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#23 September 1962
rabbitcruiser · 8 months
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The Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts opened in New York City on September 23, 1962.
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dejahisashmom · 1 year
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Padre Pio Stigmata, Miracle Worker or Fraud - Historic Mysteries
Padre Pio Stigmata, Miracle Worker or Fraud – Historic Mysteries
https://www.historicmysteries.com/padre-pio-stigmata/
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Little Shop of Horrors takes place sometime in the early 60s, but it's hard to pin down the exact year. A radio broadcast mentions President Kennedy, so that narrows it down to 1961, 1962, or 1963. During the song Feed Me (Git It), one of the offers Audrey II waves in Seymour's face is a "guest spot on Jack Paar." Jack Paar hosted the Tonight Show from July 29, 1957 to March 30, 1962. The opening line of the movie says that the events took place on the 23rd day of the month of September, so if we assume Jack Paar was still on the air when Audrey II mentioned him, then 1962 and 1963 are off the table, meaning is has to be 1961, right? Well, after Seymour kills Mr. Mushnik allows Audrey II to kill Mr. Mushnik, we get a short montage of offers and contracts and magazine covers to establish that Seymour's star is rising. One of the covers is a TV Guide for the week of October 6 - 12.
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October 6th was a Sunday in 1963, not 1961, so that complicated things until I googled existing TV Guides and learned that they don't start the week on Sunday, but Saturday instead.
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April 23 - 29, 1983 (Saturday to Friday) December 27, 1980 - January 2, 1981 (Saturday to Friday)
October 6 - 12 was a Saturday to Friday in 1962.
If we assume Audrey II just pulled the first famous talkshow host name it could think of regardless of whether or not he was still on the air, then 1962 remains our best bet because in the director's cut ending where the plants take over the world there's one shot of Audrey II bursting through a movie theater marquee advertising Jason and the Argonauts, a Ray Harryhausen movie which premiered June 13, 1963.
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Little Shop of Horrors starts on September 23, 1962.
Seymour gets his face on the cover of Life and the TV Guide the following month.
Audrey II would hit store shelves just in time for Christmas, spreading around the country faster than hula hoops and the Twist, taking over the world sometime in the new year.
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dee Bradley baker
august 31, 1962
8/31/62
virgo
august 23-september 22
8/23/-9/22/
commander Cody, captain rex, clones and bossk-star wars the clone wars
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BOOTLEGS 2023
The year is winding down, so it's time to look back at the last 12 month's crop of live tapes. Crowd noise, tape hiss, distortion, murk ... and plenty of magic, people! As I do this year after year, I ask myself: "Why do I do this year after year?" I guess it's a habit I can't break. But I do love something about these cloudy recordings — the immediacy, the imperfections, the possibilities. Each bootleg, no matter how lo-fi, contains a glimmer of hope, a potential for beauty and transcendence. The fact that not all of them (few of them, in fact!) really deliver on that promise is part of the deal. The search continues!
Anyhoo, here's a sampling of the Doom & Gloom goods from 2023 to get you caught up ... thank you to the tapers, the archivists, the fans, the innocents.
