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July 7, 2026

Chinese Beauty Jacqui Chan in Venice, 1956

Trinidad-born British actress Jacqui Chan is caught turning the heads of uniformed passers-by in this impromptu snap taken in Venice in 1956 by Anthony Armstrong-Jones (later Lord Snowdon), the British socialite photographer who eventually married Princess Margaret, Queen Elizabeth II’s sister. Chan was also a photographic model and, at the time, was Armstrong-Jones’s girlfriend.


Chan had met him in March of 1955, when the 25-year-old photographer took the 18-year-old dancer’s portrait, when she was starring in the play Teahouse of the August Moon. Armstrong-Jones, however, went on to marry Princess Margaret in 1960 during the time of his relationship with Chan. When Chan heard the news of her former lover’s engagement to Princess Margaret, she reportedly said, “Well, I hope she can cope better than I could.”

In an interview with The Australian Women’s Weekly in February 1961, Chan wanted to make it clear that she had her own success apart from her relationship with Armstrong-Jones. “I do not owe my career to all that sort of publicity,” she said. “The suggestion that I had never been offered a job until all this business is what makes me so mad. It just isn’t true.”

Indeed, Chan, who was born in 1939, has had a long and varied career, both as a dancer on stage, and an actress on the silver screen. She rose to fame thanks to her turn as Gwennie Lee in a 1959 West End stage production of 'The World of Suzie Wong.

During the 1960s, she had roles in several television series including Dixon of Dock Green, The Hidden Truth, Armchair Theatre and Ghost Squad. She played handmaiden Lotus in the 1963 film Cleopatra that starred Elizabeth Taylor. Chan also lent her vocal skills to Simon Dupree on his 1967 hit record Kites.

Some of her notable works include the role of Mrs Liu in Moving Parts (2017), a film by American director Emilie Upczak; Sherlock in 2012; Mutant Chronicles (2008); Wake of Death (2004); and Netflix drama Marco Polo.

Jacqui Chan, cousin of famed Trinidadian painter Carlisle Chan and sister of Gary and Ian Chan of Woodbrook, continues to fetch TV and film roles, and has been visiting Trinidad over the years.

The Beatles Celebrating Ringo Starr’s 24th Birthday on July 7, 1964

On July 7, 1964, The Beatles celebrated Ringo Starr’s 24th birthday while recording a special lip-sync appearance at BBC’s Lime Grove Studios in London. They were at the height of Beatlemania, fresh off the success of A Hard Day’s Night.

The Fab Four recorded mimed performances of three tracks for the hit BBC television show Top of the Pops. They performed both sides of their brand-new single, “A Hard Day's Night” and “Things We Said Today,” alongside their explosive cover of “Long Tall Sally.”

Behind the scenes, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, and George Harrison celebrated Ringo by giving him the traditional British “birthday bumps.” Photos from the day show the lads in their sharp suits having a playful time. The band members playfully grabbed the drummer by his arms and legs, lifting and bouncing him into the air once for each year of his life.






Sylva Koscina: The Stunning Croatian-Italian Star of Postwar European Cinema

Sylva Koscina (1933–1994) was a stunning Croatian-born Italian actress who became one of the most popular and glamorous stars of European cinema in the 1950s and ’60s.

With her striking beauty, long legs, and confident, playful screen presence, Koscina epitomized the modern, liberated European woman of the postwar era. She gained international fame for her roles in films such as The Loves of Hercules (1960), The Bacchantes (1961), and especially the popular Don Camillo series. She also appeared in several Hollywood and international productions.

Known for her bold, sensual style and natural charisma, Koscina remains a classic symbol of 1950s–60s European cinematic glamour. These glamorous vintage photographs capture the striking beauty, confident charm, and timeless allure of Sylva Koscina, one of the most captivating and memorable European actresses of the postwar era.






35 Fascinating Portraits of a Very Young Janet Leigh in the 1940s

Before she became the ultimate Hitchcock scream queen in Psycho (1960), Janet Leigh (July 6, 1927 – October 3, 2004) had one of the most legendary, fairytale “discovered” stories in early Hollywood history. In the late 1940s, she went from a college student who had never acted to one of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s (MGM) most promising young starlets, initially cast as the wholesome, radiant “girl next door.”

In the winter of 1945–1946, Janet Leigh (then Jeanette Helen Morrison) was a music and psychology student at the College of the Pacific. Her parents worked at a ski resort lodge in Sugar Bowl, California. Retired MGM mega-star Norma Shearer happened to be vacationing at the lodge and noticed a photograph of Jeanette on the front desk. Struck by her screen-ready beauty, Shearer took the photograph back to Hollywood and showed it to MGM talent executives. By 1946, without a single formal acting credit to her name, the 19-year-old was signed to a contract at the biggest studio in the world.

