Celebrate the Veronica Lake Centennial 🎂💯
📷 George Hurrell, 1941
"I never did cheesecake like Ann Sheridan or Betty Grable. I just used my hair."
Veronica Lake 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 #VeronicaLake100
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. #VeronicaLake100
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. #VeronicaLake100
Alan Ladd & Veronica Lake in Frank Tuttle's This Gun for Hire, 1942
The still photographer on the set was Mal Bulloch #stillonset #VeronicaLake100
Veronica Lake in Mitchell Leisen's I Wanted Wings, 1941
The still photographer on the set was Don English #stillonset #VeronicaLake100
Veronica Lake with Alan Ladd again, in George Marshall's The Blue Dahlia, 1946. The two appeared in four films together, over six years.
The still photographer on the set was Jack Koffman #stillonset #VeronicaLake100
Veronica Lake by Eliot Elisofon, 1942 #VeronicaLake100
I presume this shot was taken for René Clair's I Married a Witch.
A shot that Bob Landry took of Veronica Lake's hair for a Life magazine feature in November 1941. Her hairstyle was widely copied by young women, but once America went to war, Lake cut her locks in the interest of war industry safety. #VeronicaLake100
Veronica Lake by Peter Stackpole for Life, 1946
A much more suitable look for working on an armaments assembly line. #VeronicaLake100
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Remembering Roger Parry on his birthday 🎂
📷 Self-portrait, c. 1929 @mpatrimphoto
"Parry juggled with the art of seeing and the art of being seen, constantly adding a theatrical dimension to his photographs."
Celebrate the Oskar Werner Centennial 🎂
With François Truffaut on the set of Fahrenheit 451
📷 Philippe Halsman, 1966
Though star & director did not get along on a very unhappy set, as @tnyfrontrow says, "... the film remains audaciously surprising even now."
Oskar Werner by Philippe Halsman, 1966
"To me the stage is sculpture. Films are like a painted poster, spread out on a one-dimensional surface."
Oskar Werner & Henri Serre on the set of François Truffaut's Jules et Jim
📷 Raymond Cauchetier, 1962
"Jules and Jim is one of those rare films that knows how fast audiences can think, & how emotions contain their own explanations."
- Roger Ebert
Remembering Robert Whitaker on his birthday 🎂
📷 A self-portrait in Hamburg during The Beatles' last world tour, 1966
""I learned when to poke a camera at them and when not to."
The Beatles making a promotional film for their single "I Feel Fine"
📷 Robert Whitaker, November 1965
John Lennon by Robert Whitaker, 1964
Once again, when shooting musicians, sunglasses are a photographer's best friend.
Remembering Carleton Watkins on his birthday 🎂
📷 Self-portrait, 1883
"He was not just the greatest American landscape photographer of the 19th century but one of the greatest American artists of the 19th century & one of the great photographers, period."
- Michael Kimmelman
Carleton Watkins
Tutocanula, 3,600 ft, El Capitan, Yosemite
Remembering Mose Allison on his birthday 🎂
📷 Jack Vartoogian, 1998
"In the South, I’m considered an advanced bebop type. In New York, I’m considered a country blues-folk type. Actually, I don’t think I’m either. Maybe I’m a little of both."
Mose Allison by Ebet Roberts, 1989
"He established himself playing & singing in a gentle, understated way, in a narrow range & using a bouncing, jigging rhythm that was closely related to the so-called 'swamp music' that Jimmy Giuffre was playing."
- John S. Wilson
Mose Allison by Michael Wilson
"There's a lot of terrible things goin' on all the time, but you gotta try and have some fun in the end."
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