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Showing posts with label Then and Now. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Then and Now. Show all posts

April 3, 2019

Shot Comparisons of the Famous Axe Scene in Stanley Kubrick’s “The Shining” (1980) and Victor Sjöström’s “The Phantom Carriage” (1921)

“Here’s Johnny!” – If there’s one scene in The Shining that symbolizes the film, it’s Jack Nicholson hacking through a hotel door with a firefighter’s axe, after suggestively quoting the wolf from “The Three Little Pigs”. The still, as seen on the movie poster, remains an iconic image in the thriller genre, although Kubrick wasn’t the first to use this concept.

The nerve-racking sequence can be traced back to the 1921 Swedish horror silent The Phantom Carriage, where at a certain point, David Holm (portrayed by Sjöström himself) similarly breaks through a door with an axe in order to open it from the inside, where a woman is also trapped with her kids.


Whilst this parallel clearly indicates that Kubrick got some of his ideas from Sjostrom, The Phantom Carriage wraps up into an entirely different story with lots of flashbacks and special effects such as superimposition and double exposure, which were unique for its time.

Originally named Körkarlen in Swedish, the story is based on a novel by Nobel Prize winner Selma Lagerlöf and centers around an abusive alcoholic who is forced to reflect on his selfish misbehavior after finding out his wife had left him when he was released from prison.



The two then reunite in a Salvation Army mission, with the support of a virtuous sister named Edith Larssen, only to be shaken up again a year later when the rehabilitated husband is visited in a dream by the messenger of death, who reveals his wife’s plan of committing suicide and taking the children with her to their death.

Full of trickery and imagination, the events which seem distant from each other eventually dissolve into one more hypnotizing moral story of sin and retribution.

(Video by thiswashollywood, via Taste of Cinema)




February 26, 2019

Beatles Fans Then and Now: Ringo Starr Reunited With Mystery Beatles Fans From a Photograph

During The Beatles’ first U.S. visit in February 1964, Ringo Starr snapped this photo as the carload of teens passed the band on a freeway.

Bob Toth (front passenger seat, left), Gary Van Deursen, (next to him) Suzanne Rayot, Arlene Norbe and Charlie Schwartz pictured by Ringo Starr on the day they cut class to see their idols The Beatles. (Photo: Ringo Starr)

For years no one identified the occupants of the car — and the mystery was solved only after an article in 2013 in USA Today sparked a nationwide search. The gang surfaced and sat down for an interview on TODAY, and finally everything came together.

Fifty years may have passed, but the smiles and excitement remain the same between five Beatles fans who have been reunited to recreate an iconic shot taken by Ringo Starr five decades ago. (Photo: Today)

“I never knew that you were such a gifted photographer,” chuckled Arlene Norbe. “That’s a lucky shot... don’t tell anyone,” joked Starr of the photo.

Norbe, along with Gary Van Deursen, Suzanne Rayot, Charlie Schwartz and Bob Toth met the former Beatle, who was having an exhibit of his photography in 2013, and saw him play live with his All Starr Band. (The missing member of the sextet was Matt Blender, who passed away in 2011.)

When he wasn’t behind the drums, Ringo Starr was behind the lens. He shared over 250 rare and unseen photos from his personal archives in a book published in 2013. Titled Photograph, the book contains, in his own words, “a lot of shots of ‘the boys’ that only I could have taken,” as well as some mementos like letters, promotional posters, and newspaper clippings that his mother was able to save.

“That photo became much bigger than I thought it ever would,” said Starr. “I mean, I just put it in the book because it’s a great shot and then, suddenly in America, everyone was trying to find them!”




February 25, 2019

Then and Now Photo of Sam Elliott and Katharine Ross Shows Their Long-Lasting Love For 40 Years

Sam Elliott and Katharine Ross have a Hollywood love story that has held the test of time. They are one couple who has proved to be an exception in Hollywood, where many couples break up. They have been married for 34 years and their love story is adorable.

Then and now photo of Sam Elliott and Katharine Ross in 1978 and in 2019.

Elliott is 74 and is known for his roles on The Ranch, A Star Is Born, Tombstone, The Big Lebowski, and Justified. Ross is 79 and is known for her roles in The Graduate, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and The Stepford Wives.

Ross and Elliott met in 1978 while filming the horror movie The Legacy in London, in which they played a couple who are among a group of guests terrorized at a creepy English estate. Actually, Elliott had a small role in Butch Cassidy nearly a decade earlier, but he and Ross never met on set. “I didn’t dare try to talk to her then. She was the leading lady. I was a shadow on the wall, a glorified extra in a bar scene,” Elliott told AARP The Magazine in 2015.

