Showing posts with label 1950s Celebrity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1950s Celebrity. Show all posts

Eileen Ford - Fifties Supermodel Pioneer

Salute to Eileen Ford, founder of one of the world's most prestigious modelling agencies, born on this date in 1922.  

Ford created the career and  represented most of the top fifties models. Included among these supermodels were Jean Patchett, Dorian Leigh, Suzy Parker, Evelyn Tripp, Lisa Fonssagrives, Mary Jane Russell, Carmen Dell'Orefice, Dovima, Lillian Marcuson, Dolores Hawkins, Sunny Harnett, Nan Rees, and Georgia Hamilton. They would go on to work for many of the most influential fifties' fashion designers, magazines, and photographers.

Jean Patchett for Vogue May 15, 1951
Photographer Clifford Coffin
Dorian Leigh in Lilli Ann Ensemble
Harper's Bazaar 1957
Suzy Parker in Lilli Ann Dress 1956
Evelyn Tripp in Louise Dahl-Wolfe Photograph
Harper's Bazaar 1955
Lisa Fonssagrives in evening gown Amerique by Christian Dior
Irving Penn Photo for Vogue October 15, 1950 
Mary Jane Russel in Clifford Coffin Photo
Vogue February 15, 1950
Carmen Dell'Orefice in Pauline Trigere Dinner Coat
Hat by Elizabeth Arden, Photo by Dan Wynn
Harper's Bazaar January 1959
Dovima in Madame Grès
Richard Avedon 1950
Lillian Marcuson 1951 in Milliken wool crepe dress
Janice Milan Designer
Dolores Hawkins in Jonathan Logan Gown 1954
Sunny Harnett in Claire McCardell Dress
Richard Rutledge Photo for 1951 Vogue
Nan Rees in John Weitz Housecoat
Milton Greene 1951 Photo
Georgia Hamilton in Balenciaga
Eileen Ford and these world-class supermodels are responsible for today's fascination with fifties fashions.


Cheek to Cheek

We just watched the 1935 romantic musical "Top Hat" starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers again last night. While not a fifties' movie, the dance routine to the Academy Award nominated Best Song show tune "Cheek to Cheek" makes you want to see it over and over. 

Next to the 1950's fashions, I love the 30's style and glamour. Although it is said that Mr. Astaire hated the feathers on her gown, many feel they make the dress.


Ernest Hemingway's "The Old Man and the Sea"

Ernest Hemingway 1939
On this date in 1952, Earnest Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea was first published. The first draft of the short novel was written by Hemingway in eight weeks. It would become his most famous work. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1953 and a Nobel Prize in Literature in 1954 for his work.

The Old Man and the Sea tells the story of an aging fisherman's struggle with a giant marlin and his friendship with a young villager boy.

The novel has been adapted for the screen in a 1958 film starring Spencer Tracy and a 1990 television miniseries starring Anthony Quinn.

It is often included in high school American Literature curriculums.

Hemingway was born on July 21, 1899 in Oak Park, Illinois. Often called Papa, Hemingway's dynamic personality would lead him to many adventures. He served in the military during World War I and as a war correspondent in World War II.

Hemingway married four times and traveled around the world maintaining residences in Venice, Paris, and Cuba. After leaving Cuba, he bought a home in Ketchum, Idaho where after battling years of physical ailments and alcoholism, he took his life on July 2, 1961.

An inscription on a memorial to Ernest Hemingway just North of Sun Valley reads:

Best of all he loved the fall
the leaves yellow on cottonwoods
leaves floating on trout streams
and above the hills
the high blue windless skies

Now he will be a part of them forever.