Sonic Youth - #SonicSummer (Live 1981-2011)
Mazzy Star - The Mint, Los Angeles, California, July 15, 1993
Television - Max’s Kansas City, New York City, August 28, 1974
The Flying Burrito Brothers - Altamont Speedway, Tracy, California, December 6, 1969
Damon & Naomi - Best Video Film & Cultural Center, Hamden, Connecticut, May 12, 2023
Sandy Denny + John Martyn - Sundown Theatre, London, England, October 26, 1972
John Fahey - Carnegie Hall, New York City, Sept. 21, 1973
Neil Young with Booker T. & The MG’s - Los Angeles Sports Arena, Los Angeles, California, September 11, 1993
Prairiewolf - Paradise Found Records, Boulder, Colorado, July 1, 2023
The Band - Wollman Skating Rink, Central Park, New York City, June 30, 1971
PJ Harvey - McCabe’s Guitar Shop, Santa Monica, California, September 25, 1993
Van Morrison - Harvard Square Theatre, Cambridge, Massachusetts, March 14, 1974
The Velvet Underground - The Playhouse, Edinburgh, Scotland, June 1, 1993 (Soundcheck)
Loose Fur - The Double Door, Chicago, Illinois, May 14, 2000
Stephen Malkmus - Mr. T’s Bowl, Highland Park, California, August 13, 1998
Yo La Tengo - The Grotto, New Haven, Connecticut, October 23, 1987
Jonathan Richman & The Modern Lovers - Town Hall, New York City, October 9, 1976
The Cramps - Toad’s Place, New Haven, Connecticut, February 20, 1992
The Dream Syndicate - Crystal Ballroom, Somerville, Massachusetts, September 18, 2022
Gram Parsons - Max’s Kansas City, New York City, March 9, 1973
Tom Verlaine - The Roxy, West Hollywood, California, October 17, 1981
Lou Reed & The Tots - Humpin’ Hannah’s, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, January 20, 1973
Elizabeth Cotten - Euphoria Tavern, Portland, Oregon, February 19, 1975
Sonny Rollins and his Jazz Ensemble - East River Park Amphitheatre, New York City, August 7, 1962
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garadinervi · 2 months
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Výber z diela – Reiner, Jiroudek, Souček, Galerie umění, Karlovy Vary, August 26 – September 23, 1962 [SNG – Slovenská národná galéria, Bratislava]
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twixnmix · 1 year
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Vintage Concert Posters
Kleinhans Music Hall (Buffalo, NY) - February 25, 1961
Newark School Stadium, Newark, NJ) - August 12, 1961
Tivoli Theatre (Chicago, IL) - August 31 - September 6, 1961
Regal Theater (Chicago, IL) - December 21 - 28, 1962
Veterans Memorial Auditorium (Columbus, Ohio) - October 23, 1965
Barco-Stevens Hall (Richmond, VA) - May 13, 1966
Santa Clara County Fairgrounds (Santa Clara, CA) - March 10, 1967
Bryant Center (Oklahoma City, OK) - April 7, 1967
Coba Arena (Detroit, MI) - August 3, 1968
St. Albans Plaza (Queens, NY) - May 16, 1969
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gusgrissom · 1 year
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Sixteen minutes from home. Remembering the crew of Columbia STS-107, twenty years ago today.
Colonel Rick Douglas Husband, USAF (July 12, 1957 – February 1, 2003)
Commander William Cameron McCool, USN (September 23, 1961 – February 1, 2003)
Captain David McDowell Brown, USN (April 16, 1956 – February 1, 2003)
Kalpana Chawla (March 17, 1962 – February 1, 2003)
Lieutenant Colonel Michael Phillip Anderson, USAF (December 25, 1959 – February 1, 2003)
Captain Laurel Blair Salton Clark, M.D., USN (March 10, 1961 – February 1, 2003)
Colonel Ilan Ramon, IAF (June 20, 1954 – February 1, 2003)
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riotclitshave · 6 months
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Jim Meads was a photographer living in Hatfield, Hertfordshire near the Hatfield aerodrome in 1962. A pilot friend notified him on September 13th of that year that he would be test flying an English Electric Lightning F1 XG332 if he would like to come take some photos. Happy to get shots of the only British built fighter capable of Mach 2 speeds, he set out toward the airfield hoping to get photos of his children with the F1 landing in the background. The photo he ended up getting would become famous.
As he and his family walked up, a grounds keeper for the airfield approached them in a tractor to tell them to leave the area. That’s when the plane went out of control at a very low altitude with the pilot ejecting at the last possible moment, setting up an incredible, one of kind shot (especially for the time). As it turns out, the pilot was not Mead’s friend, but another test pilot named George Aird. He landed on a tomato greenhouse nearby, crashing through the roof and breaking both legs on the way down. The story is well documented by Aird, Meads, and Mike Sutterby, the tractor bound groundskeeper who was only 23 at the time.
