mark valuable artifacts. The technique is currently being used to identify stolen antiquities.
One hundred and fifty works of antisemitic propaganda went on display at the Caen-Normandy Memorial Museum as part of an exhibition entitled Heinous Cartoons 1886-1945: The Antisemitic Corrosion in Europe. The works are from the private collection of Holocaust survivor Arthur Langerman.
Eleven people were detained after staging a naked protest at the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum. According to the BBC, Polish media speculated that the action was a protest against the war in Ukraine.
The Spectator awarded its second annual What’s That Thing? — an award for the worst piece of public art — to “Origin,” a sculpture created by Solas Creative.
(courtesy Brooklyn Public Library)
The Brooklyn Public Library unveiled a limited edition library card featuring artwork from Maurice Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are (1963).
Kristen Visbal’s bronze sculpture “Fearless Girl” will remain on view in Manhattan’s Financial District through February 2018 according to New York City mayor Bill de Blasio. “Fearless Girl has fueled powerful conversations about women in leadership and inspired so many,” de Blasio stated. “Now, she’ll be asserting herself and affirming her strength even after her temporary permit expires — a fitting path for a girl who refuses to quit.” Hyperallergic’s Jillian Steinhauer described the sculpture as a work of “fake corporate feminism.”
The neon sign for Pearl Paint, the beloved NYC art supply store that closed in 2014, has been incorporated into the lobby of the luxury apartments built in the store’s former building. According to Curbed, the four units range from $16,000 to $18,000 per month.
A 100-kilo, 24-carat gold coin worth $4 million was stolen from the Bode Museum in Berlin. The coin, which bears the image of Queen Elizabeth II, was minted by the Royal Canadian Mint in 2007. It is thought that the thieves executed the theft with the use of a rope, a foldout ladder, and a wheelbarrow.
Ikon Gallery is looking for volunteers to participate in a staging of On Kawara’s “One Million Years (Reading)” at the Venice Biennale.
Transactions
Louis Draper, “Boy with lace curtain” (nd), gelatin silver print, 12 7/8 x 9 in, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts; Arthur and Margaret Glasgow Endowment (© Louis H. Draper Preservation Trust)
The National Endowment for the Humanities awarded the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts a $173,833 grant to digitize its collection of materials by photographer Louis Draper.
The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts acquired 30 works, including pieces by Jim Campbell, Bill Walton, Emily Sartain, and Debra Priestly.
The Museum of London acquired 100 items of clothing and accessories worn by Francis Golding, a former secretary of the Royal Fine Art Commission.
Patti Smith purchased the reconstructed home of Arthur Rimbaud for an undisclosed sum.
The Library of Congress acquired the archive of photographer Bob Adelman.
The Getty Research Institute acquired Frank Gehry’s archive from 1954 to 1988.
Frank Gehry, Winton Guest House Model (1982–87), Wayzata, Minnesota, Frank Gehry Papers at the Getty Research Institute
Transitions
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s director, Michael Govan, and Roger W. Ferguson, the chief executive of financial services company TIAA, have been asked by the Smithsonian to join its board of regents. Their nominations will need to be approved by President Trump and the House of Representatives.
Christine Poggi was appointed director of New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts.
Jeffrey Andersen announced his retirement as director of the Florence Griswold Museum.
Blake Shell was appointed executive director of the Disjecta Contemporary Art Center.
Emma Imbrie Chubb was appointed the first curator of contemporary art at the Smith College Museum of Art.
The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, appointed Amanda Hunt as director of education and public programs, and Anna Katz as assistant curator.
Andrea Gyorody was appointed assistant curator of modern and contemporary art at the Allen Memorial Art Museum.
Don McMahon was appointed editorial director of the Museum of Modern Art’s publications department.
Phillips appointed Laurence Calmels as regional director for France.
Matt Packer was appointed director of EVA International.
Tate St. Ives reopened after an 18-month, £20-million (~$24.9 million) renovation.
The Musée Camille Claudel opened in the French town of Nogent-sur-Seine.
The Philadelphia Museum of Art broke ground on its $196-million expansion project.
Koenig & Clinton gallery will relocate from Chelsea to Bushwick in June.
Zurich’s Galerie Eva Presenhuber announced plans to open its third space in New York City.
Two London galleries, Vilma Gold and Ibid gallery, will close.
Accolades
Ethan Murrow, “Plethora” (detail) (2016), sharpie on wall, 40 x 30 ft, site-specific installation as part of the Project Atrium series at MOCA Jacksonville (courtesy MOCA Jacksonville and Doug Eng)
Ethan Murrow was awarded the Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville’s 2017 Brooke and Hap Stein Emerging Artist Prize.
