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June 26, 2026

22 Stunning Portraits of Suzy Vernon in the 1920s and 1930s

Suzy Vernon (born Amelie Paris, June 26, 1901 – January 24, 1997) was a popular French film actress, primarily active as a leading lady in French and German cinema during the silent era of the 1920s and the early sound period of the 1930s.

After working in the theater after World War I, Vernon made her screen debut in 1922. She quickly rose to prominence by collaborating with some of the most prominent directors in Europe. In 1925, legendary Belgian director Jacques Feyder cast her in Visages d'enfants (Faces of Children). Her performance as a young stepmother in this stark mountain drama linked her to the early roots of Poetic Realism, an incredibly influential aesthetic movement. She secured a role in Abel Gance’s monumental, visually groundbreaking historical masterpiece, Napoléon (1927).

Vernon became an international favorite, moving seamlessly between French cinema and German UFA studio productions. She starred in popular silent titles like Der Letzte Walzer (The Last Waltz, 1927) alongside Willy Fritsch, and the detective drama Das grüne Monokel (The Green Monocle, 1929).

When synchronized sound arrived, Vernon handled the transition better than many silent stars because she was multi-talented and internationally marketable. Before dubbing became standard practice, Hollywood studios would shoot alternative-language versions of the same movie on the same sets. Vernon went to the United States to star in these French-language productions, notably playing the lead in First National’s Le masque d'Hollywood (1930)—the French counterpart to Show Girl in Hollywood.

Back in Europe during the 1930s, she continued to land prominent roles in romantic comedies and dramas. She famously starred in Pour être aimé (1933), an early romantic comedy directed by the legendary Jacques Tourneur, and shared the screen with cinema titan Harry Baur in Un homme en or (1934).

By the late 1930s, Vernon slowed down her film output, appearing in smaller roles before retiring completely from the screen in the early 1940s.






Irène Tunc: Elegant Beauty of Postwar European Cinema

Irène Tunc (1935–1972) was a strikingly beautiful French actress and model who became one of the elegant faces of European cinema in the 1950s and ’60s.

With her dark hair, captivating eyes, and refined yet sensual presence, Tunc brought a distinctive charm to both French and Italian productions. She is best remembered for her role as Camille’s friend in Jean-Luc Godard’s acclaimed film Le Mépris (Contempt, 1963), and also appeared in notable movies such as The Sleeping Car Murder (1965).

Married to actor and director Christian Marquand, Tunc enjoyed a relatively successful but short career before her life was tragically cut short in a car accident at the age of 36. These captivating vintage photos capture the refined grace, mysterious allure, and timeless elegance of Irène Tunc, a luminous French actress whose subtle beauty left a lasting impression on postwar European cinema.






Portrait of John Owen, the Earliest-Born Person With a Confirmed Date of Birth to Be Photographed, 1843

John Owen (April 16, 1735 – February 24, 1843) was an American centenarian and veteran from Salisbury, Connecticut. Owen served in both the French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War. He may have been the last living veteran of the French and Indian War.

John Owen, one of the last veterans of the French and Indian War, lived to be 107 and posed for this photograph shortly before his death in 1843.

The image above holds a unique place in the history of photography. John Owen was born in 1735, meaning he was roughly 107 or 108 years old when he sat for this portrait in 1843, passing away later that same year.

Because of his extraordinary lifespan, Owen is recognized as one of the earliest-born human beings ever to be captured on film (specifically via an early photographic process, likely a daguerreotype or a calotype copy). To put his life into perspective, he was already a young man when the United States declared independence in 1776, yet lived long enough into the 19th century to witness the birth of practical photography.

20 Photos of June Lockhart in the 1950s

In the 1950s, June Lockhart (June 25, 1925 – October 23, 2025) was a talented, versatile actress transitioning from her earlier film and stage work into a major television career, often portraying warm, intelligent, and maternal characters. She had built a solid reputation from 1930s–1940s films like A Christmas Carol (1938), Meet Me in St. Louis (1944), Son of Lassie (1945), and others, plus acclaimed Broadway work (including a Special Tony Award in 1948 for For Love or Money).

In the 1950s, she appeared in more films (e.g., Time Limit in 1957) but increasingly focused on television. She did anthology shows, guest spots, and Westerns like Gunsmoke, Have Gun – Will Travel, Rawhide, Wagon Train, and Cimarron City. Her big break came in 1958 when she replaced Cloris Leachman as Ruth Martin (wife of Paul Martin, mother to Timmy) on the long-running CBS family series Lassie. She played the role through 1964 (over 200 episodes), becoming widely known as a nurturing TV mom. She also narrated a 1958 Playhouse 90 production of The Nutcracker.

Lockhart had interests beyond acting, including politics (traveling with presidential campaigns in 1956 and 1960) and a lifelong fascination with space and science. By the end of the decade, she was establishing herself as a reliable TV presence, setting the stage for her iconic roles in the 1960s (Lost in Space as Maureen Robinson, etc.). She lived a long life, passing in 2025 at age 100.






