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June 9, 2026

Photos of Michael J. Fox on the Set of “Doc Hollywood” (1991)

The 1991 romantic comedy Doc Hollywood is a beloved, feel-good “fish out of water” classic, but behind the scenes, its production marked a massive, life-altering turning point for its star, Michael J. Fox.

The set of Doc Hollywood is historically significant because it was during this production that Fox first noticed the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease. While filming on location in Florida, he woke up one morning and noticed a distinct, uncontrollable twitch in his left pinky finger. He initially brushed it off as exhaustion or a pulled muscle from carrying heavy props, but the tremor persisted. Shortly after, at just 29 years old, he was officially diagnosed with young-onset Parkinson’s.
“It was message therapy from the universe. I had been going so fast for so long, and suddenly my body was telling me to slow down.” — Michael J. Fox, looking back on the 1990/1991 diagnosis.
Fox chose to keep the diagnosis entirely private from the public and the film industry for seven years, finally sharing his condition with the world in 1998.

While the fictional town of Grady, South Carolina (“The Squash Capital of the South”) feels like a quintessential Carolinas backwater, the film was actually shot entirely on location in north-central Florida. The production team chose the historic, oak-canopied towns of Micanopy and McIntosh (just south of Gainesville).

Grady’s charming downtown was actually Micanopy’s NE Cholokka Boulevard, a strip famous for its moss-draped trees and antique shops. The garage where Ben Stone’s iconic 1956 Porsche Speedster gets repaired was a real building on Cholokka Blvd. Today, it still stands as an antique store, and the vintage intercom box Fox speaks into is still preserved in the window.

The film boasts a phenomenal supporting cast, including a breakout performance by Woody Harrelson as the local insurance salesman and rival suitor, Hank Gordon. Harrelson and Fox were close friends off-camera, which translated into fantastic comedic friction on screen. To pass the time between takes in rural Florida, the duo frequently staged elaborate, improvised “fake bar fights” to startle the crew and locals. The roughhousing was all in good fun, though Fox jokingly noted later that he occasionally walked away with a genuine bruise that the makeup team had to meticulously cover up before the cameras rolled.

Doc Hollywood ultimately stands as a beautiful snapshot of Michael J. Fox at the height of his comedic, high-energy leading-man era, made all the more poignant by the quiet resilience he was discovering just behind the camera.






Lizabeth Scott: The Cool Blonde Icon of Film Noir

Lizabeth Scott (1922–2015) was an American actress who became one of the most distinctive and seductive icons of film noir during the 1940s and ’50s. With her striking blonde hair, piercing blue eyes, deep husky voice, and cool, enigmatic beauty, she was often described as a blonde version of Lauren Bacall.

Scott rose to fame with memorable performances in classic film noirs such as Dead Reckoning (1947) opposite Humphrey Bogart, Pitfall (1948), and Too Late for Tears (1949). Known for playing tough, cynical, and alluring women, she brought a unique blend of vulnerability and toughness to the genre.

Though her Hollywood career was relatively brief, Lizabeth Scott remains a timeless symbol of postwar glamour and one of the most stylish leading ladies of the classic noir era. These striking vintage photos capture the cool elegance, smoky voice, and magnetic allure of Lizabeth Scott, one of the most distinctive and unforgettable femmes fatales of classic film noir.






1963 Shelby 289 Cobra: The Birth of an American Legend

The 1963 Shelby 289 Cobra is one of the most legendary and iconic American sports cars ever created. Conceived by Carroll Shelby, it combined a lightweight British AC Ace chassis with Ford’s powerful 289 cubic inch (4.7-liter) V8 engine, producing between 260 and 306 horsepower. The result was an ferocious, no-nonsense machine with an extraordinary power-to-weight ratio that could accelerate from 0 to 60 mph in under four seconds.

With its long sculpted hood, aggressive stance, minimalist design, and thunderous exhaust note, the 289 Cobra embodied pure, exhilarating driving pleasure. Only a limited number were built in 1963, yet it immediately dominated both road and racetrack, cementing its reputation as a performance icon.

These powerful photos capture the raw beauty, menacing presence, and legendary spirit of the 1963 Shelby 289 Cobra, the car that redefined American high-performance motoring.






Bonnie Tyler’s Iconic 1980s Big Hair

When you think of peak 1980s “big hair,” Bonnie Tyler is one of the ultimate icons. Her look during this decade perfectly mirrored the dramatic, operatic scale of her music—especially around the time of her 1983 mega-hit “Total Eclipse of the Heart.”