Sam Elliott and Katharine Ross in Legacy. (1978)

Back then, Ross was on her fourth husband and Elliott had never been married. Ross divorced in 1979 and married Elliott in 1984. Their daughter, Cleo Rose, was born later that year and is now a musician.

Elliott nearly passed on his breakout role as Cher’s biker boyfriend in the 1985 film Mask because he and Ross were on their honeymoon in Hawaii. After Elliott told his agent he wouldn’t return early to test for the role, Ross made sure she got her new husband back in time to audition and it seems that was a good decision.

As for Elliott’s theory on why their relationship has lasted so long, he said it was their common sensibility. “We have a common sensibility, but we also work at being together,” he told AARP. “You work past the s—; you don’t walk away from it. That’s how relationships last.”

Elliott was nominated for Best Supporting Actor for his role in A Star Is Born.

Sam Elliott and Katharine Ross at an event for the Oscars, February 24, 2019. (Photo: Jeff Kravitz / Getty Images)

(via Pop Culture)




February 17, 2019

Viola Smith, a Pioneering Woman Drummer Who Was Still Actively Drumming at Age 100

Early in her music career, Viola Smith became known as “America’s fastest girl drummer.” She spent decades challenging the barriers facing female musicians -- and the centenarian she still plays today. She is the drummer for a band in her home community.


Smith was born on November 29, 1912 in Mount Calvary, Wisconsin, the eight of ten children. Smith’s love of music began at a young age. Her parents ran a dance hall in Mount Calvary, Wisconsin and she and her nine siblings all played instruments. By the age of 12, her father had arranged for her and her other underage sisters to have permission to travel and tour as part of his band, the Schmitz Sisters Family Orchestra. Later renamed the Smith Sisters, their band became a favorite touring group and even shared a bill with the Andrews Sisters.





How did she come to start on drums? “I was the sixth girl,” she explained in an interview in 2012. “My dad dictated the choice of instruments in the family.”

In the late 1930s, Smith and her sister Mildred formed their own all-girl band, the Coquettes. Smith became known for the novelty of being a “girl drummer” and was featured on the cover of Billboard magazine in 1940. But Smith became dissatisfied with how women musicians were treated. “Before World War II there was great prejudice,” she said. “The men felt like: ‘Girl musicians, what are they doing on the road? It's a male job.’”

Viola Smith was featured on the cover of Billboard magazine in 1940.

Viola Smith on her drums in 1939.

Viola Smith and her 17 drums in 1941.

During the midst of WWII in 1942, she published an article in Down Beat magazine titled “Give Girl Musicians A Break!” Smith says, “I was asked to write the article on behalf of the many capable girl musicians who were out of work.” In it, she wrote, “In these times of national emergency, many of the star instrumentalists of the big name bands are being drafted. Instead of replacing them with what may be mediocre talent, why not let some of the great girl musicians of the country take their place?” The article generated furious discussion about the prejudice against female musicians.


Since the 1940s, Smith has had a long and active career as a performer and teacher. Drumming every week from 1942 though 1954 on General Electric’s national syndicated radio program with Phil Spitalny’s all woman Hour of Charm Orchestra, Viola remained in demand long after the war ended. Movie appearances, drumming at President Truman’s inauguration celebration, The Ed Sullivan Show, playing on Broadway for the original run of Cabaret – she did it all!

Several years ago she retired from teaching drums, but to this day she still performs. Explaining her longevity, she said: “I definitely think that the exercise involved in drumming contributes to longevity. Spending two summers in Europe in 1942 and ‘44 started the wine habit: two glasses with dinner. Also hearing about a wine drinking community in Southern France where the longevity far exceeds that of the country as a whole. Thirdly, reading all of Adele Davis’ books over several decades ago, on a recipe for a long life.”

Viola Smith on the drums at age 100.



Viola Smith turned 106 in November, 2018.




February 14, 2019

'80s Pop Stars: Then and Now

See how your favorite 80s pop stars have changed over the last 30 years.

1. Kim Wilde

English pop singer, author, DJ and TV presenter Kim Wilde’s first break was in 1981 with “Kids in America”. The song made it to number two in the UK. Her singing career did not end then, as she released six albums throughout the ’80s, with 25 singles in the Top 50 of the UK singles charts. In 1983, she was honored with the Brit Award for Best British Female. In 1988 she strayed to a different path and became a landscape gardener, but eventually came back to music in 2003 and is still touring.



