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March 20, 2026

20 Photos of Holly Hunter as Ada McGrath on the Set of “The Piano” (1993)

Holly Hunter’s performance in The Piano is legendary, not just for the Oscar-winning result, but for the intense, highly specific preparation she brought to the set. Playing Ada McGrath, a woman who hasn’t spoken a word in years, Hunter had to convey an entire lifetime of emotion through silence, her instrument, and her eyes.

Hunter, who began playing at age nine, performed all the piano music seen in the film herself. She spent months mastering Michael Nyman’s complex score, which she used as her character’s “voice.” Because she was actually playing, director Jane Campion could film long, unbroken takes of her hands and face, which added a layer of physical truth to the character’s connection to her music.

To communicate as Ada, Hunter used a specific form of British Sign Language (BSL) tailored to the 19th-century setting. She worked closely with a sign language coach to ensure her movements weren’t just “signs,” but felt like a natural, fluid extension of her personality. On set, she was known for maintaining a certain stillness and rigid posture, reflecting the Victorian constraints of her costume and the internal “hoarding” of her voice.

Hunter noted that the “lengthy silence of filming” was intense, feeling as if she had “bottled up a torrent of words” by the time production ended. She developed a “mirror-like closeness” with 9-year-old Anna Paquin, who began to mimic Hunter’s mannerisms during filming. Her co-stars, including Harvey Keitel and Sam Neill, frequently praised her for grounding the production in “emotional truth.”

Filming took place in the remote, rainy Waitakere Ranges and Karekare Beach in New Zealand. The set was notoriously grueling. Hunter had to navigate deep, thick mud while wearing a massive crinoline hoop skirt and a corset. Cast members recalled that Hunter never complained about the wet, cold conditions, often remaining in character and focused between takes despite the physical exhaustion of the environment.

Her dedication resulted in a rare “clean sweep” of major awards, including the Academy Award for Best Actress, a Golden Globe, and a BAFTA. Hunter has reflected that the experience “reshaped her approach to acting,” teaching her that silence could be the “loudest voice.”






In 1963, Heinz Meixner Orchestrated a Daring Escape From East Berlin to Smuggle His Fiancée and Her Mother

Berlin Wall was erected in 1961 to divide east and west Berlin and, more precisely, to prevent people from East Berlin (the Soviet-held area) from escaping to West Berlin (governed by the Allied Forces). It went down in 1989, marking the end of the Cold War.

Checkpoint Charlie (aka Checkpoint C) is the most famous border-crossing point, designated for diplomats, foreigners, and members of the Allied Forces (1961-1990). The West Berlin part of the checkpoint – with Adler Cafe right next to it – consisted of a minimalist guard house and a sandbag barrier, which looked oddly unimpressive compared to the Eastern part’s infrastructure.

The infamous Checkpoint Charlie in 1961.

In 1963, Heinz Meixner, an Austrian lathe operator, orchestrated a daring escape from East Berlin to smuggle his fiancée, Margarete Thurau, and her mother to the West. Their story is one of the most famous escapes involving Checkpoint Charlie.

Meixner had fallen in love with Thurau while working in East Berlin, but she was denied permission to emigrate. To bypass the Berlin Wall, Meixner devised a plan to drive under the border barriers rather than through them.

While crossing the border on a motor scooter, Meixner feigned engine trouble to secretly measure the height of the steel barrier at Checkpoint Charlie, finding it was 37.5 inches (95 cm) high. He searched for a car low enough to fit and settled on a red Austin-Healey Sprite. To ensure clearance, he removed the windshield and let air out of the tires, bringing the car’s height down to about 35.5 inches (90 cm).

Shortly after midnight on May 5, 1963, the trio made their attempt. Margarete huddled in the small space behind the driver’s seat. Her mother was placed in the trunk, protected by 30 bricks Meixner had packed around her to stop potential bullets from border guards.



Meixner drove to the East German side and handed over his passport. When the guard directed him toward a customs shed for inspection, he instead slammed on the accelerator. He ducked his head as the car zipped under the steel barrier. He cleared the bar with only about an inch to spare, reaching the American sector of West Berlin so fast that he left 96-foot skid marks when he finally braked.