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rabbitcruiser · 2 years
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The Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts opened in New York City on September 23, 1962.
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The Airline Stewardess who Starved Herself to Death for Aliens
In September 1953, 28-year-old Gloria Lee began to hear a strange voice in her head. Fortunately, the voice didn’t claim to be a manifestation of schizophrenia, but a telepathic communication from Jupiter by an alien named J.W. (The Jovians were so utterly advanced that they had no use for names or vocal cords.) Lee, an airline stewardess who had a great interest in UFOs, was understandably thrilled with her psychic visitor. She’d heard stories from pilots and other stewardesses about flying saucers, but in her five years of experience had never actually seen one herself.
Imagine Lee’s disappointment, then, when J.W. refused to physically show himself to her. “Frankly,” she wrote in her first book, I was just plain disgusted J.W. didn’t “drop in for a visit” if he was who he said he was.” For months, Lee decided to ignore J.W., until one day she was hanging laundry outside her home in Westchester, California and suddenly heard a voice telling her to look up.
Not sure what to expect, Lee followed the command, and spotted a giant UFO flying northward. After hearing there were other witnesses who saw the object in near-by Redondo Beach, Lee’s faith was restored, and she took up talking to J.W. again. To further develop her powers, Lee also attended a “psychic development” class. Lee never claimed to have physically met or seen J.W., but a classmate did once sketch his picture after supposedly seeing him stand behind Lee in class.
While this experience by itself was enough to convince Lee, she still had nothing to offer to any skeptics. “I have talked to him in materialized form and via direct voice control, ” she admitted, “but for those of you who may still doubt the existence of a person named J.W., I can give you no concrete proof which would satisfy only the five senses.” Among the 1950s contactee movement, no concrete proof was needed, and Lee put out a popular book in 1959 originally entitled “Why We Are Here: by J.W., A Being from Jupiter Through the Instrumentation of Gloria Lee.”  (The book was allegedly written by J.W., who communicated it to Lee by automatic writing.)
Lee took her work with J.W. very seriously, lecturing about her communications and even founding an organization called the Cosmon Research Foundation to promote his teachings. On September 23, 1962, J.W. ordered Lee to go on a hunger strike after some government officials in Washington D.C. declined to see her channelled blueprints for a spaceship. The strike was held for world peace, and Lee said she wouldn’t stop until the “light elevator” J.W. promised her would appear on earth to take her to Jupiter.
As everybody else expected, J.W.’s light elevator never arrived, and Lee’s hunger strike lasted for 66 days until her husband William H. Byrd had her hospitalized. Sadly, Lee didn’t recover, and she died in George Washington University Hospital on December 3. 
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kwebtv · 5 months
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Character Actress
Vivi Janiss (born Vivian Audrey Jamison; May 29, 1911 – September 7, 1988) Film and television actress.
From 1952 to 1955, Janiss appeared in five episodes of Jack Webb's original version of the Dragnet police drama television series. From 1953 to 1957, she was cast in four episodes of the Schlitz Playhouse of Stars anthology series. From 1954 to 1959, Janiss appeared as Myrtle Davis in 11 episodes of Robert Young's Father Knows Best situation comedy series. From 1959 to 1962, she was cast in six episodes, none in the starring role, of the NBC Western series Wagon Train with Ward Bond and John McIntire.
In 1955, she played the historical Mary Todd Lincoln in "How Chance Made Lincoln President" in the anthology series TV Reader's Digest.
In 1957, Janiss joined Frank Ferguson as guest stars in the roles of Mabel and Frank Cliff in the episode "No Blaze of Glory" of Rod Cameron's syndicated series State Trooper. In 1959, Janiss was cast the role of Ella Westover in a second State Trooper episode, "Excitement at Milltown”. On December 4, 1959, Janiss was cast in the CBS anthology series Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse, hosted by Desi Arnaz in the episode "The Hanging Judge".  