Oskar Hult, Jonas Silfversten Bergman, and Josefine Östberg Olsson were awarded the Fredrik Roos Art Prize.
Kriota Willberg was awarded the first-ever artist residency at the New York Academy of Medicine.
The Library of Congress awarded the 2016 Bobbitt National Prizes for Poetry to Claudia Rankine and Nathaniel Mackey.
The City of Houston announced the recipients of its 2017 artist grants.
Bob Dylan agreed to formally accept the Nobel Prize for Literature at a small ceremony scheduled this weekend — five months after the award was first announced.
Obituaries
Julian Stanczak, “Forming in Four Reds” (1993-1994) (via Flickr/Sharon Mollerus)
Arthur Blythe (1940–2017), saxophonist.
Frank Delaney (1942–2017), author and arts broadcaster.
Don Hunstein (1928–2017), photographer. Best known for his iconic image of Bob Dylan and Suze Rotolo walking in Greenwich Village.
Peter Johns (1930–2017), photographer.
Ahmed Kathrada (1929–2017), anti-Apartheid activist and writer.
Molly Mahood (1919–2017), scholar. Best known for Shakespeare’s Wordplay (1957).
William McPherson (1933–2017), critic and novelist. Awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Criticism in 1977.
Robin O’Hara (1954–2017), film producer.
Liana Paredes (unconfirmed–2017), chief curator and director of collections at Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens.
William Powell (1949-2017), author of The Anarchist Cookbook (1971).
Julian Stanczak (1928–2017), artist. Figurehead of the Op art movement.
David Storey (1933–2017), author and playwright.
Christina Vella (1942–2017), author.
The post Art Movements appeared first on Hyperallergic.
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papermoonloveslucy · 4 years
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TV PREVUE & MORE!
December 29, 1957
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On December 29, 1957, Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz appeared on the cover of TV Prevue, a television listings supplement to the Sunday Chicago Sun-Times. 
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Inside, it lists the premiere of “Lucy Hunts Uranium” on January 3, 1958, part of the “Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour”.  The episode guest-starred Fred MacMurray and featured his wife, June Haver. 
It was also a busy week for Lucille Ball films on television with various stations airing Beauty for the Asking (1939), Dance Girl Dance (1940), Best Foot Forward (1943), Du Barry Was A Lady (1943), Bunker Bean (1936), Easy Living (1949), Ziegfeld Follies (1945), and The Dark Corner (1946). 
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The Los Angeles Times asked several celebrities to comment on the past year, and look ahead to 1958. Lucille Ball said that the “Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour” allowed her six months off to spend with her family and that she had no reason to be bored.
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On this date in many newspapers, it was announced that Lucille Ball was selected as one of the most successful people of 1957 in the area of Business. She was alongside such company as world leaders Queen Elizabeth and Eleanor Roosevelt.  In the area of entertainment, Ingrid Bergman took top honors. 
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In an exclusive with TV Graphic of the Pittsburgh Press, Lucille Ball commented on her “perky pan’s wide repertoire of emotions” with photos from the upcoming “Lucy Hunts Uranium”. 
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This TV column mention discussed Desilu’s purchase of RKO, which happened in late 1957 and was formalized by January 1, 1958. Happy New Year, indeed!
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jlwilliams-us · 8 years
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I: It seems as if we're channeling the Thirties. SHE: That's all right. The Thirties are coming back in art. I: Other things too, unfortunately. SHE: Oh, you mean fascism. Yes. [Performer: Elizabeth June Bergman]
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dannyreviews · 6 years
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Cinema Legends Between 95-105 + Years Old Still Alive (as of 1/1/2019)
Here are the following old timers that made it into the new year.
Mario Sequi - director, screenwriter (b. 1910 or 1913)?
Ruthie Tompson - animator (b. 1910)
Yuaka Sada - actor (b. 1911)
Renée Simonot - dubbing actress (b. 1911)
Urho Harkola - actor (b. 1911)
Katsumi Tezuka - actor (b. 1912)
Viola Smith - musician, actress (b. 1912)
Milton Quon - animator (b. 1913)
Julie Gibson - actress (b. 1913)
Pappukutty Bhagavathar - actor, singer (b. 1913)
Aldo Rossi - screenwriter, director (b. 1913)?