The escape was successful, and the story became a sensation, later documented in the Mauermuseum (Museum Haus am Checkpoint Charlie). In response to this specific “under-the-barrier” tactic, East German authorities soon added vertical steel bars beneath the horizontal checkpoint beams to prevent future attempts.

Alfred Stevens: The Painter of Parisian Elegance

Alfred Stevens (1823–1906) was a preeminent Belgian painter who became the definitive chronicler of the high-society Parisian woman during the Second Empire.

Renowned for his extraordinary technical skill, Stevens specialized in capturing the private, quiet moments of elegant ladies in opulent interiors. His work is a masterclass in texture, he could render the shimmering sheen of a silk dress, the delicate transparency of lace, and the rich patterns of Oriental carpets with breathtaking precision.

Influenced by both the Dutch Masters and the burgeoning “Japonisme” movement, Stevens’ paintings are more than mere fashion plates, they are atmospheric studies of mood and domesticity. A close friend of Édouard Manet and Edgar Degas, he stood at the intersection of Academic tradition and Impressionist light, forever immortalizing the sophisticated glamour of the 19th-century elite.

Slow down for a moment and admire the exquisite textures and quiet grace in these timeless masterpieces by Alfred Stevens.

A Girl Reading

A Painter in the Studio

An Elegant Lady Indoors

At the Railway Station

Autumn Flowers

On March 20, 1969, John Lennon and Yoko Ono Were Married in Gibraltar

On March 20, 1969, one of the most famous and unconventional weddings in pop culture history took place. John Lennon and Yoko Ono were married in Gibraltar, a choice driven more by legal necessity than a desire for a Mediterranean backdrop.


Getting married turned out to be surprisingly difficult. They had hoped to hold their nuptials in Paris, or more specifically, on the way to Paris. “We wanted to get married on a cross-channel ferry, that was the romantic part,” Lennon said in the Beatles’ Anthology documentary. They tried everywhere. John attempted to arrange a marriage on a car ferry to France, but was refused. They tried cruise ships and embassies, but Germany required three weeks’ residency and France two weeks.

It was Apple employee Peter Brown who came to the rescue. Chartering an aircraft, they flew to Gibraltar. As John later said, “We were calling Peter Brown and said, ‘We want to get married. Where can we go?’ And he called back and said, ‘Gibraltar’s the only place.’ So — ‘OK, let's go!’”

The couple arrived at the British Consulate Office, and were married in a 10-minute ceremony performed by registrar Cecil Wheeler. Since Gibraltar was a British colony and Lennon a British citizen, there was no issue. Both wore white for the ceremony, though their attire was far from traditional. Ono wore a white miniskirt, knee socks, and a wide-brimmed floppy hat, while Lennon wore a white suit with a turtleneck jumper beneath.

Lennon later described the place with deep affection: “It’s the ‘Pillar of Hercules,’ and also symbolically they called it the ‘End of the World’ at one period. They thought the world outside was a mystery from there, so it was like the Gateway to the World. So, we liked it in the symbolic sense, and the rock foundation of our relationship.” Within the hour, Lennon and Ono had reboarded their aeroplane and were en route back to their Parisian hotel, the Plaza Athénée.

Rather than a quiet getaway, the newlyweds turned their honeymoon into a global statement. They spent their honeymoon in Amsterdam, campaigning with a week-long bed-in for peace at the Amsterdam Hilton Hotel. They planned another bed-in in the US but were denied entry, so they held one instead at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal, where they recorded “Give Peace a Chance.”

Lennon later wrote “The Ballad of John and Yoko,” which recounts the events of the couple’s wedding and honeymoon. He recorded it with McCartney on April 14, 1969, and it was released as a single on May 30, 1969, reaching No. 1 in the UK and No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100.

In 1999, to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the wedding, Gibraltar issued postage stamps of the couple standing on the airport runway in front of the famous rock, holding their marriage certificate. The couple remained married until Lennon’s murder on December 8, 1980, and welcomed their only son, Sean Taro Ono Lennon, in October 1975.

To this day, the Rock of Gibraltar remains a site of pilgrimage for Beatles fans, and the image of the couple holding their marriage certificate in front of the Rock is one of the most iconic photographs of the era.






Evocative Portraits of Shirley MacLaine on the Set “Irma la Douce” (1963)

Photographed during the filming of Irma la Douce, these evocative portraits of Shirley MacLaine capturing her essence on this 1963 classic are a true celebration of her radiant charisma. She embodies the spirit of Irma, a character defined by her vibrant green stockings, playful demeanor, and irrepressible energy.

