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March 30, 2026

30 Vivid Photos of Warren Beatty on the Set of “Dick Tracy” (1990)

Warren Beatty was the driving force behind the 1990 film Dick Tracy, serving as the film’s director, producer, and star in the titular role of the yellow-clad detective. The production was famously ambitious, characterized by Beatty’s perfectionism and a unique visual style that limited the film’s color palette to just seven primary colors to mimic the look of the original 1930s comic strips.

Beatty was obsessed with maintaining the palette of Chester Gould’s original Sunday funnies. He restricted the entire film’s color palette to just seven primary and secondary colors (mostly red, blue, yellow, green, orange, purple, and black/white), each in the exact same shade. If a tie was red, it had to be the exact red used for a car or a storefront. To achieve the “flat” look of a comic book, Beatty utilized extensive matte paintings and forced perspective sets rather than shooting on traditional locations.

On set, Beatty faced the dual challenge of directing a massive ensemble while buried under the “square-jawed” persona of Tracy. True to his reputation (similar to his work on Reds), Beatty was known for demanding dozens of takes. For one scene where Charlie Korsmo (The Kid) eats chocolate ice cream, Beatty reportedly filmed it 50 times until it felt “right.”

The set was a “who’s who” of Hollywood, often hidden under hours of makeup. Beatty insisted that the villains look exactly like their comic counterparts. Actors like Al Pacino (Big Boy Caprice) and Dustin Hoffman (Mumbles) spent up to four hours a day in the makeup chair.

During production, Beatty’s off-screen relationship with Madonna (Breathless Mahoney) heavily influenced the set’s atmosphere. Madonna actually worked for “scale” (the minimum union wage) because she wanted the role so badly, though she later made millions through the soundtrack.






Photographs of Teenage Celine Dion in Paris for the Very First Time on July 10, 1982

On July 10, 1982, Celine Dion went to France to record her new album Tellement j’ai d’amour…. This was the first time Celine visited Paris. She was photographed in front of the Eiffel Tower, the Arc de Triomphe among other places in the city. They were also photographed in the restaurant “Chez Guy et Dodo” on the rue Cadet in the 9th district.

While 1982 was indeed the year she first set foot in the city that would become her second home, her most famous “first” of that year was her international debut at the Yamaha World Popular Song Festival in Tokyo, which took place later that October. However, her arrival in Paris in the summer of 1982 was the true beginning of her conquest of France.

In July 1982, a 14-year-old Céline arrived in Paris for a promotional tour arranged by her manager (and future husband), René Angélil. She made her very first appearance on French television on the iconic show Champs-Élysées, hosted by Michel Drucker. Drucker famously recalled that Angélil had begged him to listen to “this kid from Quebec,” and after hearing her sing, Drucker predicted she would be a superstar.

It was during this period that she began promoting the song “D’amour ou d’amitié.” By early 1983, she became the first Canadian artist to be certified Gold in France for that single, selling over 500,000 copies.

In various biographies, Céline has recalled being overwhelmed by the scale of Paris compared to her small hometown of Charlemagne. She often mentions how René took her to see the Eiffel Tower and the Champs-Élysées for the first time during this specific summer trip.

It’s a beautiful moment to look back on, before the 250 million albums sold and the sold-out stadiums, she was just a teenager with a suitcase and a voice that the French public was about to fall in love with.






20 Portraits of a Young Eric Clapton in the 1960s

In the 1960s, Eric Clapton transformed from a local art student into a global “guitar god,” defining the sound of British blues and psychedelic rock. His decade was marked by a restless search for musical purity, leading him through several of the era's most influential bands.

Clapton joined the Yardbirds as lead guitarist in 1963 while still a teenager. He developed his blues-rooted style there, but left in 1965 when the band moved toward a more pop-oriented sound, famously unwilling to compromise his devotion to the blues.

Joining “finishing school” John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers (1965–1966) for blues musicians, he recorded the landmark Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton (the “Beano” album). His aggressive, overdriven tone on this record inspired the famous "Clapton is God" graffiti across London.

Alongside Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce, Clapton formed the first “supergroup” in 1966. They pioneered high-volume, improvisational blues-rock and heavy psychedelia with hits like “Sunshine of Your Love” and “White Room.”

After Cream dissolved, Clapton formed Blind Faith with Steve Winwood, which lasted only one album but was hugely anticipated.

During his time with Cream, Clapton perfected a thick, singing lead sound produced by rolling off the tone control on his Gibson guitar, a technique still studied by guitarists today. He moved from a red Telecaster in the Yardbirds to the “Beano” Gibson Les Paul, then to the famous psychedelic-painted “The Fool” Gibson SG during the Cream era, before eventually shifting toward the Fender Stratocaster by the late 1960s.

His look shifted from the sharp, mod suits of The Yardbirds to the wild “Afro” hair and vibrant, bohemian fashion of the late-1960s psychedelic scene. By 1969, Clapton was a worldwide superstar, having been one of the first musicians to bridge the gap between traditional American blues and modern stadium rock.






Elsbeth Juda: The Photographer Who Reimagined British Fashion

Elsbeth Juda (1911–2014) was a pioneering British fashion photographer whose avant-garde vision redefined post-war British style. Best known under her professional moniker “Jay,” she was the associate editor and star photographer for the influential trade magazine Ambassador from the 1940s to the 1960s.

