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March 23, 2026

30 Wonderful Movie Magazine Covers Featured Joan Crawford From Between the 1920s and 1950s

Joan Crawford was a ubiquitous presence on movie magazine covers from the late 1920s through the 1950s, serving as a primary symbol of Hollywood’s evolving glamour. Her career longevity allowed her to transition from the “jazz baby” flapper of the silent era to a sophisticated dramatic icon.

In the late 1920s, Crawford often appeared on magazines like Motion Picture and Photoplay as the quintessential “jazz baby.” These covers featured vibrant illustrations or early color photography highlighting her youthful energy, bobbed hair, and large, expressive eyes. She was frequently associated with the “flapper” lifestyle, reflecting her early roles in films like Our Dancing Daughters (1928).

During the 1930s, Crawford became one of the biggest stars at MGM. This era of magazine covers showcased the height of Hollywood glamour. She was often depicted with her signature Adrian-designed gowns and heavy “smoky” eye makeup. Covers from Modern Screen and Silver Screen in this decade emphasized her status as a fashion trendsetter and a “shopgirl” heroine who made it big.

After moving to Warner Bros. and winning an Oscar for Mildred Pierce (1945), Crawford’s magazine presence shifted. The covers of the 1940s often portrayed a more mature, intense, and dramatic persona. The imagery moved toward sharp lighting and strong contours, reflecting the film noir style of her most successful movies during this period.

By the 1950s, Crawford remained a constant presence in film fan magazines. Her covers from this era, such as those for Movie Life or Screenland, focused on her longevity in the industry and her status as a Hollywood legend. These images often featured her with more structured hairstyles and the bold, high-contrast makeup that became her hallmark in films like Sudden Fear (1952) and Johnny Guitar (1954).






Thomas Midgley Jr., the Most Harmful Inventor in History

Thomas Midgley Jr., born in 1889 in Dayton, Ohio, was an inventive American chemical engineer whose work profoundly shaped the 20th century, though in ways that would later prove devastating. In his early career, he tackled the problem of engine knocking, experimenting with various additives. After years of research, he developed tetraethyl lead in 1921, marketed by General Motors as “ethyl” gasoline. The additive greatly improved engine performance and was rapidly adopted worldwide, but it also released massive quantities of toxic lead into the environment. This led to widespread ecological contamination and chronic human exposure, consequences that were ignored or downplayed during Midgley’s lifetime, even as he himself suffered lead poisoning.


Seeking to move on from the controversy surrounding leaded gasoline, Midgley turned his attention to refrigeration technology, which at the time relied on hazardous substances like ammonia and sulfur dioxide. In 1928, he co-developed chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), introducing Freon as a seemingly perfect solution: safe, stable, and non-flammable. For decades, CFCs became standard in cooling systems and aerosols.

It wasn’t until the 1970s that scientists discovered their destructive impact on the ozone layer, creating a global environmental crisis. Although CFCs were phased out under the 1987 Montreal Protocol, the atmospheric damage they caused continues to this day, cementing Midgley’s reputation as a cautionary figure in technological innovation.

Portrait of Thomas Midgley, Jr., ca. 1940s.

Midgley’s life ended with a grim irony. After contracting polio at the age of 51, he became partially paralyzed and designed an elaborate system of pulleys and ropes to help lift himself from bed. In 1944, he was accidentally strangled by this very device, dying at the age of 55.

Holding 171 patents and celebrated in his time for ingenuity, Midgley is now remembered as a man whose well-intentioned creations inadvertently caused some of the most far-reaching environmental harms in history.

A Gallery of 70 Striking Real Photo Postcards of European Actresses From Between the 1920s and 1950s

The Picturegoer series is a legendary cornerstone of film memorabilia, particularly beloved by collectors of British cinema history. Published by the popular weekly film magazine Picturegoer (which ran from 1911 to 1960), these postcards provide a comprehensive visual record of the Golden Age of Hollywood and British film.


The series is vast, containing thousands of cards produced primarily between the 1920s and the 1950s. They were printed by Rotary Photographic Co. and later Beagles & Co., typically using a high-quality real photographic process (sepia or black-and-white) that gave them a glossy, professional finish. On the back of each card is a number. The lettering after some of the numbers denotes the series that the card was from. The first series ran to over 1,400 cards and had no prefix letter, followed by Series A, Series B, and so on. Groups of several poses of the same star were sometimes published and identified with an alphabetical suffix, for example, Greta Garbo had cards numbered 600, 600a, 600b, 600c... depicting nine different images.

For collectors, the value of a Picturegoer card is determined by several factors. Icons like James Dean, Grace Kelly, or early horror stars (like Boris Karloff) command the highest prices. Because these were often kept in scrapbooks, cards with “album marks” on the corners or adhesive residue on the back are less valuable.

Interestingly, while most postcards are more valuable “unposted,” some collectors enjoy the social history of a card sent in the 1940s with a fan’s handwritten note about a movie they just saw. Serious collectors often try to complete specific numerical runs. Finding the “missing” numbers in a sequence is a major part of the hobby.

Beyond being mere collectibles, these cards served as the primary way fans connected with their idols before the era of digital media and instant access. They were the “Instagram” of the 1930s, a tangible, high-quality image that brought the glamour of the silver screen into a fan’s home.






