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May 9, 2026

28 Photographs of Melissa Gilbert During the 1980s

Melissa Ellen Gilbert (born May 8, 1964) is an American actress. She began her career as a child actress in the late 1960s, appearing in numerous commercials and guest-starring roles on television. From 1974 to 1983, she starred as Laura Ingalls Wilder, the second-oldest daughter of Charles Ingalls (played by Michael Landon) on the NBC series Little House on the Prairie. During the run of Little House, Gilbert appeared in several television films, including The Diary of Anne Frank (1980) and The Miracle Worker (1979).

During the 1980s, Gilbert successfully transitioned from the world’s most famous child star to a versatile adult actress and a staple of 1980s Hollywood social circles. This decade saw her conclude her iconic decade-long run as Laura Ingalls Wilder in 1983, receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1985, and engage in a high-profile, tumultuous six-year romance with actor Rob Lowe.

Gilbert spent the first few years of the decade finishing her role on Little House on the Prairie, which aired its final regular season in 1983. She then focused on establishing herself in more mature, dramatic roles through television movies.

She delivered acclaimed performances in films like The Diary of Anne Frank (1980) and Choices of the Heart (1983), where she played lay missioner Jean Donovan. She expanded her range by appearing in stage productions like Broadway Bound and later provided the voice for Barbara Gordon / Batgirl in animation. At just 21 years old, she became the youngest person at the time to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.






Christine Keeler: The Sensational Beauty of the Swinging Sixties

Christine Keeler (1942–2017) was an English model, showgirl, and one of the central figures in the infamous Profumo Affair of 1963, a scandal that rocked British politics and society.

Famous for her striking beauty, youthful allure, and turbulent private life, Keeler became a symbol of the swinging sixties’ hedonism and moral ambiguity. Her simultaneous relationships with John Profumo, the British Secretary of State for War, and Soviet naval attaché Yevgeny Ivanov sparked a major national security scandal that ultimately led to Profumo’s resignation and contributed to the fall of the Conservative government.

Though often portrayed as a femme fatale, Keeler’s life was marked by exploitation, media frenzy, and personal tragedy. Her story continues to fascinate as a defining moment in 20th-century British history. Here is a collection of captivating photos capturing Christine Keeler in the bloom of her youth, a woman whose striking beauty and turbulent story came to define an entire era.






May 8, 2026

Stunning Portraits of Hertha Thiele in the 1930s

Hertha Thiele (May 8, 1908 – August 5, 1984) was a prominent German actress whose career was defined by her success during the Weimar Republic and her later resurgence in East Germany (GDR). She is most famous for her roles in socially conscious and controversial films of the early 1930s.

Thiele began her acting career on stage around age 20 at the Schauspielhaus in Leipzig. She gained international fame in 1931 for her lead role as Manuela von Meinhardis in the groundbreaking film Mädchen in Uniform (“Girls in Uniform”), directed by Leontine Sagan. The film featured an all-female cast and explored themes of lesbian affection in a Prussian boarding school; it became a major success and earned her comparisons to Greta Garbo. She received thousands of fan letters, many from women.

She starred in influential film Kuhle Wampe (1932) co-written by Bertolt Brecht, which focused on the hardships of the working class during the Great Depression. Anna und Elisabeth (1933) was her second film exploring lesbian themes, reuniting her with co-star Dorothea Wieck. Thiele considered this the most important work of her career, though it was quickly banned by the Nazi regime.

Thiele resisted pressure to participate in Nazi propaganda films. She reportedly told Joseph Goebbels that she did not “blow with the wind,” leading to her exclusion from the Reich Chamber of Culture. In 1937, she emigrated to Switzerland, where she faced limited acting opportunities and worked as a prompter and later as a psychiatric nursing assistant.

After World War II, she returned to East Germany (GDR), initially struggling to restart her theater career. She worked in Switzerland for much of the 1950s–1960s before settling in the GDR around 1965–1966. There, she appeared in theater productions (e.g., in Magdeburg and Leipzig) and became well-known for roles in East German television series and films, such as Polizeiruf 110, The Legend of Paul and Paula (1973), and others through the 1970s. She received East German awards, including the Art Prize and National Prize.

She was married at least once (to actor Heinz Klingenberg) and possibly more times. Toward the end of her life, she gained renewed attention from Western feminists interested in Mädchen in Uniform. She died in East Berlin in 1984.

Thiele is remembered for her androgynous appeal and roles that challenged social norms, particularly around gender and sexuality in Weimar-era cinema. Her image and performances have been analyzed in the context of homoerotic themes in early German film.






Iconic 1920s Hairstyles: 30 Vintage Scrapbook Portraits From the Flapper Era

The 1920s marked a revolutionary moment in women’s fashion and self-expression, and nothing captured this spirit more vividly than the era’s bold hairstyles. From the sleek bob and chic finger waves to the daring shingle cut and playful curls, these iconic looks became powerful symbols of liberation and modernity.