In its first season on the air, Janiss was cast with Everett Sloane in Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone episode "The Fever". Then on October 7, 1960, cast as Edna Castle, she joined Luther Adler in the role of her husband, pawnbroker Arthur Castle, in "The Man in the Bottle" episode of The Twilight Zone.  Years later in 1977, Janiss played a minor role as a pawnshop proprietor in the episode "Second Chance" of James Garner's NBC detective series The Rockford Files.
Janiss appeared in many other series, too, three times on The F.B.I., starring Efrem Zimbalist Jr., and twice each on The Virginian and Ben Casey. She was cast once on Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater, Lawman, Trackdown, Cimarron City, Route 66, Have Gun – Will Travel, Follow the Sun, Hennesey, Outlaws, Laramie, 87th Precinct, Perry Mason, Mannix, and The Streets of San Francisco.
After she and Bob Cummings divorced, Janiss wed actor John Larch. The couple appeared together on four television series, including the series premiere, "No Fat Cops", on October 3, 1961, of ABC's The New Breed, starring Leslie Nielsen. In this episode, Larch and Janiss were cast as John and Mary Clark. Earlier, the two had co-starred on November 23, 1959, as Johnny and Elsie in the episode "End of an Era" of NBC's Western series, Tales of Wells Fargo, starring Dale Robertson, and on May 23, 1960, as Isaiah and Rebecca Macabee in the episode "The Proud Earth" of the half-hour NBC anthology series Goodyear Theatre. On November 9, 1960, Larch and Janiss appeared as Ben and Sarah Harness in the episode "The Cathy Eckhart Story" of Wagon Train, with Susan Oliver in the starring role. Later, on December 19, 1968, the couple appeared again together in the 10th episode "Yesterday Died and Tomorrow Won't Be Born" of Jack Lord's CBS crime drama Hawaii Five-O.
Janiss' last roles were in the 1978 CBS television film First, You Cry, a story about breast cancer starring Mary Tyler Moore, and in two 1979 CBS series appearances on Barnaby Jones with Buddy Ebsen  and House Calls, starring Wayne Rogers.  (Wikipedia)
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The Airline Stewardess who Starved Herself to Death for Aliens
In September 1953, 28-year-old Gloria Lee began to hear a strange voice in her head. Fortunately, the voice didn’t claim to be a manifestation of schizophrenia, but a telepathic communication from Jupiter by an alien named J.W. (The Jovians were so utterly advanced that they had no use for names or vocal cords.) Lee, an airline stewardess who had a great interest in UFOs, was understandably thrilled with her psychic visitor. She’d heard stories from pilots and other stewardesses about flying saucers, but in her five years of experience had never actually seen one herself.
Imagine Lee’s disappointment, then, when J.W. refused to physically show himself to her. “Frankly,” she wrote in her first book, I was just plain disgusted J.W. didn’t “drop in for a visit” if he was who he said he was.” For months, Lee decided to ignore J.W., until one day she was hanging laundry outside her home in Westchester, California and suddenly heard a voice telling her to look up.
Not sure what to expect, Lee followed the command, and spotted a giant UFO flying northward. After hearing there were other witnesses who saw the object in near-by Redondo Beach, Lee’s faith was restored, and she took up talking to J.W. again. To further develop her powers, Lee also attended a “psychic development” class. Lee never claimed to have physically met or seen J.W., but a classmate did once sketch his picture after supposedly seeing him stand behind Lee in class.
While this experience by itself was enough to convince Lee, she still had nothing to offer to any skeptics. “I have talked to him in materialized form and via direct voice control, ” she admitted, “but for those of you who may still doubt the existence of a person named J.W., I can give you no concrete proof which would satisfy only the five senses.” Among the 1950s contactee movement, no concrete proof was needed, and Lee put out a popular book in 1959 originally entitled “Why We Are Here: by J.W., A Being from Jupiter Through the Instrumentation of Gloria Lee.”  (The book was allegedly written by J.W., who communicated it to Lee by automatic writing.)