2. Janet Jackson

Janet Jackson, American singer, songwriter, dancer and actress, and the youngest Jackson child, began her career in 1976 with her role in The Jacksons television series. She truly rose to fame with her hit single “When I think Of You”, as well as her desire to follow in her brother, Michael Jackson’s path. She is known for her sexually provocative records and elaborate performances. She continues to perform today, and stand strong. And has announced her pregnancy at the age of 50!



3. Cyndi Lauper

Singer Cyndi Lauper was incredibly successful with her addictive lady anthem “Girl’s Just Want To Have Fun” and ballad “Time After Time”. Over 50 million of her albums have been purchased since the ’80s. In addition to this she was given a Tony Award for her composition of the Broadway hit Kinky Boots. She is an avid LBGT activist, and has founded the True Colors Fund. She has always had a very colorful look in both her attire and hair.



4. Kylie Minogue

Although she is still on top today, Australian Kylie Minogue’s career was just beginning in the ’80s. Her first album included hit singles “I Should Be So Lucky” and “The Locomotion” which brought her to fame. She is also a songwriter and actress, starring by in the Australian soap opera Neighbors as one of her first gigs. She has released several more albums and gone on many tours since then, despite fighting breast cancer. She is known to be the highest-selling Australian artist.



5. Madonna

Madonna’s claim to fame came with her album entitled with her very own name. Among her ’80s hits are “Like a Prayer”, “Material Girl” and “Holiday”. She has gained her popularity through breaking barriers in popular music and music videos, and has become an MTV legend. Today, she is not only one of the most well known successful musicians with sold out arenas worldwide, but is also an actress, writer and businesswoman. And of course has brought lots of attention to Malawi, Africa.







February 9, 2019

Comparison Then and Now Photos of a Street in Germany During WWII vs. Today

Two amazing photos. The first is allied forces pushing through the town of Oberdorla, Germany, during World War II in 1945. The second is the same street captured 71 years later in 2016.


This is a nice colorized reproduction of an original WWII photograph. Not only it brings much more detail to black and white photo, there’s also a detailed description of the photo.
Infantrymen of ‘B’ Company, 44th Armored Infantry Battalion, 6th US Armored Division while crossing the street, pass the body of Pfc. Robert Vardy Wynne (aged 19 from Texas) who had just been mortally wounded by a sniper.
This took place on April 4 1945 in Oberdorla, Mühlhausen/Thüringen, Germany.


Here’s the same street captured in the same angle 71 years later in 2016:





December 22, 2018

The Forgotten Dream: Photo Manipulations That Show What If 1900s Immigrants Arrived in Present Day New York City

In her photo series titled The Forgotten Dream, Hungarian artist Flora Borsi found black and white photos of immigrants arriving in the United States in the early 1900s, colorized them, and Photoshopped the people into modern-day photos of New York City.


In a time when immigration is a such a source of controversy in the United States, The Forgotten Dream shows both sides of the story. A dream many not be all that it promises. Problems still exist underneath the sweet idea of endless prosperity. Still, the dream allowed these people to gamble what they had for what they could be–once more linking the past with the future.

“Last year I’ve been to Ellis Island and I immediately had a bad feeling about that place,” Borsi wrote in 2017. “Approximately I knew what happened in Ellis Island and later I’ve been thinking about the likeness of current the immigration reforms in the United States.”

“I made a research and it’s really sad what happened to many Immigrants. Many of them died in Ellis Island while waiting and hoping for an opportunity for a new life. In this way their dream came true. I created this project as a reminder and commemorate to the 3,500 people who died there.”










December 10, 2018

Behind the Scenes From the Making of 2014 Galaxy Chocolate Commercial With Audrey Hepburn

This is a commercial ad of Galaxy chocolate which was released in March 2014 in United Kingdom, under the title of “Galaxy: Chase”.

The Breakfast At Tiffany’s star has been brought back to life with CGI technology, which makes the footage seem entirely new. The CGI for this 60 second commercial took a year to replicate Audrey’s face.

The ad is incredibly realistic: Audrey gazes gaminely from a bus window, flirts with a driver and skips through an Italian market-place before eating a square of Galaxy chocolate.

Hepburn’s sons, Sean Ferrer and Luca Dotti, agreed to sell her image to the company, saying their mother was a chocolate fan and would have been “proud” to be in the ad, according to CBS News.

Dove and the commercial producers are inordinately proud of their achievement. The digital effects firm Framestore began by searching for a suitable Hepburn double — someone, ideally, who would “share as many of her features and characteristics as possible.” Filmed over the course of a week on the Amalfi Coast, the cast originally included three women to play Hepburn - their mouth, eyes and body to be fused by the wonders of CGI to bring a 1953 version of her to life - but the final cut only includes two: Jenny Ishammar and Lou-Helene Barbry.










