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March 27, 2026

25 Stunning Vintage Postcards of Gloria Swanson in the 1920s and 1930s

Gloria Swanson wasn’t just a movie star; she was the blueprint for the modern celebrity. Her transition from the silent era of the 1920s to the “talkies” of the 1930s is a masterclass in reinvention, marked by extreme highs and a very public struggle to stay on top.


In the 1920s, Swanson was the highest-paid woman in Hollywood and a global fashion icon. Working largely with director Cecil B. DeMille, she perfected the persona of the “clothes horse,” a sophisticated, draped-in-fur aristocrat. It was said that women across America waited to see what Swanson wore on screen so they could copy it. She popularized bobbed hair, oversized jewelry, and even “theatrical” makeup for everyday wear.

In 1925, she turned down a $1 million-a-year contract with Paramount to become an independent producer with United Artists. It was a risky, boss-level move that few actors, male or female, dared to make. Sadie Thompson (1928) earned her an Academy Award nomination and proved she had dramatic depth beyond just looking glamorous.

The 1930s were much more turbulent for Swanson. Like many silent stars, she faced the “sound barrier.” While her voice was actually quite good (she could sing, too), the industry’s tastes were shifting toward a more gritty, naturalistic style that clashed with her grand, silent-era gestures. She successfully transitioned to sound with The Trespasser (1929/1930), which earned her another Oscar nod. However, she struggled to find follow-up hits.

By the mid-1930s, her box-office power faded. She moved to New York and eventually Europe, effectively retiring from the screen for a period to focus on business ventures and radio. The public began to see her as a relic of a more “extraVagant” time, a sentiment she would later lean into for her most famous role decades later.

Interestingly, her real-life experience of being a “forgotten” star in the 1930s and 1940s is exactly what allowed her to give such a haunting, authentic performance as Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard (1950).






Max Schödl: The Master of Still Life and Orientalist Elegance

Max Schödl (1834–1921) was an Austrian painter renowned for his exquisite still lifes, particularly those capturing the opulent beauty of antique objects.

Active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Schödl became a master of miniature-like precision, often focusing on “Orientalist” themes such as intricate Chinese porcelain, Japanese bronzes, and luxurious silks. His work is characterized by an almost photographic attention to detail, where the textures of cold jade, shimmering lacquer, and delicate embroidery are rendered with breathtaking realism.

Unlike the grand, sweeping landscapes of his era, Schödl’s paintings offer an intimate, silent world of craftsmanship, inviting the viewer to appreciate the quiet elegance of historical artifacts. Explore the stunning precision and rich textures of Max Schödl’s work through this collection of his most captivating still life paintings.

Still Life with Japanese Works of Art

A Still Life With Oriental Objects

Antique Still Life

Asian Still Life

Oriental Still Life

22 Amazing Photos of James Caan on the Set of “The Godfather” (1972)

James Caan’s time on the set of The Godfather (1972) was defined by high-energy improvisation, a playful “prankster” reputation shared with co-stars, and some genuine tension during physical scenes. Though he was originally considered for the role of Michael Corleone, director Francis Ford Coppola and Caan himself pushed for Al Pacino, allowing Caan to play the hot-headed Sonny.

During the wedding scene, Caan spontaneously smashed an FBI photographer’s camera. He then threw money at the photographer because, as he put it, in his neighborhood “if you broke something, you replaced it.”

Sonny’s famous “bada bing” line was an ad-lib inspired by the comedian Don Rickles, whom Caan used as a loose model for Sonny’s driving energy. In the fight with Carlo Rizzi, Caan decided to throw a sawed-off broomstick at his co-star, which was not in the script.

To cut through the intense atmosphere on set, Caan and Robert Duvall began a contest of “mooning” the cast and crew. This culminated in Marlon Brando and Duvall mooning 400 people during the wedding scene, for which Brando was jokingly awarded a “Moon Champion” belt.

Gianni Russo, who played Carlo, claimed Caan took their on-screen rivalry into reality, alleging Caan actually broke two of his ribs and chipped his elbow during their fight scene. Caan later dismissed these claims, stating he mostly performed the scene with a stuntman.

Filming Sonny’s death required 147 squibs, more than the veteran technician had ever used in 50 years. Caan recalled being genuinely terrified during the stunt due to the amount of flying glass and wood.

Caan was initially furious after seeing the film for the first time because Coppola had cut roughly 10 pages of Sonny’s character-building scenes to keep the runtime under three hours.

Co-star Robert Duvall recalled that Caan made filming genuinely funny, even in serious scenes like the one where Vito examines Sonny's corpse. Despite all the on-set drama and mischief, the role officially made Caan a movie star, earning him an Academy Award nomination and producing a performance that invited audiences to reconsider what screen tough guys could be. 






Swinging Sixties Style: 30 Stunning Photos of Women in Miniskirts

In the mid-to-late 1960s, a fashion phenomenon arrived that would define an entire generation: the miniskirt. Originating from the streets of “Swinging London” and popularized by designers like Mary Quant, the miniskirt was far more than just a piece of clothing with a shorter hemline. It was a potent symbol of youth rebellion, sexual liberation, and newfound confidence for women.