Norman Lloyd - actor, producer, director (b. 1914)
Fred Fox - soundtrack musician (b. 1914) † 5/21/2019
Alfredo Varelli - actor (b. 1914)
Norman Spencer - producer (b. 1914)
Mary Ward - actress (b. 1915)
Herman Wouk - novelist, screenwriter (b. 1915) † 5/17/2019
Giuseppe La Torre - cinematographer (b. 1915)
Rita Livesi - actress (b. 1915)
Mag Bodard - producer (b. 1916) † 2/28/2019
Olivia De Havilland - actress (b. 1916)
Kirk Douglas - actor (b. 1916)
Eric Bentley - screenwriter, playwright (b. 1916)
Elisa Stella - actress (b. 1916)
Beverly Cleary - novelist, screenwriter (b. 1916)
Jean Erdman - choreographer (b. 1916)
Ivy Baker - costume designer (b. 1916)
Anna Maria Bottini - actress (b. 1916)
Roberto Bruni - actor (b. 1916)
Lily Vincenti - actress (b. 1916)
Sumiko Mizukubo - actress (b. 1916)?
Harriet Frank Jr. - screenwriter (b. 1917)
Vera Lynn - singer, actress (b. 1917)
Earl Cameron - actor (b. 1917)
Marsha Hunt - actress (b. 1917)
Suzy Delair - actress (b. 1917)
Lise NĂžrgaard - novelist, screenwriter (b. 1917)
Hilde Zadek - opera singer, actress (b. 1917) † 2/21/2019
Anne Hegira - actress (b. 1917)
Don Marion Davis - actor (b. 1917)
Fabien Collin - director (b. 1917)
Bob Cunningham - actor (b. 1917)
Antonio Gradoli - actor (b. 1917)
Lucy Jarvis - producer (b. 1917)
Fay McKenzie - actress (b. 1918) † 4/16/2019
Artur Brauner - producer (b. 1918)
Baby Peggy - actress (b. 1918)
Ivy Bethune - actress (b. 1918)
Dusty Anderson - actress (b. 1918)
Guje Lagerwall - actress (b. 1918) † 1/8/2019
Doreen Turner - actress (b. 1918)
Jeanne Manet - actress (b. 1918)
Nino Borghi - production designer (b. 1918)
Jean Moussette - director, editor, cameraman (b. 1918)
Adriana Sivieri - actress (b. 1918)
René de Obaldia - playwright, screenwriter (b. 1918)
Tao Porchon-Lynch - actress (b. 1918)
Ida Schuster - actress (b. 1918)
Branka Veselinovic - actress (b. 1918)
Maurice Marks - actor, stuntman (b. 1918)
Dave Bartholomew - musician, lyricist (b. 1918)
Sid Ramin - composer (b. 1919)
Nehemiah Persoff - actor (b. 1919)
Walter Bernstein - screenwriter (b. 1919)
Marge Champion - actress, dancer (b. 1919)
Joachim Tomaschewsky - actor (b. 1919)
Caren Marsh - dancer, actress (b. 1919)
Grace Albertson - actress (b. 1919)
Betty Brodel - singer, actress (b. 1919)
Sheila Mercier - actress (b. 1919)
Norma Miller - dancer, actress (b. 1919) † 5/6/2019
Alfie Scopp - actor (b. 1919)
Helen Shingler - actress (b. 1919)
Doris Merrick - actress (b. 1919)
Armin Dahlen - actor, director (b. 1919)
Jean Barker - editor (b. 1919)
Helge Robbert - cinematographer, director (b. 1919)
June Spencer - actress (b. 1919)
Max Berliner - actor (b. 1919)
Doris Merrick - actress (b. 1920)
Don Kennedy - actor (b. 1920)
Noah Keen - actor (b. 1920) † 3/24/2019
Victor Platt - actor (b. 1920)
Kate Murtagh - actress (b. 1920)
Franca Valeri - actress (b. 1920)
Jack Edwards - actor (b. 1920)
Norma Barzman - screenwriter (b. 1920)
Sergio MendizĂĄbal - actor (b. 1920)
A. E. Hotchner - novelist, screenwriter, playwright (b. 1920)
Gudrun Parker - producer, director (b. 1920)
Doudou Babet - actress (b. 1920)
Joan Ellacott - costume designer (b. 1920)
Vera Bergman - actress (b. 1920)
Susan Miller - actress (b. 1920)
Nicolette Bernard - actress (b. 1920)
Claude Accursi - screenwriter (b. 1920)
Francis Rigaud - director, screenwriter (b. 1920)
Ann Triola - actress, singer (b. 1920)
AgnĂšs Delahaie - producer (b. 1920)
Edward Lewis - producer, screenwriter (b. 1920)
Hilda Bernard - actress (b. 1920)
Carol Channing - actress (b. 1921) † 1/15/2019
Josip Elic - actor (b. 1921)
Ruth de Souza - actress (b. 1921)
Jack Rader - actor (b. 1921)
Geoffrey Chater - actor (b. 1921)
Bill Butler - cinematographer (b. 1921)
