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June 30, 2026

30 Amazing Photographs of Lena Horne Performing on Stage in the 1940s and 1950s

Lena Horne (June 30, 1917 – May 9, 2010) was one of the most elegant and influential live performers of the 1940s and 1950s. Although she became a Hollywood star, many critics believed her greatest artistry was revealed on stage, where she had complete freedom to shape her performances.

In the 1940s, Horne became the first Black woman to sign a long-term studio contract with MGM. This Hollywood stature directly influenced her live performances at high-end venues like New York’s Café Society and during her tours for World War II troops.

Because of the rigid racial politics of the era, Horne and her management consciously crafted an onstage image of untouchable, high-fashion elegance. She often stood relatively still by the microphone, dressed in immaculate, sophisticated evening gowns.

Her early 1940s style was smooth, silky, and meticulously controlled. She leaned heavily into traditional pop standards and torch songs, treating her signature tune, “Stormy Weather” (1943), with a poignant, melancholic restraint rather than belt-it-out theatricality.

On stage, Horne used her posture and impeccable diction as a shield and a statement. She famously refused to play demeaning roles on screen, and on stage, her flawless, dignified presentation challenged the segregated spaces she was invited to perform in. When performing for the USO, she famously walked away from the white section to perform directly in front of the Black soldiers who had been relegated to the back rows.

By the 1950s, Hollywood had essentially blacklisted Horne due to her progressive political activism and friendships with figures like Paul Robeson. Shut out of movies and television, she pivoted entirely to live performance, reinventing herself as the undisputed queen of the international nightclub circuit.

Free from the constraints of Hollywood studio executives, Horne’s stage persona underwent a massive shift. The cool restraint of the 1940s gave way to an aggressive, fiercely passionate energy. She used her eyes, dramatic hand gestures, and sharp, biting phrasing to cut through the room. She would later describe this shift as letting out the anger she had suppressed for years.

Her sets became faster and more dynamic. She mastered the art of the sophisticated, slightly cynical mid-tempo swing. Songs like “Just One of Those Things,” “Deed I Do,” and “Love” were delivered with a knowing, sly smile and impeccable jazz timing.

This era culminated in her historic, multi-week engagement at New York’s Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Her live album from that run, Lena Horne at the Waldorf-Astoria, became the best-selling record by a female artist in the history of RCA Records at the time. On that stage, she was backed by a massive, driving orchestra, commanding the room with total authority and a vocal power that was far more muscular and raw than her 1940s recordings.

In late 1957, she took this evolved star power to Broadway, starring in the musical Jamaica. Her performance was so electric that she won a New York Drama Critics’ Poll Award and became the first Black woman nominated for a Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical.

If the Lena Horne of the 1940s was a flawless, distant diamond, the Lena Horne of the 1950s was a live wire—using her unmatched glamour, sharp wit, and an increasingly powerful vocal attack to completely dominate the rooms that tried to box her in.






Pascale Petit: The Sensual Beauty of 1950s-60s European Cinema

Pascale Petit (born 1938) is a French actress who became one of the most alluring and popular stars of European cinema in the late 1950s and ’60s.

With her striking beauty, expressive eyes, and sensual yet vulnerable screen presence, Petit quickly rose to fame after being discovered by director Jean Delannoy. She is best remembered for her passionate and intense performances in films such as The Crucible (1957) opposite Yves Montand, The Cheater (1958), and The Hotbed (1963).

Petit was often cast in dramatic, romantic, or adventurous roles, and her combination of innocence and sensuality made her a distinctive figure in French and Italian cinema of the era. These captivating vintage photos capture the striking beauty, expressive eyes, and sensual charm of Pascale Petit, one of the most alluring French actresses of postwar European cinema.






30 Beautiful Mid-Century Restaurant Postcards From the U.S.

The mid-20th century was a golden age for American restaurant advertising, when bold, colorful postcards captured the excitement of dining out in a booming postwar nation. These beautiful vintage postcards showcase the vibrant aesthetic of the 1950s and ’60s: from sleek diner counters and glamorous supper clubs to cheerful family restaurants and exotic-themed eateries.

