A thread of photos by Ralph Morse, another great Life magazine photographer. π§΅
Stickball in Spanish Harlem, 1947
Ralph Morse
Audrey Hepburn with her Best Actress #Oscar, for Roman Holiday, March 1955
A French resistance fighter takes aim at a German sniper attacking a crowd during a tour by Charles De Gaulle, following the liberation of Paris.
A spectacular photo by Ralph Morse for Life magazine, August 1944
Grace Kelly & Prince Rainier by Ralph Morse, 1956
They've just announced their engagement.
Wow! I've never seen this shot before.
Frank Gehry demonstrates the strength of his line of cardboard furniture, by jumping on a desk. A fun photograph by Ralph Morse, 1972
Ralph Morse
A light-beam contour map used by the Air Force to design flight helmets, 1954. This photo showed up on a Life magazine cover.
Ralph Morse
A fabulous shot from a Life story about a short-order cook, from 1947.
I'm a sucker for neon, 1940s cars & high-contrast lighting.
Ralph Morse
Brooklyn Dodger 1st baseman Gil Hodges gets an out in the 1955 World Series against the Yankees. The Dodgers beat the Yankees in The Subway Series, 4 games to 3.
Mercury astronauts John Glenn, Gus Grissom & Alan Shepard. Another Life cover photo by Ralph Morse, March 3, 1961
Ralph Morse
Babe Ruth's final appearance at Yankee Stadium, June 13, 1948. He died two months later.
Ernie Kovacs by Ralph Morse, 1957
Ralph Morse
Christopher Plummer & David Carradine in Peter Shaffer's Royal Hunt of the Sun, 1964
Plummer reprised his role as Atahualpa in the 1969 film; Robert Shaw took over the Francisco Pizarro role.
One of the great baseball photographs, by Ralph Morse: Jackie Robinson steals home as Yogi Berra waits for the pitch. Game 1 of the 1955 Subway Series between the Yankees & Dodgers. Years later, Yogi still insisted that Robinson was out.
The desk in Einstein's office at Princeton.
Taken by Ralph Morse hours after his death on April 18, 1955.
Ralph Morse
Commuters' Bar, Long Island Railroad, January 1948
Ralph Morse
Apollo 11 launch, July 16, 1969
Ralph Morse with one of his Cape Canaveral prints
π· J. Pat Carter, Delray Beach, Florida, 2007
"If Life could afford only one photographer, it would have to be Ralph Morse."
- George P. Hunt, Life managing editor
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Remembering William Steig on his birthday π
π· Jill Krementz, 1973
"The Erotic has always been implicit in Steig's work. Like Picasso, Steig celebrates the body both in ripeness and decay."
- Brendan Gill, Here at the New Yorker
William Steig
September 23, 1985
A great @NewYorker cover on William Steig's birthday. Well-timed, as I'm keeping an eye on a bunch of NFL games this afternoon. Go @Lions!
William Steig
December 31, 1955
One of my favourites: a Top 10 @NewYorker cartoon
Remembering Veronica Lake on her birthday π
She was so good in Preston Sturges' Sullivan's Travels, 1941.
I was absurdly pleased to find out this outfit was designed by Edith Head, who did the costumes for the film. Great shot by Talmadge Morrison, the on set still photographer
A lovely shot by Talmadge Morrison of Joel McCrea & Veronica Lake, in Preston Sturges's Sullivan's Travels, 1941
It must have been a relief for Edith Head to move on to this scene.
Veronica Lake by George Hurrell, 1941
Glamour is one thing, but look at Lake's eyes in this shot. Hurrell is searching for character here, & finding it.
Remembering Louise Brooks on her birthday π
π· Eugene Robert Richee, 1923
"Brooks is a flame fluttering in the wind of her own breath."
- David Thomson
Louise Brooks by Eugene Robert Richee, 1928
"The only star actress I can imagine either being enslaved by or wanting to enslave; and a dark lady worthy of any poet's devotion."
- Kenneth Tynan
A spectacular portrait of Louise Brooks by Eugene Robert Richee, 1928
Herbert Mitgang notes in his 1985 @NYTimes obituary:
"She told Mr. Tynan that she had never been in love, was supported at various times by several millionaires, but declined to marry them."
Remembering Aaron Copland on his birthday π
π· Irving Penn, 1979
"He has never turned out bad work, nor worked without an inspiration. His stance is that not only of a professional but also of an artist - responsible, prepared, giving of his best."
- Virgil Thomson
An undated portrait of Aaron Copland by the composer David Diamond, who was a fine photographer.
"By having sold out to the mongrel commercialists half-way already, the danger is going to be wider for you, and I beg you dear Aaron, don't sell out entirely yet."
Aaron Copland by George Platt Lynes (undated) @BeineckeLibrary
"The composer who is frightened of losing his artistic integrity through contact with a mass audience is no longer aware of the meaning of the word art."
Another thread of a favourite photographer: Life magazine's Carl Mydans π§΅
Here with his Contax camera in a great shot by his colleague Andreas Feininger, 1942
Vladimir Nabokov by Carl Mydans
Ithaca, New York, September 1958