Muriel Pavlow - actress (b. 1921) † 1/19/2019
Walter Mirisch - producer (b. 1921)
Tom Felleghy - actor (b. 1921)
Teddi Sherman - screenwriter (b. 1921) † 1/16/2019
Patricia Marmont - actress (b. 1921)
Carlo Lastricati - assistant director (b. 1921)
Grisha Dabat - screenwriter (b. 1921)
Herbert Kofer - actor (b. 1921)
Dobroslav SrĂĄmek - sound editor (b. 1921)
Yu Lan - actress (b. 1921)
Zygmunt Nowak - sound editor (b. 1921)
Miriam Nevo - actress (b. 1921)
John Aldred - sound mixer (b. 1921)
George Lefferts - producer, screenwriter (b. 1921)
Wally Campo - actor (b. 1921)
Derek Granger - producer (b. 1921)
Herbert Westbrook - art director, production designer (b. 1921)
Betty White - actress (b. 1922)
Ray Anthony - musician, actor (b. 1922)
Carl Reiner - actor, director, screenwriter (b. 1922)
Doris Day - actress, singer (b. 1922) † 5/13/2019
Margia Dea - actress (b. 1922)
Helen Mowery - actress (b. 1922)
Bill Macy - actor (b. 1922)
Joan Copeland - actress (b. 1922)
Bibi Ferreira - actress (b. 1922) † 2/13/2019
Tony Charmoli - dancer, choreographer, director (b. 1922)
Charles Csuri - animator (b. 1922)
Norman Lear - producer (b. 1922)
Micheline Presle - actress (b. 1922)
Ivry Gitlis - violinist, actor (b. 1922)
Janis Paige - actress (b. 1922)
Bert I. Gordon - director (b. 1922)
Peter Hughes - actor (b. 1922) † 2/5/2019
Françoise Javet - editor (b. 1922)
Ebrahim Golestan - director (b. 1922)
Ethmer Roten - film score musician (b. 1922)
Angel Wagenstein - screenwriter (b. 1922)
Gershon Kingsley - film composer (b. 1922)
Jacqueline White - actress (b. 1922)
Jonas Mekas - director (b. 1922) † 1/23/2019
Paula Valenska - actress (b. 1922)
Ivan King - art director (b. 1922)
Maurice Delbez - director (b. 1922)
Christian Alers - actor (b. 1922)
Mona Lisa - actress (b. 1922)
Chandrashekhar - actor (b. 1922)
John Shirley - editor (b. 1922)
Dilip Kumar - actor (b. 1922)
Alan Scott - actor (b. 1922)
Qin Yi - actress (b. 1922)
Doreen Brownstone - actress (b. 1922)
Mariya Portnaya - animator (b. 1922)
Enrico Bomba - producer, director (b. 1922)
Agustina Bessa-LuĂ­s - playwright, screenwriter (b. 1922)
Terence Kelly - actor (b. 1922)
Vladimir Etush - actor (b. 1922)
Rudolf Kovac - production designer (b. 1922)
Peter Berkos - sound editor (b. 1922)
Marcel Berbert - producer (b. 1922)
Raffaele La Capria - screenwriter (b. 1922)
Robert Fletcher - costume designer (b. 1922)
Jacqueline Duc - actress (b. 1922)
Sydney Bettex - production designer (b. 1923)
Larry Storch - actor (b. 1923)
Valentina Cortese - actress (b. 1923)
Rosita Fornes - actress (b. 1923)
Franco Zeffirelli - director (b. 1923)
Gloria Henry - actress (b. 1923)
Gene Reynolds - actor, screenwriter, producer, director (b. 1923)
Stan Waterman - producer, cinematographer (b. 1923)
Donald Elson - actor (b. 1923)
Paul Muller - actor (b. 1923)
JaromĂ­r JanĂĄcek - editor (b. 1923)
Elizabeth Sellars - actress (b. 1923)
Jimmy Lydon - child actor, producer (b. 1923)
Peggy Stewart - actress (b. 1923) † 5/29/2019
Michael Medwin - actor, producer (b. 1923)
Val Bettin - actor (b. 1923)
Ralph Senensky - director (b. 1923)
Edward Ryan - actor (b. 1923)
Rhonda Fleming - actress (b. 1923)
Werner Lenz - cinematographer (b. 1923)
Glynis Johns - actress (b. 1923)
Nicholas Parsons - actor (b. 1923)
JĂłzef Hen - screenwriter, novelist (b. 1923)
Bob Barker - game show host (b. 1923)
Mike Nussbaum - actor (b. 1923)
Vatroslav Mimica - director (b. 1923)
Kim Yaroshevskaya - actress (b. 1923)
Barbara Chilcott - actress (b. 1923)
Ruth Geller - actress (b. 1923)
Billy Watson - child actor (b. 1923)
Sam Gray - actor (b. 1923)
Patrick Gordon - actor (b. 1923)
Bernard Gersten - producer (b. 1923)
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