Lee took her work with J.W. very seriously, lecturing about her communications and even founding an organization called the Cosmon Research Foundation to promote his teachings. On September 23, 1962, J.W. ordered Lee to go on a hunger strike after some government officials in Washington D.C. declined to see her channelled blueprints for a spaceship. The strike was held for world peace, and Lee said she wouldn’t stop until the “light elevator” J.W. promised her would appear on earth to take her to Jupiter.
As everybody else expected, J.W.’s light elevator never arrived, and Lee’s hunger strike lasted for 66 days until her husband William H. Byrd had her hospitalized. Sadly, Lee didn’t recover, and she died in George Washington University Hospital on December 3. 
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mutant-what-not · 1 year
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52 years ago today, March 23, 1971, the final episode of The Beverly Hillbillies aired. It originally broadcast for nine seasons on CBS from September 26, 1962 to March 23, 1971, starring Buddy Ebsen, Irene Ryan, Donna Douglas, and Max Baer, Jr.
The series is about a poor backwoods family transplanted to Beverly Hills, California, after striking oil on their land. A Filmways production created by writer Paul Henning, it is the first in a genre of "fish out of water" television shows, and was followed by other Henning-inspired country-cousin series on CBS. In 1963, Henning introduced Petticoat Junction, and in 1965 he reversed the rags-to-riches model for Green Acres. Panned by many entertainment critics in its time, it quickly became a huge ratings success for most of its nine-year run on CBS.
The Beverly Hillbillies ranked among the top twenty most watched programs on television for eight of its nine seasons, twice ranking as the number one series of the year, with a number of episodes that remain among the most watched television episodes of all time. It accumulated seven Emmy nominations during its run. The series remains in syndication on MeTV, and its ongoing popularity spawned a 1993 film remake by 20th Century Fox.
In 1997, the episode "Hedda Hopper's Hollywood" was ranked #62 on TV Guide's 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time.
The Beverly Hillbillies was one of the very few network situation comedies to feature multi-episode story arcs and was among the earliest farce comedy series on American television.
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jedivoodoochile · 1 year
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Norma Jeane to Marilyn Monroe 1926 - 1962. (Scroll down for 1926 - 1962)💋
1926
June 1: Birth at Los Angeles General Hospital.
June 13: Taken to live with the foster family, the Bolenders.
1933💋
Fall: Mother Gladys Baker takes Norma Jeane to live with her.
1934💋
February: Gladys Baker taken to an institution.
1935💋
June 1: Grace McKee becomes legal guardian.
September 13: Norma Jeane is left at the orphanage.
1937💋
June 26: Grace McKee takes her away from the orphanage.
1938💋
November: Goes to live with 'Aunt' Ana Lower.
1942💋
June 19: Marries James E. Dougherty.
1944💋
April: Norma Jeane starts work at the Radio Plane Munitions Factory.
1946💋
April: First National Magazine cover, in 'Family Circle'.
June 26: Photographed by David Conover for 'Yank' magazine.
July 19: First Screen-Test, for 20th Century Fox.
July 23: First Six Months studio contract, renewed in January.
July 29: First mention in a Hollywood gossip Column (Hedda Hopper).
August 2: Norma Jeane Dougherty applies to join the 'Blue Book Modeling Agency'.
September 13: Divorce granted from James E. Dougherty.
1947💋
August 25: Fox Contract not renewed for a second time.
1948💋
February: Marilyn befriends mogul Joseph M. Schenck.
March 9: Contract with Columbia Pictures.
September 8: Dropped by Columbia.
December 31: Meets agent Johnny Hyde, who indicates himself to promote her.
1949💋
May 27: Poses for photographer Tom Kelley - the nude Calendar shots.
July 24: First interview with Earl Wilson.
August 15: Starts shooting 'A Ticket To Tomahawk'.
October: Sings contract with MGM for the breakthrough role in 'The Asphalt Jungle'.
