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June 13, 2026

30 Amazing Photos of Michelle Pfeiffer and Al Pacino on the Set of “Frankie & Johnny” (1991)

Michelle Pfeiffer and Al Pacino appeared together in the 1991 romantic comedy-drama Frankie & Johnny, directed by Garry Marshall. It was their second film together after Scarface (1983). The movie is an adaptation of Terrence McNally’s play Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune, with Pacino as Johnny (a recently released ex-con working as a cook) and Pfeiffer as Frankie (a cautious waitress). They share strong on-screen chemistry in this story about two lonely people finding connection.

The production history of the film is famous for its casting controversy. The original stage play featured Kathy Bates and Kenneth Welsh as ordinary, weathered, “everyday” people looking for a late-stage shot at love. When Hollywood cast two of the most famously attractive movie stars on the planet, critics were initially skeptical.

To counteract their innate star power, Michelle Pfeiffer took on a deliberately muted appearance to play Frankie, a deeply guarded, emotionally scarred waitress. Al Pacino traded his usual explosive intensity for a softer, more persistent, and worn-around-the-edges charm as Johnny, a middle-aged ex-con trying to make a fresh start as a short-order cook.

While the original stage production was a claustrophobic, two-character play set entirely inside a one-room apartment, Marshall utilized the screenplay to expand the narrative world. On-set photography captured massive location shoots across New York City, incorporating 94 speaking parts and a bustling Manhattan café environment.

The title is a reference to the traditional American popular song “Frankie and Johnny,” first published in 1904, which tells the story of a woman who finds her man making love to another woman and shoots him dead. The film received generally favorable reviews and grossed $67 million with a $29 million budget.






Mary Wickes, the Original On-Screen Mary Poppins

Mary Wickes was the first actress to play Mary Poppins on screen, debuting in the role 15 years before Julie Andrews. Long before the iconic 1964 Walt Disney musical, Wickes brought P.L. Travers’ famous nanny to life in a live, one-hour television broadcast.

On December 19, 1949, CBS aired an adaptation of Mary Poppins as an episode of the popular anthology series Studio One. Wickes starred as the titular magical nanny. She was joined by E.G. Marshall as Mr. Banks and child actor Tommy Rettig as Michael Banks. Wickes’ performance closely mirrored P.L. Travers’ original 1934 book. Her version of Mary Poppins was much pricklier, stern, and authoritative than the sweeter version later popularized by Disney.

Because it was broadcast live, the production relied on crude yet impressive physical special effects. Wickes was flown across the studio airspace using a meat hook and pulley system, and a mechanical trick allowed her to appear to slide upward on a staircase banister.

The 1949 broadcast successfully reignited Hollywood’s interest in adapting the book series into a feature film. Years later, when Walt Disney secured the rights to produce his musical adaptation, author P.L. Travers actually favored Mary Wickes for the role because of how well Wickes fit her original literary vision. Wickes, who was already working with Disney at the time as the live-action reference model for Cruella de Vil in 101 Dalmatians (1961), actively asked to be considered.

However, Disney was determined to make a musical and went in a younger direction, casting Julie Andrews in her legendary film debut. Friends of Wickes later shared that she was deeply heartbroken by the snub. Despite this, she kept a framed photograph of herself in her 1949 Mary Poppins costume in her home for the rest of her life.

While she missed out on the Disney feature film, Mary Wickes enjoyed a highly successful six-decade career as one of Hollywood’s most recognizable character actresses.







Taina Elg: The Elegant Finnish Star of 1950s Hollywood

Taina Elg is a celebrated Finnish-American actress and dancer whose grace and versatility left a memorable mark on Hollywood during the Golden Age of cinema.

Originally trained as a prima ballerina with the Royal Swedish Ballet and the Grand Ballet du Marquis de Cuevas, her poise and striking beauty quickly caught the eye of Hollywood talent scouts, leading to a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) in the mid-1950s. Elg is best remembered for her radiant, Golden Globe-winning performance in George Cukor’s classic musical Les Girls (1957), where she starred alongside Gene Kelly and Mitzi Gaynor.

Beyond her film career, Elg found great success on the theatrical stage, earning a Tony Award nomination for her work on Broadway in the 1975 musical Where’s Charley?. Blending European elegance with classic Hollywood glamour, she remains a cherished icon of 1950s cinema and performing arts. These beautiful vintage photos capture the graceful poise, classical beauty, and refined charm of Taina Elg in the 1950s.






When Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa Went on Display in the U.S. for the First Time, on Loan From France, in 1963

On January 8, 1963, the Mona Lisa went on display in the United States for the first time, on loan from France. The historic 1963 tour was the result of some high-level diplomacy and a personal request from First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy to the French Minister of Cultural Affairs, André Malraux. Despite intense protests from French art experts who feared the painting would be damaged during transit, it safely crossed the Atlantic ocean aboard the ocean liner SS France, traveling in its own first-class cabin under tight security.