This collection of authentic vintage scrapbook portraits offers a intimate glimpse into the golden age of the flapper, showcasing the elegance, rebellion, and individuality that defined women’s hairstyles during the Roaring Twenties.






Here’s the Amazing Story Behind the Iconic Van Halen’s “1984” Album Cover

The cover for Van Halen’s 1984 (stylized as MCMLXXXIV) is one of rock’s most recognizable images, featuring a painting of a putto (angel-like child) smoking a cigarette. The image was created by graphic artist Margo Nahas. Interestingly, it wasn’t originally commissioned for the band.


The band (via Warner Bros. Records creative director Richard Seireeni) initially approached Nahas with a specific request: paint four chrome women dancing (in various states of undress, according to some accounts). Nahas turned it down because rendering multiple highly reflective chrome figures would be extremely difficult and time-consuming.

Her husband, designer Jay Vigon (who was helping with the project and had connections at Warner Bros.), took her portfolio to the band anyway. Eddie Van Halen, Alex Van Halen, and David Lee Roth reviewed it and immediately picked an existing painting from her personal work: a cherub/putto (winged baby angel) smoking a cigarette. It was “love at first sight” for them, and it became the cover.

Nahas created the painting in 1982, before Van Halen was involved. She based it on Carter Helm, the young son of one of her best friends. She photographed him holding candy cigarettes (which he ate after a brief tantrum). She then turned the photo into the rebellious angel painting.

The image perfectly captured a mix of innocence (the angelic cherub) and rebellion (smoking), which aligned with Van Halen’s edgy rock image at the time. The album, released in January 1984 and stylized as MCMLXXXIV on the cover, became one of their biggest successes, featuring hits like “Jump.”

Margo Nahas has created many other album covers (including for Prince’s Purple Rain lettering via her husband, Stevie Wonder, Toto, etc.), but the Van Halen one remains her most famous. The cover has become a classic piece of rock iconography, symbolizing the band’s shift toward a more pop-oriented sound while keeping their rebellious spirit.

35 Groovy Vintage Portraits Defining 1970s Couple Fashion

In the vibrant 1970s, couple style reached its most expressive and romantic peak. Partners embraced the era’s free-spirited attitude by dressing in coordinated looks that perfectly captured the decade’s eclectic fashion. From matching bell-bottom jeans and flowing bohemian blouses to disco-ready polyester shirts and platform heels, couples celebrated unity through style.

Whether channeling hippie romance with fringed suede jackets and floral prints or stepping out in bold geometric patterns and metallic fabrics for a night at the disco, 1970s couples weren’t afraid to make a statement together. This decade perfected the art of “his and hers” fashion: stylish, sensual, and unapologetically fun.

Explore this collection to see why 1970s couple fashion remains the ultimate inspiration for effortless, groovy cool.






40 Photos of Anne Baxter in the 1950s

Anne Baxter (May 7, 1923 – December 12, 1985) was an American actress, star of Hollywood films, Broadway productions, and television series. She won an Academy Award, a Golden Globe, and seven Photoplay Awards, and was nominated for an Emmy and two Laurel Awards.

The 1950s marked a pivotal era for Baxter. She successfully transitioned from the youthful roles of the 1940s, which culminated in an Oscar for The Razor’s Edge (1946), into a versatile leading lady capable of playing both sophisticated schemers and historical icons.

Baxter began the decade with what remains her most famous role: Eve Harrington in All About Eve (1950). Playing opposite Bette Davis, Baxter delivered a masterclass in subtlety. She portrayed Eve as an ostensibly “mousy” fan who systematically dismantles the life of a Broadway star. The role earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress. It redefined her screen persona from the “girl next door” to a formidable, often calculating, intellectual presence.

Throughout the mid-1950s, Baxter resisted being typecast, moving between film noir, Westerns, and massive Technicolor spectacles. In 1953, she starred in Alfred Hitchcock’s I Confess. Playing a woman caught in a blackmail plot involving a priest (Montgomery Clift), she showcased her ability to handle the psychological tension characteristic of the genre.

Her most visually iconic 1950s role was Nefretiri in Cecil B. DeMille’s The Ten Commandments (1956). Dressed in elaborate, vibrant costumes, Baxter brought a campy, high-drama energy to the role that contrasted sharply with her more grounded contemporary work. Her delivery of lines like “Moses, Moses, Moses!” became a permanent fixture in Hollywood pop-culture history.

By the late 1950s, Baxter began to distance herself from the Hollywood “rat race.” In 1960, she married Randolph Galt and famously moved to a remote cattle station in the Australian Outback. This move effectively ended her period as a constant Hollywood headliner, though she would later detail this “pioneer” experience in her acclaimed memoir, Intermission. In the 1950s, however, she remained one of the industry's most technically proficient and hardworking stars, bridging the gap between the prestige of the 1940s and the evolving spectacle of the 1960s.









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