Tyler’s hair wasn't just big; it was intricately styled to combine several major 1980s hair trends into one cohesive, rock-star image. The foundation of her look was a tight, textured chemical perm. This gave her hair the necessary crimped, curly structure to hold massive amounts of volume without falling flat under stage lights.

Her cut featured heavily feathered, shorter layers around the crown and framing her face, which gradually cascaded into longer, texturized lengths past her shoulders. This allowed the top to stay incredibly light and bouncy. To achieve that gravity-defying height, the roots were backcombed (teased) aggressively and locked into place with industrial-strength hairsprays of the era. The style was emphasized by her signature bright, honey-blonde coloration, often contrasted with slightly darker roots or lowlights to give the curls visual depth and definition.

Notice how the shorter layers at the very top of her head are teased upward to create maximum lift, while the sides are feathered back to frame her face. It created an iconic silhouette that defined the pop-rock diva look of the early-to-mid 1980s.






Nancy Sinatra Trying on Her Boots

Nancy Sinatra’s 1960s style, especially tied to her 1966 hit “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’,” epitomized mod fashion—bold, confident, youthful, and empowering. She helped popularize the go-go boot as a symbol of female swagger and independence.

Go-go boots were mid-calf to knee-high, low-heeled, and typically made of white patent leather, vinyl, or leather. French designer André Courrèges introduced the white mid-calf version in 1964, but Nancy made them mainstream.

In the famous music video and performances (e.g., The Ed Sullivan Show), she wore white go-go boots paired with a black mini sweater-dress or similar short outfit, strutting with attitude. She also appeared in black or red leather boots in photos and on album covers. These boots were practical for dancing yet stylish, flat or low-heeled for movement, with a sleek, square-toed look that screamed 1960s youth culture.

Nancy didn’t just wear the look, she embodied a shift toward female assertiveness in fashion and music. Go-go boots became linked to go-go dancers, TV shows like Hullabaloo, and broader 1960s liberation. Her style influenced countless women and remains a retro staple.







June 8, 2026

Amazing Photographs Capture Everyday Life in the Frontier Oil Town of Freer, Texas in 1938

By 1938, the remote brush-country settlement of Freer, Texas, located deep in Duval County, had been violently transformed by one of the most classic, wild, and unregulated oil booms in American history.

What was just a lonely crossroads named Government Wells a decade prior became a sprawling, hyper-energized frontier oil town. The discovery of the Government Wells oil field in 1928, followed by the massive Loma Novia and Seven Sisters strikes in the mid-1930s, turned Freer into a roaring epicenter of black gold.

Freer’s main thoroughfares were notoriously unpaved for much of the boom. Depending on the weather, 1938 residents either choked on clouds of caliche dust kicked up by heavy oil-field trucks or watched model-T trucks and heavy drilling equipment sink axle-deep into treacherous South Texas mud.

The town was teeming with “boomers”—a nomadic army of roughnecks, wildcatters, pipeliners, lease hounds, and teamsters who traveled from field to field following the money (Johnson, n.d.). By 1938, the chaotic tent cities of the early 1930s were giving way to more permanent wooden structures, but the population remained intensely transient.

Situated in Duval County, a region dominated by the notorious South Texas political machine of Archie Parr and his son George Parr (the “Duke of Duval”), Freer operated under its own code of ethics. The town was packed with quickly built saloons, gambling dens, and dance halls to entertain weary roughnecks with cash burning holes in their pockets.

LIFE staff photographer Carl Mydans visited Freer in 1938 about found a town that was bustling but ramshackle, set up to suit the needs of roughneck mercenaries. His photographs captured a unique window into this rapid transformation, where modern industrial wealth clashed directly with rugged, lawless frontier living:






Mae Murray: The Gardenia of the Silent Screen

Mae Murray (1885–1965) was an American actress, dancer, and one of the most glamorous stars of the silent film era. Nicknamed “The Gardenia of the Screen,” she was celebrated for her striking beauty, large expressive eyes, delicate features, and flamboyant on-screen persona.

Rising to fame in the 1910s, Murray reached her peak in the 1920s with notable performances in films such as The Merry Widow (1925), directed by Erich von Stroheim. Known for her extravagant lifestyle, lavish costumes, and dramatic style, she perfectly embodied the glittering excess and glamour of Hollywood’s Jazz Age.

Though her career faded rapidly with the arrival of sound films, Mae Murray remains an enduring symbol of silent cinema’s golden age and one of its most fascinating and visually iconic stars. These exquisite vintage photos capture the luminous beauty, theatrical elegance, and unforgettable presence of Mae Murray, a true icon of silent cinema’s golden age.









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