More than just advertisements, these postcards reflect the cultural optimism, rising consumerism, and evolving American lifestyle of the era, offering a delightful visual journey into the golden age of U.S. dining culture.

California. Paul Masson Champagne Cellars, Saratoga

California. Farmer's Market, Los Angeles

California. The Nut Tree, Vacaville

California. The Redwood Room, Clift Hotel, San Francisco

California. Tonga Room, Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco

20 Glamorous Photos of Ruth Warrick in the 1940s

Ruth Warrick (June 29, 1916 – January 15, 2005) had a fascinating, high-profile entry into Hollywood in the 1940s, transitioning from a radio singer and actress to a prominent film star. Her decade was defined by working with legendary directors, portraying strong (and often complex) women, and establishing herself as a versatile talent.

Warrick’s career changed overnight when Orson Welles cast her as Emily Monroe Norton Kane, the first wife of Charles Foster Kane, in Citizen Kane. Welles reportedly chose her because she possessed the refinement and elegance he envisioned for the role, famously saying he wanted “an actress who is a lady.” The film is now widely regarded as one of the greatest ever made, and Warrick’s performance, especially during the famous breakfast-table montage, remains one of its highlights.

Following the success of Citizen Kane, Warrick signed with RKO and became a sought-after leading lady, frequently playing sophisticated, dignified, or quietly resilient characters.

In 1943, she starred in the espionage thriller Journey into Fear, which featured Orson Welles and several other alumni. She showcased her range in films like The Iron Major (1943), a biographical sports drama opposite Pat O’Brien, and Blood on the Moon (1948), a gritty psychological Western starring Robert Mitchum, where she played the crucial role of Amy Lufton.

Warrick’s 1940s filmography is notable for the caliber of directors she worked with beyond Welles. She starred in A Scandal in Paris (1946), a biographical film about the French criminal-turned-detective Eugène François Vidocq, working under Sirk's distinctively elegant direction. She closed out the decade working with Capra in this musical comedy Riding High (1950, filmed in late 1949) alongside Bing Crosby.

In 1946, Warrick took on the live-action role of Sally, the protective and traditional mother of young Johnny, in Walt Disney’s musically iconic but historically controversial Song of the South. While the film itself later became locked in the Disney vaults due to its depiction of the post-Civil War South, it was a massive box-office property at the time and a major credit in her mid-40s portfolio.

As the 1940s came to a close, the landscape of entertainment began to shift. Warrick, with her deep background in live radio, adapted seamlessly to the birth of broadcast television. By the late 1940s and early 1950s, she began appearing in anthology drama series, paving the way for the soap opera stardom (most famously as Phoebe Tyler Wallingford on All My Children) that would define the later chapters of her long career.






Sid Vicious’ Mugshot Taken After His Arrest by New York City Police on December 8, 1978

Two months prior to this photograph, on October 12, 1978, Sid Vicious’ 20-year-old American girlfriend, Nancy Spungen, was found dead on the bathroom floor of Room 100 at Manhattan’s historic Chelsea Hotel. She died from a single stab wound to the abdomen. Sid, who claimed he woke up from a severe drug stupor with no memory of what happened, was promptly arrested and charged with her murder. Virgin Records subsequently put up his $50,000 bail.


While out on bail for the murder charge, Sid’s volatile behavior continued. On December 8, 1978, he was arrested again after escalating a fight at a Manhattan rock club called Hurrah. During the altercation, he assaulted Todd Smith, the brother of acclaimed punk poet and musician Patti Smith, by striking him in the face with a broken bottle. This specific booking photograph was captured immediately following that arrest.

Following this booking, a judge revoked Sid’s bail and sent him to New York’s notorious Rikers Island jail. He spent 55 days there, where he underwent a forced, agonizing drug detoxification process. He was released on bail once again on February 1, 1979.