In these behind-the-scenes moments, MacLaine moves effortlessly between sparkling laughter and contemplative focus, offering a rare glimpse into her dedicated process. The photos illuminate not just her striking beauty, framed by the whimsical Technicolor world of Paris, but also her intuitive depth as an actress.

Each portrait is a timeless testament to Shirley MacLaine’s natural grace and the captivating screen presence that made Irma la Douce an enduring masterpiece.






28 Fabulous Photos of Glenn Close as Marquise Isabelle de Merteuil on the Set of “Dangerous Liaisons” (1988)

On the set of Dangerous Liaisons (1988), Glenn Close’s transformation into the Marquise de Merteuil was a masterclass in using physical restriction to build a character. The 1988 production, filmed in various French châteaus, was famously grueling due to the commitment to historical accuracy.

Close arrived in Paris with a seven-week-old daughter and described her body at the time as “looking like a loaf of bread.” To achieve the required 18th-century silhouette, she was first “wrestled into a modern girdle” and then a “beautifully fitted, very tight corset.” The restriction was so severe, reducing her waist to 24.5 inches. that she occasionally felt like she would faint and had to lie flat on the floor during fittings to recover.

She often described her costumes, designed by James Acheson, not as clothing, but as armor. To capture the rigid social structure of 1700s France, the production used period-accurate corsetry and underpinnings. The corsets were so restrictive that Close reportedly had difficulty breathing and eating during long shoot days. However, she credited this physical “trap” with helping her find Merteuil’s controlled, predatory stillness.

During the character’s climactic mental breakdown, Close was so immersed in the role that she reportedly lost bladder control while kneeling on the floor, only realizing what had happened after the scene ended. She personally conceptualized the film's final shot after director Stephen Frears told her the goal was to show that “her soul was on her face.”

Frears encouraged a sharp, intellectual atmosphere on set to match the wit of Christopher Hampton’s script. Unlike the more fluid, romantic approach seen in other adaptations of the novel (like 1989’s Valmont), Close maintained a formidable, intellectual authority on set. Crew members often noted how she could switch from a lighthearted conversation to the Marquise’s lethal coldness the moment the cameras rolled. Her chemistry with John Malkovich (Valmont) was built on a shared background in theater. On set, they approached their scenes like a high-stakes chess match, often rehearsing the biting dialogue until the rhythm was perfect.

Dangerous Liaisons was theatrically released by Warner Bros. Pictures on December 21, 1988. Grossing $34.7 million against its $14 million budget, the film was a modest box-office success. It was nominated for seven awards at the 61st Academy Awards, including Best Picture, winning three: Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Costume Design, and Best Production Design.






March 19, 2026

36 Amazing Photos of Ursula Andress in the 1970s

Ursula Andress (born March 19 1936) is a Swiss actress and former model who has appeared in American, British, and Italian films. Her breakthrough role was as Bond girl Honey Ryder in the first James Bond film, Dr. No (1962).

In the 1970s, Andress transitioned from the “Bond Girl” icon of the previous decade into a staple of European genre cinema. While she remained a massive international sex symbol, her career during this era was defined by a prolific run in Italian films, ranging from cult comedies to gritty adventures.

Andress spent much of the decade working in Italy, often starring in “Commedia sexy all'italiana” or “Poliziotteschi” (crime) films. In 1971, she starred in Red Sun, a unique “East meets West” crossover featuring an incredible international cast including Charles Bronson, Alain Delon, and Toshirō Mifune.

By the mid-1970s, she was one of the highest-paid actresses in Italy. Films like The Sensuous Nurse (L'infermiera) were massive commercial hits in Europe, cementing her status as a screen siren even as her Hollywood roles became less frequent.

In 1978, she starred in The Mountain of the Cannibal God (La montagna del dio cannibale). This film remains a significant (and controversial) entry in the Italian cannibal subgenre, marking a shift toward more visceral, gritty roles.

Throughout the 1970s, Andress maintained a high-fashion, athletic image. She was frequently photographed by the era’s top photographers and remained a fixture in magazines like Playboy, often praised for her “Amazonian” physique and timeless aesthetic.








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