Juda was celebrated for her bold, industrial aesthetic: often placing elegant models in high-fashion couture against the gritty, dramatic backdrops of factories, shipyards, and urban landscapes. Her work was instrumental in promoting British textiles and design to a global audience, blending a sharp, modernist eye with a playful, rebellious spirit.

By moving fashion photography out of the static studio and into the dynamic, real world, Elsbeth Juda helped shape the visual identity of 20th-century Britain and paved the way for the “Swinging Sixties” revolution.

Model in green gabardine suit in the "New Look" style with a nip-waisted round-hipped jacket over a full skirt by Deréta, photo by Elsbeth Juda, Harper's Bazaar UK, December 1947

Model in romantic sweet-pea chiffon dress girdled and embroidered in black by Victor Stiebel, photo by Elsbeth Juda in the gallery of Sybil Colefax and John Fowler's shop, Harper's Bazaar UK, December 1947

Corps de Ballet dressing room, Sadler's Wells, photo by Elsbeth Juda, London, 1949

Pat O'Reilly in black-white-and-gray printed beach dress by Elizabeth Arden, photo by Elsbeth Juda at Fregene Beach, Italy, Harper's Bazaar UK, May 1949

Pat O'Reilly in charming gray-and-white spotted sundress with matching bolero by Frederic Starke, broderie Anglaise cloche by Erik, photo by Elsbeth Juda at the Villa Borghese, Harper's Bazaar UK, May 1949

The Jazz Age in Strips: 35 Candid Photobooth Portraits of Young Women From the 1920s

In the 1920s, the invention of the automated photobooth by Anatol Josepho revolutionized how people captured their own likeness, offering a rare, uncurated glimpse into the lives of young women. These photobooth portraits are a stark departure from the stiff, formal studio photography of the Victorian era. Inside the tiny, curtained booths, young women of the “Jazz Age” felt free to experiment with their newfound liberation.

Captured in a series of grainy, high-contrast frames, these images often show the iconic flapper aesthetic: bobbed hair tucked under cloche hats, dark kohl-rimmed eyes, and bold “cupid’s bow” lips. But beyond the fashion, there is a sense of playful intimacy.

You see friends huddled together, flashing rebellious smiles, or a solitary woman offering a candid, soulful gaze to the lens. They are more than just photos, they are visual diaries of a generation that was bold, spirited, and determined to define themselves on their own terms.






March 29, 2026

28 Amazing Black and White Photos From the Set of “Little Women” (1949)

The 1949 adaptation of Little Women is a lavish Technicolor production from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), directed and produced by Mervyn LeRoy. Released as part of MGM’s 25th-anniversary celebration, it remains one of the most commercially successful versions of Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel, becoming a top-grossing film of its year.

The film stars June Allyson, Peter Lawford, Margaret O’Brien, and Elizabeth Taylor. Janet Leigh and Rossano Brazzi also appear in key roles, with Allyson as Jo, Taylor as Amy, O'Brien as Beth, Leigh as Meg, Lawford as Laurie, and Brazzi as Professor Baer.

Set during and after the American Civil War, the film follows the four March sisters as they navigate poverty, personal ambitions, and family tragedy while their father is away at war. The production is celebrated for its lush, “postcard-like” aesthetic, featuring pastel skies and highly stylized sets. Beyond the sister’s birth order swap, the film’s ending leans into romantic conventions of the era, emphasizing Jo’s eventual marriage to the Professor.

Little Women became one of the top-grossing films of 1949. According to MGM records it earned $3,425,000 in the US and Canada, and $2,495,000 overseas resulting in a profit of $812,000. The film was a major technical achievement for its time. It won the Oscar for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration (Color) and was nominated for Best Cinematography (Color).

While praised for its charm and beauty, some critics felt it leaned too heavily into sentimentality compared to the grittier 1933 version starring Katharine Hepburn.






Fascinating Photos of Annabella Sciorra in the 1990s

Annabella Sciorra (born March 29, 1960) was a definitive “It Girl” of the early 1990s, known for a specific kind of grounded, intelligent, and fiercely independent energy. She often played characters who were caught between traditional expectations and a modern, urban reality.

Sciorra came to prominence with her film debut in True Love (1989) and worked steadily throughout the 1990s. She followed that breakthrough with three major films in 1990: the Richard Gere crime thriller Internal Affairs, the Robin Williams comedy Cadillac Man, and the Jeremy Irons literary adaptation Reversal of Fortune.

In 1991, she garnered widespread attention with her portrayal of Angie Tucci in Spike Lee’s acclaimed drama Jungle Fever, which was shortlisted for the Palme d'Or at Cannes. Critics were effusive, the New York Times wrote that among the cast, Sciorra “shines” and “glows.” She then starred in the hit thriller The Hand That Rocks the Cradle (1992).

Film parts in the mid-decade included romantic leads in The Night We Never Met, the neo-noir Romeo Is Bleeding, and Mr. Wonderful (all 1993). In 1995, she signed on with indie director Abel Ferrara for his gritty vampire film The Addiction, and helped produce and starred in his follow-up, the mob drama The Funeral (1996).

Her career settled into a mix of indie films and small but poignant supporting roles in major productions, including James Mangold’s Cop Land (1997) and the Robin Williams fantasy What Dreams May Come (1998). Film critic Roger Ebert described her performance in the latter as “heartbreakingly effective.”

She briefly achieved leading lady status in the early 1990s before plateauing into supporting roles and largely unheralded indie fare, often cast as put-upon paramours in crime films. Despite that trajectory, she was regarded as a compelling and versatile actress, a true stalwart of New York’s drama scene throughout the decade.









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