Remembering Merle Oberon on her birthday 🎂
📷 Cecil Beaton, 1934
"It was the strength of Oberon’s work before the camera, combined with the singularity of her beauty, that first captured the film establishment’s attention - not her parentage, not her upbringing."
- Mayukh Sen
A candid shot of Merle Oberon by William Grimes, 1940
Merle Oberon & Robert Ryan in Jacques Tourneur's Berlin Express
📷 Art Say, 1948
Merle Oberon & Warren Stevens in The Price of Fear
📷 Bill Walling, 1956
Merle Oberon played George Sand in Charles Vidor's A Song to Remember. Chopin was played by Cornel Wilde
📷 Ned Scott, 1945
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Remembering Alan Rickman on his birthday 🎂
📷 Annie Leibovitz
"Die Hard made Bruce Willis a movie star, but it earned Rickman a different kind of designation, as the prototypical, and at the same time impossible-to-replicate, action-movie villain."
- @iancrouch
Another Annie Leibovitz portrait of Alan Rickman, as Severus Snape, from 2001
Remembering Nina Simone on her birthday 🎂
📷 David Redfern, 1966
"Every generation has to discover Nina Simone. She is evidence that female genius is real."
- Germaine Greer
One of my favourite Nina Simone portraits, by Bob Willoughby, from c. 1960
For Nina Simone's birthday, this spectacular photograph by Guy Le Querrec
From the 1er Festival Culturel Panafricain, Théâtre de l'Atlas, Alger, July 30, 1969
Remembering W. H. Auden on his birthday 🎂
📷 George Platt Lynes @BeineckeLibrary
"Given poetry’s almost total isolation from public discourse today, there’s something deeply appealing about Auden’s quest to establish a poetry of public intimacy."
- Meghan O'Rourke
W. H. Auden by Yousuf Karsh, 1972
Karsh remembered this last session with Auden, in Stephen Spender's garden:
"Come soon, come soon," he invited, but I knew I would never see him again.
W. H. Auden at El Teatro Cafe in Venice
📷 Ruth Orkin, 1951
Remembering Raymond Queneau on his birthday 🎂
📷 Robert Doisneau, 1956
"Queneau’s thinking did not always follow the ways of his century, but his writing unmistakably *belongs* to that century, & indeed often seems to anticipate it."
- Jordan Stump
Raymond Queneau was called by Le Monde "the most universal mind of our time." He was apparently an accomplished painter!
Here's a self-portrait from 1947.
Raymond Queneau by Henri Cartier-Bresson, 1963
"True stories deal with hunger, imaginary ones with love."
Remembering Anaïs Nin on her birthday 🎂
📷 Inge Morath, Hollywood, 1959
"The rehabilitation of Nin is taking place not because her work has changed, but because the world has changed to make room for her work."
- @sadydoyle
Coffee with Anaïs Nin ☕️
📷 Inge Morath,Schwab's Drugstore, Los Angeles, 1959
Anaïs Nin by Annette Lederer, 1969
"The role of a writer is not to say what we all can say, but what we are unable to say."
Remembering Andrés Segovia on his birthday 🎂
📷 Erich Auerbach, 1963
"Unable to find a teacher, he guided himself and would say in later years with a smile, 'To this day, teacher & pupil have never had a serious quarrel'."
- Donal Henahan
Andres Segovia by Nickolas Muray
Vanity Fair, 1928
Watch Christopher Nupen's film of Segovia's concert at the Alhambra, from 1976
Heitor Villa-Lobos & Andres Segovia sign the guestbook at the Centro Guitarristico in Montevideo.