In these vintage photos, you see women confidently embracing this daring new look, often paired with sleek bob haircuts, patterned tights, and iconic go-go boots. The miniskirt represented a definitive break from the restrictive and formal attire of the past, signaling a seismic shift in societal norms. It captured the playful, rebellious, and free-spirited energy of the 1960s, permanently altering the landscape of both fashion and feminism.






March 26, 2026

Steven Tyler Posing With His 1956 Mercedes Benz 220S in 1975

These photographs of Steven Tyler with his 1956 Mercedes-Benz 220S were taken by Ron Pownall at Jamaica Pond in Boston, Massachusetts in October 1975 for CREEM magazine.

“I first met Aerosmith in 1973 at the Roberts Center Gym at Boston College,” said Pownall. “It was a rockin’ gig in the gym for a campus Fall Festival of some sort. We became friends, and I ended up doing most of their photography for the next 15 years.”

“These pics are from a CREEM magazine series, Stars Cars, in 1975. We shot around Jamaica Pond, on the edge of Boston. Everybody in the band had these fancy Porsches, ‘Vettes, Z’s, but Steven had a barely-running 1956 Mercedes 220 Convertible. In fact, it died at the end of the shoot, and we had to have it towed; despite Steve’s insistence we could figure it out because he had the owner’s manual! But, as always, we had a fun shoot.”

The 1956 Mercedes-Benz 220S is renowned for its elegant design and engineering excellence, featuring a 2.2-liter inline-six engine and advanced suspension for its time. This classic vehicle reflects Tyler’s appreciation for timeless automobiles. Over the years, Tyler’s car collection has expanded to include remarkable vehicles such as a 1941 Ford Pickup and a Hennessey Venom GT Spyder.






35 Fascinating Photos of Diana Ross as Billie Holiday on the Set of “Lady Sings the Blues” (1972)

Diana Ross’s performance on the set of Lady Sings the Blues (1972) was a transformative debut that redefined her career from a pop superstar to a dramatic actress. Directed by Sidney J. Furie, the film was shot over 42 days, with Ross on set for 41 of them, fully immersing herself in the life of jazz legend Billie Holiday.

To prepare, Ross created a personal space in her dressing room filled with photographs of Holiday to internalize her image. She reportedly listened to tape recordings of her lines without emotion, allowing her true feelings to develop naturally during filming with her co-stars.

Principal photography utilized the Paramount backlot to recreate 1930s Harlem, while designer Bob Mackie provided iconic period-accurate costumes. Co-star Billy Dee Williams noted an immediate “unspoken connection” on set, treating Ross as a professional peer despite her being a newcomer to film. A 10-minute promotional featurette from 1972 shows Ross in scenes cut from the final film, including a recording session for “Don’t Explain.”

Vincent Canby of The New York Times described Ross as “an actress of exceptional beauty and wit, who is very much involved in trying to make a bad movie work ... her only apparent limitations are those imposed on her by a screenplay and direction seemingly designed to turn a legitimate legend into a whopper of a cliché.”

Variety wrote, “For the bulk of general audiences, the film serves as a very good screen debut vehicle for Diana Ross, supported strongly by excellent casting, handsome '30s physical values, and a script which is far better in dialog than structure.”

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film three stars out of four, writing that Ross had given “one of the great performances of 1972,” and observing that the film “has most of the clichés we expect—but do we really mind clichés in a movie like this? I don't think so.”

Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune also awarded three stars out of four, writing, “The fact that ‘Lady Sings the Blues’ is a failure as a biography of legendary jazz singer Billie Holiday doesn’t mean it can’t be an entertaining movie. And it is just that—entertaining—because of an old fashioned grand dame performance by Diana Ross, late of the pop-rock scene, in the title role.”

Pauline Kael of The New Yorker wrote that “when the movie was over I wrote ’I love it’ on my pad of paper ... Factually it’s a fraud, but emotionally it delivers. It has what makes movies work for a mass audience: easy pleasure, tawdry electricity, personality—great quantities of personality.”

Tom Milne of The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote that Ross did “a remarkable pastiche job on the tone and timbre of Billie Holiday’s voice, [but] misses the elegant, almost literary wit of her phrasing,” and found the presentation of Holiday’s life story “offensively simplistic.”






30 Stunning Portraits of Jackie Collins in the 1950s and ’60s

In the 1950s and ’60s, long before she became the world-renowned “Queen of Hollywood Glamour,” Jackie Collins was a starlet in her own right, possessing a magnetic beauty that rivaled the characters she would later create. These early portraits capture a fascinating era of her life, showcasing a young woman with striking features and a rebellious, avant-garde spirit.

During this period, Jackie was often seen with her signature dark, voluminous hair and a fashion sense that blended the structured elegance of the fifties with the bold, liberated “Mod” style of the sixties. Whether she was posing for soft-lit studio headshots or candid street snaps, there was always a glint of sharp intelligence and mischief in her eyes, a hint of the sharp-witted observer who would one day pull back the velvet curtain on the scandals of the rich and famous.









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