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May 12, 2026

Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell: A Tragic Partnership

Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell had one of Motown’s most iconic musical partnerships in the late 1960s, marked by electrifying on-stage and recorded chemistry, a close platonic friendship, and profound personal tragedy.

In 1967, Motown paired Gaye with Terrell to revitalize his career. They quickly became the gold standard for soul duets, producing a string of hits written by Nick Ashford and Valerie Simpson, including: “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough,” “Your Precious Love,” “Ain’t Nothing Like the Real Thing,” “You’re All I Need to Get By.”

They released successful albums like United (1967) and You’re All I Need (1968). Their voices blended beautifully – Gaye’s smooth, emotive tenor complemented Terrell’s vibrant, powerful delivery – creating songs that felt like genuine romantic dialogues. They toured together and performed live with strong stage presence. Terrell, who had prior solo success and experience (including with James Brown), helped the somewhat shy Gaye become more comfortable performing live.

They shared undeniable on-stage and vocal chemistry, which fueled constant rumors of a romantic or sexual affair. However, most accounts, including statements from Gaye himself, describe their relationship as platonic—a deep, sibling-like friendship built on mutual respect, trust, and shared passion for music.

Gaye publicly denied romance, e.g., telling a publication: “Tammi is a great girl... I love her very much, but not romantically. We’ve never had anything going between us...” Some insiders and later speculation suggest possible deeper feelings or a secret affair on Gaye’s side, but nothing has been definitively substantiated. Gaye viewed Terrell as a soul mate in a non-romantic, profound sense.

On October 14, 1967, during a performance at Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia, Terrell collapsed into Gaye’s arms onstage while singing “Your Precious Love.” This was the first major sign of her illness; she was later diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor. She continued limited recording (with some reports that Valerie Simpson filled in on later tracks due to Terrell’s health), and made a final public appearance with Gaye at the Apollo Theater. Tammi Terrell died on March 16, 1970, at age 24.

Her death devastated Gaye. He went into seclusion, fell into depression, and it contributed to his struggles with drug abuse. He vowed not to duet with another woman for a long time and later said her passing felt like she was “dying for everyone who couldn’t find love.” Many link the introspective, socially conscious shift in his music (e.g., What’s Going On) partly to this loss.

Their story remains a classic example of Motown magic cut short by tragedy, with their duets continuing to influence soul and R&B decades later.






May 11, 2026

Here’s the Story Behind the Infamous Final Scene From John Waters’ “Pink Flamingos” (1972)

In the final scene of the 1972 cult classic Pink Flamingos, the drag queen Divine famously eats fresh dog feces. This act was intended as the ultimate “publicity stunt” to cement her character’s title as the “Filthiest Person Alive” and to shock mainstream audiences.


Director John Waters conceived this scene to provide a level of shock that no big-budget studio would dare attempt. To ensure the quality of the “prop,” the small dog used in the scene was reportedly fed steak for three days before filming. The scene was captured in a single, unedited shot with no camera tricks or cuts, proving to the audience that the act was real.

Although Divine had agreed to the stunt a year prior, she did not fully grasp the reality until the three-hour wait for the dog to “go” on camera. She is seen gagging and smiling with the residue on her teeth in the final cut.

Following the shoot, Divine immediately scrubbed her teeth, legend has it she used the toothbrush of someone she disliked. Concerned about potential health risks, she later called a hospital hotline pretending to be a mother whose child had eaten dog waste; she was relieved to hear the worst likely outcome was “white worms.”

Because the film was shot on a shoestring budget ($12,000) on 16mm film, the grainy, documentary-style aesthetic added a layer of gritty realism that made the sequence even more jarring for audiences at the time. To this day, it is frequently cited in discussions regarding the limits of performance art and transgressive filmmaking.

The scene became the cornerstone of the film’s marketing, often summarized by the tagline “this queen eats dog sh*t.” While it led to long lines at midnight movie screenings, it also caused legal trouble, with Waters losing several court battles over the film’s “obscenity.”