The tour debuted at the National Gallery of Art (Washington, D.C.) on January 8, 1963, with an opening ceremony attended by President John F. Kennedy, the First Lady, and over 2,000 dignitaries. It opened to the public the following day, drawing over 500,000 visitors until February 3. The masterpiece moved to Manhattan, where it went on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art from February 7 to March 4, drawing an additional one million visitors.

During the museum exhibitions, the artwork remained behind bulletproof glass and was guarded 24/7 by U.S. Secret Service agents, local police detectives, and museum security guards.

To handle the unprecedented crowds, both museums had to extend their viewing hours, and visitors were only permitted to look at the painting for a matter of seconds as the line kept moving. It remains one of the most successful and tightly guarded single-painting exhibitions in American history.






Natalie Wood: Stunning On-Set Portraits From “Gypsy” (1962)

In 1962, a radiant 24-year-old Natalie Wood was at the height of her beauty and Hollywood stardom while filming the lively musical Gypsy. These stunning on-set portraits capture the young actress in all her glory: full of vitality, confidence, and magnetic charm.

Whether dressed in elaborate showgirl costumes or captured in quieter moments between takes, Wood’s expressive eyes and luminous presence shine through every frame. The images perfectly reflect her star power and the vibrant energy she brought to the role, offering a captivating glimpse of one of Hollywood’s most beloved actresses during a golden moment in her career.






June 12, 2026

Lucille Ball and Harpo Marx in the Mirror Scene on “I Love Lucy” (1955)

The mirror routine between Lucille Ball and Harpo Marx in I Love Lucy is widely considered one of the finest physical comedy sequences in television history. Aired on May 9, 1955 during Season 4 (Episode 28, simply titled “Harpo Marx”), the scene pays brilliant homage to the classic vaudeville “mirror mime” routine, most famously executed by Harpo and Groucho Marx in the 1933 film Duck Soup.


The plot centers on Lucy Ricardo trying to convince her visiting New York friend, Caroline Appleby, that she is close friends with Hollywood’s elite. To pull off the ruse, Lucy dresses up and impersonates various celebrities. When the real Harpo Marx unexpectedly walks in, a panicked Lucy—already disguised as Harpo in a matching trench coat, top hat, and curly blonde wig—hides. When he discovers her, Lucy tries to fool him into believing he is merely looking at his own reflection in an empty door frame.

While the broadcast performance looked effortless, filming the routine presented unique challenges. Lucy was a legendary perfectionist who relied heavily on strict, meticulous rehearsal. In contrast, Harpo was an instinctive, improvisational performer who rarely executed a physical gag the same way twice. Because Harpo would occasionally stray from the agreed choreography, the duo had to shoot the sequence repeatedly. They ultimately had to finish filming after the live studio audience went home to ensure perfect synchronization.

Despite the grueling retakes, a tiny mistake slipped through to the final cut. During the routine, Lucy accidentally honks her prop horn using her opposite (wrong) hand, briefly breaking the mirror illusion.

The episode marked a joyous reunion for the two stars, who had originally worked together 17 years prior in the 1938 Marx Brothers film Room Service.

Vintage Photographs of Traditional Ottoman-Era Wooden Ferris Wheels From the Early 20th Century

Long before George Washington Gale Ferris Jr. engineered his massive steel monolith for the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair, the fundamental concept of the “pleasure wheel” was spinning throughout the Ottoman Empire. By the early 1900s, these traditional, hand-cranked wooden structures, often referred to in Turkish as a dönme dolap (spinning cupboard), remained a vibrant fixture of rural markets, Eid celebrations, and village festivals across Anatolia and the Balkans.

Unlike their steam-driven Western counterparts, early 20th-century Ottoman wheels were beautiful exercises in folk engineering. Constructed entirely from local timber, these rough-hewn wheels featured basic wooden spokes bound to a central wooden axle resting on heavy A-frame supports.

Instead of enclosed cabins, passengers (frequently children) sat in simple, open wooden chairs, benches, or cradles suspended from iron pins or ropes. There were no engines. These structures were entirely human-powered. Strong ride operators would manually pull the wheel down by its outer rims or spokes, using their body weight to launch the wheel into motion.

The persistence of these wooden wheels into the 1900s represents centuries of continuity. European travelers had been documenting this exact Ottoman amusement since the early modern period. In the 1620s, English traveler Peter Mundy also encountered similar wooden “swinging carousels” in the Ottoman Balkans, marveling at how efficiently a few men could spin a crowd of locals using nothing but timber and muscle.

By the dawn of the 20th century, the traditional dönme dolap began to face steep competition. The late Ottoman era saw an influx of industrial, mass-produced tin and metal toys from Western Europe, alongside larger, mechanized fairground attractions.

While the handcrafted wooden Ferris wheels gradually faded from bustling urban centers like Istanbul and Salonica, they remained a cherished piece of nostalgic visual history, immortalized in early 20th-century postcards and black-and-white ethnographic photographs capturing the final decades of Ottoman festive culture.









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