#what a way to go
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silverscreencaps · 11 months ago
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What a Way to Go! (1964) dir. J. Lee Thompson
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ladyshinga · 5 months ago
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roses-in-hollywood · 4 months ago
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Shirley MacLaine in What A Way To Go! (1964)
Costumes by Edith Head
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birdmans · 3 months ago
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sabrina carpenter at the grammy awards (2025) / shirley maclaine in what a way to go! (1964)
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ladyhawke · 2 years ago
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WHAT A WAY TO GO! (1964) dir. J. Lee Thompson
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honeyyymmoon · 3 months ago
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Sabrina Carpenter has arrived at the Grammys red carpet in an icy blue bombshell dress by JW Anderson with showstopping Chopard jewerly. Sabrina pays homage to the 1964 romantic comedy "What a Way to Go" with her Grammys dress.
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vampirecorleone · 6 months ago
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"Shirley MacLaine is quoted as saying she was happy to work with Edith Head, with a $500,000.00 budget, 72 hairstyles to match the gowns, and $3.5-million gem collection, on-loan from Harry Winston. The value of the gems, adjusted for inflation, would be $23.5 million in 2016" What a Way to Go! (1964) dir. J. Lee Thompson || Costume Design by Edith Head
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quitonly · 2 years ago
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WHAT A WAY TO GO! 1964, dir. J. Lee Thompson
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forlorngarden · 3 months ago
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best part of opal was the old lady reading bisexual erotica by the creek. daily. why isn't she more famous around here
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vampyranha · 5 months ago
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Women in films 🖤
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paulnewmansblueeyes · 1 month ago
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Paul as Larry Flint in What a Way to Go!, 1964.
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silverscreencaps · 11 months ago
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What a Way to Go! (1964) dir. J. Lee Thompson
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weirdsimsinhistory · 2 months ago
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Casually ignoring NPC horrors lol
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livelovecaliforniadreams · 3 months ago
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Sabrina Channeling What a way to go! 
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popculturebaby · 1 year ago
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Shirley MacLaine in “What a Way to Go!”, 1964
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alphynix · 11 months ago
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Tachypleus syriacus was a horseshoe crab from the late Cretaceous (~100-95 million years ago) of what is now Lebanon.
Closely related to modern tri-spine horseshoe crabs, it displayed a similar level of sexual dimorphism. Females grew to at least 25cm long (~10"), with rounded front edges to their carapaces and shorter rear spines, while males were around 30% smaller with a scalloped shape to the front of their carapaces.
One recently described female specimen also preserves distinctive nodules around the rim of its carapace, which may represent some sort of sensory structure.
This particular specimen is also unique for preserving a coprolite in the process of being expelled from the horseshoe crab's body – that's right, it died while pooping.
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NixIllustration.com | Tumblr | Patreon
References:
Bicknell, Russell DC, et al. "A unique example of the Late Cretaceous horseshoe crab Tachypleus syriacus preserves transitional bromalites." Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology (2024): 1-6. https://doi.org/10.1080/03115518.2024.2348748
Bicknell, Russell DC, et al. "On the appendicular anatomy of the xiphosurid Tachypleus syriacus and the evolution of fossil horseshoe crab appendages." The Science of Nature 106.7 (2019): 38. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-019-1629-6
Lamsdell, James C., and Scott C. McKenzie. "Tachypleus syriacus (Woodward)—a sexually dimorphic Cretaceous crown limulid reveals underestimated horseshoe crab divergence times." Organisms Diversity & Evolution 15 (2015): 681-693. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13127-015-0229-3
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