Maria Schell: The Radiant Soul of the Silver Screen

Maria Schell was a transcendent star of international cinema, remembered for her incredible emotional range and a smile so luminous it earned her the nickname “Seelchen” (Little Soul). A powerhouse of the 1950s, she possessed a rare ability to portray deep vulnerability and resilient strength simultaneously, winning the Best Actress award at Cannes for her unforgettable performance in The Last Bridge.

Whether she was gracing the screens of Hollywood alongside Gary Cooper or capturing hearts in European masterpieces like Visconti’s Le Notti Bianche, Schell brought a profound humanity and spiritual depth to every role. Her legacy remains that of an actress who didn’t just perform, she felt every line, leaving an indelible mark on the history of world cinema.

Take a look at these vintage portraits to see the captivating beauty and emotional grace of Maria Schell.






The 1953 Facel Ford Comète: Pure Post-War Elegance

The 1953 Facel Ford Comète remains one of the most sophisticated examples of Franco-American collaboration in automotive history. While its mechanical heart was a modest Ford V8, its soul was entirely French, featuring a breathtakingly elegant body handcrafted by the renowned Facel-Métallon.

With its low-slung silhouette, clean horizontal lines, and a signature wide-mesh grille, the Comète was widely considered one of the most beautiful cars of its era. It represented a luxurious “Grand Touring” philosophy, prioritizing style and comfort for the elite French market during the post-war recovery.

Today, only a handful of good examples are known to exist in the United States, making this an exceptionally rare piece of Franco-American automotive collaboration that preceded Jean Daninos’ later Facel Vega marque. Take a look at these vintage photos to see the stunning craftsmanship of the 1953 Facel Ford Comète.






March 22, 2026

20 Amazing Photos of 19-Year-Old Reese Witherspoon on the Set of “Freeway” (1996)

Watching Reese Witherspoon on the set of Freeway (1996) is like seeing a star being born in real-time. Only 19 during filming, she delivered a performance that director Matthew Bright famously compared to seeing “Jimi Hendrix at the Whisky a Go Go”—a raw, electric “revelation” that defied her young age.

Witherspoon later admitted the role “scared [her] to death,” but overcoming the hurdle gave her the confidence to "try anything" in her subsequent acting career. Bright described her presence on set as a “sweet but feral cat,” one moment docile and big-eyed, the next screeching and violent.

Before Legally Blonde defined her as a polished comedic lead, Witherspoon was known on this set for her “feral” and “tough-as-nails” energy. She played Vanessa Lutz, a modern, foul-mouthed Little Red Riding Hood, with a thick Southern drawl she pulled from her own Louisiana roots.

Despite the dark and “sleazy” subject matter, cast and crew noted her total control over the character’s darker turns. Her scenes with Kiefer Sutherland (the “Big Bad Wolf”) were particularly intense, including a pivotal moment in a car where she flips the script on him, holding him at gunpoint.

The production was a quick, gritty shoot in Southern California, primarily around Sylmar (the motel scenes) and San Pedro (the lighthouse scene), lasting from July to August 1995. One of the most famous improvised-feeling moments involves her character taunting a disfigured Sutherland in court. This “no-holds-barred” attitude on set convinced producers she was destined for A-list stardom.

Though the film was a “low-rent, lowbrow” production, Witherspoon’s gravity and toughness elevated the material. Her work on Freeway earned her the Best Actress Award at the 1997 Sitges – Catalonian International Film Festival.






The Making of Princess Soraya’s Wedding Dress for Her 1951 Marriage to Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran

The wedding dress worn by Princess Soraya (Soraya Esfandiary-Bakhtiari) for her 1951 marriage to Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran is widely considered one of the most opulent and heavy haute couture creations in history. Designed by Christian Dior himself (with some accounts attributing the actual drafting to a young Yves Saint Laurent, who was then working at the house), the gown was a feat of both engineering and artistry.





Christian Dior was commissioned to create a masterpiece that would reflect the immense wealth and prestige of the Iranian monarchy. The final design was an architectural marvel of the “New Look” era.

It was crafted from approximately 37 yards (34 meters) of silver lamé, creating a shimmering, metallic effect. The gown was lavishly hand-embroidered with 6,000 diamond pieces, thousands of pearls, and intricate gold thread work. A staggering 20,000 marabou stork feathers were used to trim the dress, adding a soft, ethereal volume to the skirt and train. 

The sheer volume of materials made the gown incredibly heavy. It reportedly weighed between 20 and 30 kilograms (44–66 pounds). It required the work of roughly 20 tailors and seamstresses at the House of Dior to complete the intricate hand-detailing in time. On the wedding day, Soraya was still weak from a bout of typhoid fever. The weight of the 20-meter train was so immense that she struggled to stand or walk.

The dress was so heavy that a last-minute adjustment was necessary just before the ceremony began. To relieve Soraya of the crushing weight, the Shah and his aides reportedly used scissors to cut 8 meters (about 26 feet) off the train so she could walk down the aisle. Because the palace was freezing in the February cold, Soraya wore a woolen vest and socks hidden beneath the magnificent silver lamé. 

Decades after her 1958 divorce and subsequent life in exile, the dress reappeared in the public eye. After her death in 2001, her belongings were auctioned in Paris, where the iconic Dior gown was sold for $1.2 million. It remains a symbol of both the pinnacle of 1950s fashion and the “sad-eyed” princess’s tragic royal tenure.








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