A random selection of photos featuring several stars of the silent era.
With a name based on a Mystery Science Theater 3000 riff, EPP was originally going to mostly house B-movie reviews. Now though, it has become a repository for whatever burrs get under my pop culture saddle on any given day. Seriously, I must be insane; who else voluntarily reads a book on the history of jeans...and enjoys it?
Showing posts with label Mary Pickford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Pickford. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
The Silent Majority: Everyone was There
Labels:
Colleen Moore,
Dorothy Gish,
Jack Pickford,
Joan Crawford,
John Gilbert,
Lillian Gish,
Lon Chaney Sr.,
Louise Brooks,
Marilyn Miller,
Mary Pickford,
Norma Shearer,
The Silent Majority
Monday, August 30, 2010
This Vain World...
So I read something on Facebook that upset me. (I'm sure those of you who know me are shocked. I'm cheesed off over some random internet thing!)
Shirley Manson asked her fans if it's possible that she's insane because she, unlike some of her friends and a large chunk of people in the entertainment industry, refuses to do the whole plastic surgery/Botox/"oh just go and pave your face already" thing. Prior to this, Shirley has always come out strongly against that sort of physical tampering, at least for herself. I suspect this sudden insecurity could be the result of a recent birthday, but it brings up a few important points for me.
I'm not against the idea of people changing themselves physically in any way that they find personally fulfilling. Piercings, tattoos, nose jobs, body modification...whatever you're okay with, whatever you want, that's great. However, I am against the way that the media continues to push a ridiculous and often impossible ideal of beauty, even with all of the backlash and outcry against such portrayals.
Once upon a time, it was all right for entertainers to look fairly like the selves they had been born as. Oh, sure, someone like Fanny Brice might have a nose job, but a lot of the time, make-up and good lighting hid a multitude of "imperfections". Then came Hollywood, and starlets had to be thinner, and thinner, and thinner...because the camera ads weight...and they've continued to get thinner and thinner until they look like a crop of starved urchins. Now, I'll grant you that some people are naturally thin; but when you have to be so thin that you begin to look ill, that's too far.
After the jump: some photos of the way women in the entertainment industry were once allowed to look, along with commentary on how they might end up now.
Shirley Manson asked her fans if it's possible that she's insane because she, unlike some of her friends and a large chunk of people in the entertainment industry, refuses to do the whole plastic surgery/Botox/"oh just go and pave your face already" thing. Prior to this, Shirley has always come out strongly against that sort of physical tampering, at least for herself. I suspect this sudden insecurity could be the result of a recent birthday, but it brings up a few important points for me.
I'm not against the idea of people changing themselves physically in any way that they find personally fulfilling. Piercings, tattoos, nose jobs, body modification...whatever you're okay with, whatever you want, that's great. However, I am against the way that the media continues to push a ridiculous and often impossible ideal of beauty, even with all of the backlash and outcry against such portrayals.
Once upon a time, it was all right for entertainers to look fairly like the selves they had been born as. Oh, sure, someone like Fanny Brice might have a nose job, but a lot of the time, make-up and good lighting hid a multitude of "imperfections". Then came Hollywood, and starlets had to be thinner, and thinner, and thinner...because the camera ads weight...and they've continued to get thinner and thinner until they look like a crop of starved urchins. Now, I'll grant you that some people are naturally thin; but when you have to be so thin that you begin to look ill, that's too far.
After the jump: some photos of the way women in the entertainment industry were once allowed to look, along with commentary on how they might end up now.
Labels:
Barbara Stanwyck,
Helen Morgan,
Ladies,
Mary Pickford,
Old Hollywood,
Shirley Manson,
Theater,
Vanity,
Ziegfeld Girls
Sunday, August 29, 2010
The Silent Majority: Tragedy and Triumph with the Pickford Kids and Co.
Mary Pickford is one of the best known stars that the silent film era produced. What many fans don't realize is that she was not the only Pickford to make it in pictures; she was simply the one who lasted. Her brother, Jack, was, for a time, a juvenile heartthrob and might have been a matinee idol of the first caliber had personal problems and alcoholism not derailed him. Sister Lottie was rated the weakest of the siblings talent-wise, but she still managed an output of around 25 films over the course of several years. Of course, all three had made names for themselves on the stage before that, touring their native Canada and the U.S. with a number of companies.
Here then, some pictures of Mary, Lottie, Jack, along with Olive Thomas, Douglas Fairbanks Sr., Marilyn Miller, and others.
Here then, some pictures of Mary, Lottie, Jack, along with Olive Thomas, Douglas Fairbanks Sr., Marilyn Miller, and others.
Labels:
Douglas Fairbanks Sr.,
Jack Pickford,
Lottie Pickford,
Marilyn Miller,
Mary Pickford,
Olive Thomas,
The Silent Majority
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