MGM immediately put her through rigorous acting, voice, and dance lessons. The studio rebranded her as Janet Leigh and utilized her natural warmth, expressive eyes, and classic mid-century elegance. MGM took a massive gamble by casting a complete unknown as the female lead opposite box-office star Van Johnson in The Romance of Rosy Ridge (1947). She played a sweet, post-Civil War farm girl, winning over both critics and audiences with her earnest performance.

Leigh got an early taste of the film noir genre in Act of Violence (1948), playing the anxious, protective wife of a haunted WWII veteran (Van Heflin), proving she could handle intense dramatic weight beyond simple romantic roles. She closed out the decade by playing Meg March in MGM’s lavish Little Women (1949), technicolor adaptation of the classic novel, starring alongside Elizabeth Taylor, June Allyson, and Margaret O'Brien. She shared the screen with Hollywood royalty Errol Flynn and Greer Garson in That Forsyte Woman (1949), cementing her place as a versatile leading lady who could hold her own in period dramas.

By the time 1949 rolled around, Leigh was no longer just a lucky discovery; she was a highly sought-after star, setting the stage for the complex psychological roles and noir thrillers that would define her career in the 1950s and 1960s.






1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 Sport Berlinetta: Italian Pre-War Elegance

The 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 Sport Berlinetta is one of the most elegant and desirable pre-war Italian sports cars ever produced.

Powered by a refined 2.5-liter inline-six engine delivering approximately 110 horsepower, the car combined impressive performance with the comfort and refinement expected of a true grand tourer. The sleek, aerodynamic Berlinetta body was masterfully crafted by the renowned coachbuilder Touring, featuring flowing lines, a distinctive fastback profile, and an unmistakably sporting yet sophisticated presence.

Built in very limited numbers just before the outbreak of World War II, this model remains an extremely rare and highly prized classic today. These beautiful vintage photographs capture the sleek, aerodynamic lines and timeless sophistication of the 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 Sport Berlinetta, a rare and magnificent example of Italian automotive artistry at its finest.






July 6, 2026

Adorable Childhood Photos of Nancy Reagan From the 1920s and 1930s

Nancy Reagan’s childhood was essentially a tale of two very different worlds: an early period marked by separation and instability, followed by a sudden shift into an elite, privileged upbringing. Born Anne Frances Robbins in New York City on July 6, 1921, her early life was far from the picture-perfect image she later projected. Her father, Kenneth Robbins, was a car salesman who left the family shortly after she was born. Her mother, Edith Luckett, was a dynamic, ambitious stage actress.

Because her mother needed to travel constantly for theatrical tours to make a living, she made the difficult decision to send young Nancy (then nicknamed “Nancy” by her mother) to live with relatives. From the age of two until she was nearly nine, Nancy grew up in a modest home in Bethesda, Maryland, raised by her maternal aunt Virginia and uncle Audley Galbraith.

During these six years, she deeply missed her mother. She later recalled that her happiest moments were the rare occasions when Edith would pass through town on tour, leaving behind the glamorous scent of stage makeup and perfume.

Everything changed in 1929. Her mother married Dr. Loyal Davis, a highly prominent, wealthy, and politically conservative neurosurgeon from Chicago. Virtually overnight, Nancy was swept into a life of high society, moving into a luxury apartment on Chicago's Gold Coast.

Dr. Davis was strict but deeply devoted to Nancy. She adored him, and when she turned 16, he formally adopted her. It was at this point her name legally became Nancy Davis. She attended the elite Girls’ Latin School of Chicago, where she excelled in drama and sports, followed by Smith College in Massachusetts, where she majored in English and theater. Through her mother’s theatrical connections and her stepfather’s status, the family home regularly hosted legendary figures of the era, including Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, and Walter Huston.

This secondary phase of her childhood fundamentally shaped the woman she would become. The stability and elegance of her life in Chicago replaced the anxieties of her early years, instilling in her a fierce loyalty to family and a comfort within upper-class social circles that served her perfectly all the way to the White House.






50 Rare and Beautiful Color Photos of Tver Oblast, Russia in 1910

In 1910, the Russian Empire was on the cusp of dramatic change, and these rare color photos offer a precious and vivid glimpse into everyday life in Tver Oblast.

Captured using the early Autochrome process, the images display rich, saturated colors that bring to life the rural landscapes, historic towns, churches, markets, and people of the region. From peasants working in the fields to families in traditional clothing and scenes of provincial daily life, these photographs preserve a world that would soon be transformed by revolution and modernization.

As some of the earliest color images of provincial Russia, they serve as an extraordinary historical and artistic treasure, revealing the beauty, texture, and atmosphere of Tver Oblast at the beginning of the 20th century.

Spinning yarn in the village of Izvedovo, 1910

Monks at work, planting potatoes, Gorodomlya Island, 1910

Cows in a field, summer 1910

Entrance to the enclosure of the Nilova Pustyn. The Holy Gates with the gate church of St. Nilus, 1910

Entrance to the Orsha Monastery and the house of the abbess, 1910




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