Pia Rossilli: Timeless Elegance of Mid-Century Fashion

Pia Rossilli (1937–2020), later known as Pia Kazan, was a striking American fashion model of Italian descent who became one of the prominent faces of the 1950s and ’60s. With her elegant features, expressive eyes, and sophisticated charm, she worked with top photographers and appeared in major magazines such as Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, and Elle.

After marrying renowned fashion photographer Lionel Kazan, Rossilli continued her career while becoming his frequent muse. She embodied the graceful, feminine style of mid-century fashion, transitioning effortlessly between studio elegance and natural outdoor shoots.

Though she stepped away from modeling later in life, her timeless beauty and classic portraits remain cherished examples of golden-age fashion photography. These beautiful vintage photos capture the effortless grace, sophistication, and timeless allure of Pia Rossilli, one of the most elegant faces of mid-20th century fashion.

Pia Kazan is wearing a cognac velveteen gob hat by Emme Boutique, photo by Karen Radkai, Vogue, August 1, 1960

Pia Kazan wearing a mauve wool tweed suit with a wide-collared jacket with knotted cord buttons and a narrow over-the-knee skirt, and a matching overblouse, by Finger & Rabiner, worn with a lilac velvet beret, US Vogue, August 1, 1960

Pia Kazan wearing a sleeveless leopard print knitted wool overblouse with a red knitted wool narrow-collared jacket and narrow, knee-length skirt, by Kimberly, worn with a gold ring and earring set with pearls, US Vogue, August 1, 1960

Pia Rossilli Kazan in red wool tweed suit over red wool jersey top by Leonard Arkin, matching muffin beret by Madcaps, photo by Karen Radkai, Vogue, August 1, 1960

Pia Kazan in raspberry tweed (wool and reindeer hair) dress and jacket by Sportwhirl, pink velveteen gob-hat by Emme Boutique, Valentine shoes, photo by Karen Radkai, Vogue, August 1, 1960

Photos of a Very Young Salvador Dalí in the 1920s

Salvador Dalí (May 11, 1904 – January 23, 1989) was a Spanish surrealist artist renowned for his technical skill, precise draftsmanship, and the striking and bizarre images in his work. In the 1920s, Dalí underwent one of the most dramatic stylistic transformations in art history. He began the decade as a talented student experimenting with various movements and ended it as the provocative face of Surrealism.

Born in Figueres, Catalonia, Spain, Dalí showed artistic promise from childhood. He studied at the Municipal Drawing School in Figueres and later moved to Madrid in 1922 to attend the prestigious Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando. At the academy (and while living at the Residencia de Estudiantes), he was known as a flamboyant dandy with long hair, sideburns, stylish clothing in an English aesthete vein, and a rebellious figure who criticized professors and absorbed influences like Impressionism, Fauvism, Cubism, Futurism, and Metaphysical painting. He experimented widely, producing works with classical precision alongside avant-garde elements. His technical skill was evident early on.

In 1925, he held his first solo exhibition at Galeries Dalmau in Barcelona (22 works), which was a critical and commercial success. He also participated in group shows. In 1926, he made his first trip to Paris, meeting Pablo Picasso (whom he admired) and connecting with Joan Miró. He was briefly expelled from the academy for insubordination but left without a diploma, boldly claiming the faculty couldn’t judge him. He painted works showing Cubist influences and began shifting toward more symbolic or dreamlike imagery. Hybrid portraits and other experimental pieces from this period (often linked to his friendship with poet Federico García Lorca) highlight his maturing style.

From around 1927, Dalí's work increasingly incorporated Surrealist elements, influenced by Sigmund Freud’s ideas on the subconscious, dreams, and eroticism. Paintings like Honey is Sweeter than Blood (1927) and Apparatus and Hand (1927) bridged Cubism and Surrealism. In 1929, he formally joined the Paris Surrealist group led by André Breton, collaborated with Luis Buñuel on the groundbreaking surrealist film Un Chien Andalou (An Andalusian Dog), and met his lifelong muse and wife, Gala (Elena Ivanovna Diakonova). These events catapulted him toward international fame. His style evolved rapidly toward bizarre, incongruous images in meticulously realistic detail, often set in dreamlike or desolate landscapes inspired by his Catalan homeland, hallmarks of his mature work.