December 4, 2018

A Woman May Be President! And What Experts in 1950 Predicted for 21st Century Life


The December 27, 1950 Robesonian (Lumberton, NC) ran an Associated Press article titled, “How Experts Think We’ll Live in 2000 A.D.” The article covered the future of movies, commercial flight, space travel, medicine and women, among many other topics.

Can you believe that by the year 2000 a woman may be president of the United States? Apparently not. The entire piece has been transcribed below, via Paleo-Future.


The last half of the 20th Century dawns with fantastic promises shining through dark clouds.

Amid war and rumors of war, new terrors grip the world, but hopes and dreams of the future prevail.

The year 2000 looms nearer in the accelerating pace of modern life than 1950 ever could have seemed at the beginning of this century.

If the past fortells the future and the present trends point the way, many millions of persons alive today will live to see peace, prosperity, health, longer life, more leisure and greater luxuries than ever were known.

A woman may be President!

These are some of the rewards envisaged for the year 2000 by Associated Press experts looking ahead.

Here is how they size up prospects:


WORLD AFFAIRS: Price of Peace

Students of history in the year 2000 will probably look back on the 20th century as the era of blood and money.

Blood because the earth will still be reeking from the third world war.

Money, representing the material resources of the western world, because it will have outweighed the unfulfilled promises of Russian imperialistic Communism in unifying the world, or at least will be on the way to that end.

More importanly, but bearing on both, will be the recognition that a new world unifying power - the United States - will have taken it splace in the center of international affairs: forging a new "empire," different from Britain's, different from Rome's, indeed not an empire at all in the old sense, but [nevertheless] a new core, a new catalytic force.

This central position of the United States will grow out of its already-demonstrated willingness to base its relations with other nations on a community of interest; out of its capabilities for lending aid to the underdeveloped out of its refusal to divide the world after World War II, into spheres of influence for the benefit of the great powers.

The Third World War - barring such a miracle as has never yet occurred in relations between countries so greatly at odds - will grow out of Russia's exactly opposite attempts to unify the world by force.

By the year 2000 some sort of world federation idea should have taken real form, with the United States, because of its commercial interest in the development of other lands, because of the blood it will have shed in their behalf, holding a lot of votes.


SCIENCE: A Man-Made Planet

The first man-made star will be circling around the earth by the year 2000.

This star's light will be like that of the moon, reflected sunshine. It will be visible before sunrise and after sunset. It will circle 400 to 500 miles away from earth, or possibly farther.

This little planet is likely to be the first of the space ships, because there are a lot of practical reasons for building it, regardless of the future of interplanetary travel. It will be the nose of a step-rocket, one which fires in sections, each part dropping off to fall back to earth, until the final piece attains the speed of seven miles a second. At that velocity the end piece will not fall back, but will become a satellite of earth.

Practical uses are numerous. One is a radar beacon. Another to reflect radio signals, for scientific study. Three of these small ships, high enough and evenly spaced around the earth might become relays to serve the entire world with television.

The first ship is unlikely to be manned. But it may get power enough from the sun's heat to drive electronic equipment indefinitely.

In 2000 we shall be able to fly around the world in a day. We shall be neighbors of everyone else on earth, to whom we wish to be neighborly.

The atomic age should be getting under way. Atomic power will become useful in those areas where coal and oil are expensive and where water power is not available.


ECONOMICS: New Living Standards

The nation's industrial and agricultural plant will be able to support 300 million persons 50 years from now - twice the present population. Land now unproductive will be made to yield. Science will steadily increase crop production per acre. Technological, industrial and economic advances will give the American people living standards eight times as high as now.

Dr. Harold G. Moulton, president of the Brookings Institution, in his book, "Controlling Factors in Economic Development," predicts that in the next century the nation's expenditure for food will be eight times what it is now.

The total expended each year for housing will be 16 times the present outlay; for apparel 20 times more; for health and education 30 times more, and for recreation and travel 33 times more.

Technical advances will be well distributed throughout the economy. For example, a housewife may use an electronic stove and prepare roast beef in less time than it takes to set the table.

Other economists agree with Dr. Moulton. The Twentieth Century Fund, looking ahead only 10 years, forsees an American population of 155 million (a conservative estimate) who, as consumers, will be spending 159 billion dollars annually into additional capital goods, for further expansion of the industrial plant.


WOMEN: For President!

The woman of the year 2000 will be an outsize Diana, anthropologists and beauty experts predict. She will be more than six feet tall, wear a size 11 shoe, have shoulders like a wrestler and muscles like a truck driver.