A 1920s Discovered Family Photo Album: Glimpses of Everyday Life

This remarkable discovered family photo album offers an intimate and heartfelt window into everyday life during the 1920s, a decade of profound social change and newfound optimism.

Through these personal snapshots, we see children playing in sunlit gardens, stylish young women in cloche hats and flapper dresses, and men in sharp suits enjoying weekend outings. The images capture both the quiet moments of domestic life and the excitement of a rapidly modernizing world: from new automobiles and jazz-age fashion to family vacations and community celebrations.

More than just historical records, these photos serve as a warm, nostalgic time capsule, revealing the hopes, joys, and simple pleasures of ordinary people living through the Roaring Twenties.

The ladies on a wall

Three on a running board

Friends

Girl on bridge

Girl on bridge

June 25, 2026

George Michael Photographed for “Listen Without Prejudice, Vol.1” (1990)

After the huge success of Faith (1987), George Michael became uncomfortable with being marketed as a sex symbol. For Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1, he deliberately stepped away from celebrity imagery and wanted listeners to focus on the music rather than his appearance. The album title itself reflected his wish to be judged without preconceived ideas about his image.

One of the most striking decisions was that Michael did not appear on the album cover. Instead, the sleeve used a cropped section of “Crowd at Coney Island,” a famous 1940 photograph by Weegee. This was highly unusual for a superstar whose face had previously been central to his marketing.

The promotional photographs from the era reflected the same philosophy. Many were understated portraits, often emphasizing introspection rather than glamour. Michael favored a more mature, artistic presentation, with simple clothing, natural lighting, and serious expressions that contrasted sharply with the leather-jacket, jukebox, and stubble-heavy imagery of the Faith period.

The Listen Without Prejudice photoshoot era therefore represents George Michael at his most deliberate and self-reflective: less interested in being a pin-up star and more determined to be recognized as a serious songwriter and artist.





30 Adorable Childhood Photos of Carly Simon From the 1940s and 1950s

Carly Simon (born Carly Elisabeth Simon on June 25, 1943, in New York City) grew up in a privileged, culturally rich, intellectually stimulating, yet emotionally complex household during the 1940s and 1950s. She was the third of four children born to Richard L. Simon (co-founder of the major publishing house Simon & Schuster) and Andrea Heinemann Simon (a civil rights activist and singer). Her father came from a German-Jewish family and was a classical pianist who frequently played Chopin and Beethoven at home. Her mother was Catholic, with a diverse heritage that included German, Cuban, and Pardo (freed-slave descendant) roots; DNA testing later showed Simon with about 10% African and 2% Native American ancestry via her maternal grandmother.

The family lived primarily in the affluent Riverdale neighborhood of the Bronx, with additional homes in Stamford, Connecticut, and later connections to Martha’s Vineyard. They also had an apartment in New York City. The household was wealthy and well-connected, hosting notable figures such as musicians (e.g., Benny Goodman), writers, Albert Einstein, Eleanor Roosevelt, and others. Jackie Robinson played backyard softball games at their Stamford home, and Pete Seeger was reportedly her kindergarten music teacher.

Siblings included older sisters Joanna (opera singer and TV personality) and Lucy (singer/songwriter), and younger brother Peter (photographer). All the children were encouraged in self-expression and the arts; the sisters later performed together as the Simon Sisters. The family was raised nominally Catholic.

Music was central to daily life. Her father’s piano playing and mother’s singing filled the home, alongside show tunes, jazz, classical, pop, and folk. Simon’s uncle (in the basement) taught her early songs on the ukulele. This environment fostered creativity, and the children often sang together. Simon has described the surface as happy, with lots of music, singing, and playing.

Despite the privileges, her childhood had difficulties. Simon began stuttering severely when she was eight years old. A psychiatrist tried unsuccessfully to cure her stuttering. Instead, Simon turned to singing and songwriting. “I felt so strangulated talking that I did the natural thing, which is to write songs, because I could sing without stammering, as all stammerers can.” She also dealt with dyslexia, which she believes positively influenced her songwriting by allowing ideas to flow more intuitively.

Simon has publicly stated that at age seven, a family friend in his teens sexually assaulted her, an experience she described as heinous that affected her views on sex for a long time. Her father’s health declined after being edged out of Simon & Schuster (sold in the 1950s); he suffered heart attacks, retired in 1957, and became emotionally withdrawn (near catatonic at times) before dying in 1960. Simon felt she was less favored than her sisters and tried to win approval by being the family clown.

Simon attended the private Riverdale Country School. She briefly attended Sarah Lawrence College (where she and Lucy performed as the Simon Sisters) and also studied at Juilliard. Her performing start with her sister in the early 1960s built on childhood musical foundations.

Overall, her childhood blended privilege, intellectual and artistic stimulation, famous connections, and a musical household with personal struggles. These experiences deeply informed her confessional songwriting style later on. Her memoir Boys in the Trees provides the most detailed personal account.









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