To celebrate his release, friends and family threw a party at an apartment in Greenwich Village. Tragically, having lost his drug tolerance during his time in jail, Sid took a lethal dose of highly pure heroin. He was found dead the following morning on February 2, 1979, at just 21 years old. Because of his sudden death, he never stood trial for the murder of Nancy Spungen, leaving the truth behind her death forever unresolved.

June 29, 2026

Woodstock on the Water: 40 Amazing Photographs of the Ramblin’ Raft Race on Atlanta’s Chattahoochee River in 1977

The Ramblin’ Raft Race (primarily the one on Atlanta’s Chattahoochee River) was a legendary, massive floating party and rafting event that defined wild 1970s fun in the South. It ran annually from 1969 to 1980 (mostly on the third Saturday in May, around Memorial Day weekend) and grew from a small Georgia Tech fraternity stunt into what Guinness World Records recognized in 1978 as the world’s largest participatory sporting event.

Georgia Tech student Larry Patrick (Delta Sigma Phi fraternity) organized the first “Great Chattahoochee River Raft Race” as a casual social event. It began as a challenge issued on-air to WQXI radio DJs. About 50+ participants and 2,500 spectators showed up for a grueling 34-mile course that took around 30 hours.

The race shortened to a more manageable 9.2-mile course (from below Morgan Falls Dam to Paces Ferry/Vinings area). Corporate sponsors like Coca-Cola and later Anheuser-Busch joined, along with WQXI’s heavy promotion. Creative homemade raft categories encouraged wild entries (e.g., pirate ships, themed contraptions). Attendance exploded: by 1971, thousands of rafts and up to 180,000 spectators; peaks in the mid-to-late 1970s reached tens of thousands of rafters and 300,000–400,000+ total participants/spectators.

It earned nicknames like “Woodstock on the Water” and “The Rose Bowl on the River”—a huge, carefree party with music, beer, creative (and often sinking) rafts made from inner tubes, barrels, lumber, and anything that floated. National media (e.g., CBS with Dan Rather, Newsweek, Sports Illustrated) and even international coverage followed.

The event was as much about the spectacle and debauchery (drinking, music, bikinis, general chaos) as competition. Creative rafts included floating cars, bathtubs, pianos, Civil War battleship replicas, Star Wars-themed builds, and more. Many didn’t finish; “rescues” were common.

It drew people from all walks of life and helped spotlight the Chattahoochee River. Organizers (via the American Rafting Association, which Patrick helped form) emphasized river cleanup and conservation. The race’s popularity contributed to momentum for protecting the river, aiding the creation of the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area in 1978 under President Jimmy Carter.

However, it also brought challenges: litter, traffic nightmares, public drunkenness, drug use, nudity complaints from riverside property owners, and strain on local resources. Organizers worked hard on logistics (shuttles, parking, Porta-Potties, volunteers including Tech students/engineers), but issues mounted.

The race ended after 1980. WQXI took over that year from the American Rafting Association; a drowning occurred (the only one), and liability/insurance costs soared. The National Park Service pushed back on security/cleanup burdens, leading to cancellation. Similar “Ramblin’ Raft Race” events popped up in other places (e.g., Louisville on the Ohio River, Tampa), inspired by Atlanta’s, but the original was the iconic one.






35 Iconic Studio Portraits of 1970s High School Seniors

The 1970s was a vibrant and transformative decade for American high school culture, and these iconic studio portraits beautifully capture the spirit of the era.

From feathered hair, shag cuts, and long straight styles to bold fashion choices like wide collars, polyester fabrics, and platform shoes, these images reflect the transition from the late 1960s counterculture to the emerging disco and preppy aesthetics of the late 1970s.

Each senior posed with confidence, individuality, and the distinctive look of their time, a perfect blend of youthful optimism and 1970s style. These portraits, via LLF archives2, serve as a nostalgic time capsule, preserving the fashion, hairstyles, and personalities of a generation on the cusp of adulthood.









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