The 1920s were a period of technical mastery, stylistic experimentation, personal flamboyance, and key connections that set the stage for his iconic Surrealist output in the 1930s (e.g., melting clocks in The Persistence of Memory). He was already provocative, ambitious, and deeply engaged with the avant-garde scene in Spain and France.






30 Amazing Photographs of Fred Astaire on the Set of “Top Hat” (1935)

On the set of Top Hat (1935), Fred Astaire was a meticulous perfectionist who controlled nearly every aspect of his dance numbers, from the orchestration to the final edit. He famously insisted that the camera remain still and capture dancers from head to toe in long, continuous takes, famously stating, “Either the camera will dance, or I will.” Filming began in early April 1935 at RKO, with a budget around $620,000.

Astaire was famous for his grueling rehearsal schedules. Before a single frame of Top Hat was shot, he and Ginger Rogers spent weeks in a rehearsal hall. He would work until his shoes were literally soaked with sweat, often practicing a single tap sequence for hours to ensure the sound was crisp and the rhythm was flawless.

The most famous story from the set involves the “Cheek to Cheek” sequence. Rogers arrived in a dress heavily adorned with ostrich feathers. As they began to spin, the dress shed feathers like a “chicken being plucked in a cyclone,” as Astaire later put it. Feathers got in his eyes, his mouth, and all over his tuxedo. Astaire, usually a private man, reportedly lost his temper. However, after the dress was stitched down and the scene was successfully filmed, he made light of it by sending Rogers a gold feather charm and nicknamed her “Feathers.”

Astaire had a “Full Body” rule for filming. He hated the way musicals were edited at the time, frequently cutting to close-ups of faces or just the feet. On the set of Top Hat, he insisted that the camera must stay wide. The audience had to see the dancer’s entire body from head to toe. He favored long takes with minimal cuts to prove that the dancing was real and not a product of film editing.

For the title number, “Top Hat, White Tie and Tails,” Astaire treated his cane like a musical instrument. He spent a significant amount of time on set working with the sound engineers. Because the tap sounds were often re-recorded (post-synced) to ensure clarity, Astaire would go into a studio and “dance” with his hands or feet while watching the footage to perfectly match the audio to his filmed movements.

While they weren’t close social friends off-camera, their professional synergy on the Top Hat set was at its peak. Astaire was the taskmaster, and Rogers was one of the few people who could match his stamina. He once remarked that she was the only partner who didn’t cry during his intense rehearsal sessions, though she did famously end up with bleeding feet from her heavy shoes and his demanding choreography.






A Glimpse into 1880s New England: Vintage Photos From a Family Album

Step back into the 1880s with this intimate collection of vintage photographs preserved in a New England family album. These rare images offer a heartfelt window into everyday life during the late Victorian era: from quiet moments at home and family gatherings to scenes of rural life, bustling town squares, and the simple elegance of the time.

Captured with remarkable clarity, the portraits and snapshots reveal not only the fashion and architecture of the period but also the warmth, dignity, and resilience of ordinary families living in New England more than 140 years ago.






May 10, 2026

Tamara Karsavina: The Elegant Muse of the Ballets Russes

Tamara Karsavina (1885–1978) was one of the greatest ballerinas of the 20th century and a legendary figure in the history of ballet. A principal dancer with the Imperial Ballet in St. Petersburg and a star of Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes, she captivated audiences with her extraordinary grace, dramatic intensity, and remarkable intelligence.

Renowned for her groundbreaking interpretations of roles such as Giselle, The Firebird, and Spectre de la Rose, Karsavina brought a new level of emotional depth and artistic sophistication to ballet. After leaving Russia following the Revolution, she settled in England, where she became a respected teacher and writer, greatly influencing the development of British ballet. Her elegance, artistry, and pioneering spirit continue to inspire dancers and ballet lovers worldwide.

These vintage portraits capture the extraordinary grace, poise, and magnetic presence of Tamara Karsavina, one of the most celebrated and influential ballerinas of the 20th century.









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