Chances are she will be doing a man’s job, and for this reason will dress to fit her role. Her hair will be cropped short, so as not to get in the way. She probably will wear the most functional clothes in the daytime, go frilly only after dark.

Slacks probably will be her usual workaday costume. These will be of synthetic fiber, treated to keep her warm in winter and cool in summer, admit the beneficial ultra-violet rays and keep out the burning ones. They will be light weight and equipped with pockets for food capsules, which she will eat instead of meat and potatoes.

Her proportions will be perfect, though Amazonian, because science will have perfected a balanced ration of vitamins, proteins and minerals that will produce the maximum bodily efficiency, the minimum of fat.

She will go in for all kinds of sports – probably will compete with men athletes in football, baseball, prizefighting and wrestling.

She’ll be in on all the high-level groups of finance, business and government.

She may even be president.


POPULATION: Growth Will Slow

The population of the United States, which rose from 76,000,000 in 1900 to 130,500,000 in 1950, may not double again in the next half century. U.S. Census Bureau experts doubt that it will reach 300,000,000 by the year 2000, but they are not hazarding predictions that far ahead.

Population may reach 200,000,000 before the end of the century and will keep on increasing well into the 21st century.

While population doubled in the last half century, it more than tripled in the previous 50 years between 1850 and 1900. Between 1800 and 1850, it had more than quadrupled.

Three shifts in U.S. population that have been tremendous in the past 10 years are expected to keep going strong. These are:

Movement of people from farms to town, migration from the center of the country to the border states, particularly the Pacific coast and the South, and the movement of city dwellers to the suburbs. These trends will be further stimulated by industrial production needed for the new, long-range defense program and by farm mechanization.






December 3, 2018

10 Hyde Park Place: See How the Facade of London’s Smallest House Was Changed During More Than 100 Years

Located at No.10, Hyde Park Place, a street off the Bayswater Road near Lancaster Gate Tube Station, this house alleged to be the smallest one in London. With the ground floor consisting of nothing more than an alleyway behind the front door and the first floor just a tiny bathroom.


Squeezed between two other buildings this house is 3 feet 6 inches (about one meter) wide. It was built in 1805, and was damaged by a bomb in 1941. Mr. Lewis Grant Wallace was the first and only tenant. One theory for its existence is that it blocked a public right of way to serve as a watch house overlooking the old St George’s graveyard - extremely popular with bodysnatchers in the 18th century!

The building is now occupied by nuns as part of Tyburn Convent, where it remains today. It kept its original appearance until recent times, when the facade was rebuilt in red brick.

ca. 1905

1909 (Photo by Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)

ca. 1926-27

1928 (Image © Mary Evans Picture Library)

1931 (Photo by PA Images via Getty Images)





November 26, 2018

Photographed in 1948 and Again in 2003, Two Best Friends From Wisconsin That Have Shared the Same Passion for Over 50 Years

Clara Mayer and Adline VanVlanderen pose with their motorcycles in 1948 and in 2003 when they returned to recreate the photo in Cudahy, Wisconsin.



According to Moto Lady, the original 1940s image appears in the HD museum available as a print. One can imagine these two lovely ladies reuniting after fifty odd years and comparing their new bikes to the old.




November 22, 2018

Amazing Found Photos Show a Beautiful House From 1938 That Still Exists in Needham, Massachusetts

These amazing photos were found by Suzanne that captured a beautiful house at 214 Hillcrest Rd., Needham, Massachusetts in 1938. It still exists and looks to be in beautiful condition.
“What a nice surprise to find that this house still exists and looks to be in beautiful condition. You can see how much larger the two trees in front of the house are now. There is also a large letter L on the chimney, so I would say the owner's last name started with L. My parents were married the year the house was built. I'm going to mail the photos to the current owner.”

Our 1st New Home, Hillcrest Rd., Needham, Mass., 1938. Notice a large letter L on the chimney

Our First Built Home - 214 Hillcrest Rd., Needham, Mass., 1938. This photo may have been taken on a snowy night

The house in 2013. Search by Google




October 27, 2018

Photo of the Raddest High School Math Teacher Explaining the Physics of Surfing in 1970s SoCal

What a dude backbone boards 1+1= Tube


A math teacher at Dana Hills High School in Southern California, circa late 1970s. The photo was posted by the engaged educator’s son on r/OldSchoolCool 4 years ago and making the rounds again.
“My dad teaching math in Southern California (late 70s/early 80s)”

He’s finally retiring after teaching for 40 years at the same school, so the yearbook had him recreate the picture.







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