1950💋
January 5: Starts shooting 'The Fireball'.
April: Lands small but perfectly formed part in 'All About Eve'.
December 18: Johnny Hyde dies.
1951💋
March 29: Presents an Oscar at the Academy Awards ceremony.
April 18: Shooting starts on 'Love Nest'.
May 11: Latest six months contract and Fox converted to seven-year deal.
September 8: First full length national magazine feature in 'Colliers'.
1952💋
March: Marilyn and Joe DiMaggio go out on a first date.
March 13: Nude calendar story broken to public.
April 7: First 'Life' cover snapped by Phillipe Halsman.
June 1: On her birthday leans she is to be Lorelei Lee in 'Gentlemen Prefer Blondes'.
August 31: Live radio debut.
September 2: Grand marshal at the Miss America pageant.
1953💋
January, 21: She becomes a star when 'Niagara' is released.
January, 26: Marilyn and Jane Russell put their hand and feet prints in wet cement. At Graumann's Chinese Theater.
September, 13: TV debut at the 'Jack Benny Show'.
November, 4: Premier of 'How To Marry a Millionaire'.
December 15: Doesn't appear for shooting of 'The Girl in Pink Tights'.
1954💋
January, 4: Suspended by Fox.
January, 14: Marriage with Joe Dimaggio in San Francisco.
February, 2: They arrive at Tokyo Airport.
February, 16: Marilyn gives 10 concert's for the American soldiers in Korea.
September, 15: The shooting for the blowing skirt scene, included in the movie 'The Seven Year Itch'.
October, 5: Marilyn divorces Joe DiMaggio.
November, 6: Hollywood party in honor of Marilyn.
1955💋
January, 7: Press conference for 'Marilyn Monroe Productions Inc.'.
January, 15: Marilyn moves to the East coast, she is also suspended by Fox.
February: She met Lee Strasberg, and joins 'The Actor Studio'.
March, 31: She appears on a pink elephant on a benefit evening in 'Madison Square Garden'.
April, 8: Live in TV program of 'Person2Person' with Edward R. Murrow.
June, 1: Premier of 'The Seven Year Itch'.
1956💋
January, 4: A new contract between Fox and MM Productions.
February, 9: Marilyn and Sir Laurence Olivier announce that they will work together in 'The Sleeping Prince'.
June, 29: She marries Arthur Miller.
July, 14: She travels to London to begin with the shooting of 'The Prince And The Showgirl'.
August: Her first miscarriage.
October, 29: She meets Queen Elizabeth.
1957💋
June, 13: Premier of 'TPATS'.
August, 1: Another miscarriage.
1958💋
August, 4: The shooting of 'Some Like It Hot' begins, until November.
December, 17: Another miscarriage.
1959💋
March, 29: Premier of 'Some Like It Hot'.
1960💋
March, 8: Golden Globe award for 'Best Actress in a Comedy', in 'Some Like It Hot'.
June, 18: The shooting of 'The Misfits' begins.
August, 26: Marilyn is admitted in the hospital, some say in was a suicide attempt.
November, 11: Marilyn announce she divorces Arthur Miller.
November, 16: Clark Gable (who worked with in 'The Misfits') died of an heart attack.
1961💋
January, 20: Divorce of Arthur Miller.
January, 31: Premier 'The Misfits'.
February, 7: She is admitted to the 'Payne Whitney Clinic' in New York.
February, 11: She is admitted to 'Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center'.
October: Meets Robert Kennedy.
November: Meets John. F. Kennedy.
1962💋
February: Moves back to Los Angeles, in Brentwood.
March, 5: She get's a Gold Globe Award for 'World Film Favorite'.
April, 23: Shooting begins for 'Something's Got To Give'.
May, 19: Sings 'Happy Birthday' to JFK in 'Madison Square Garden'.
June, 1: Last workday at Fox.
June, 7: fired by Fox.
June, 23: Rehired by Fox.
July, 20: Admitted to the 'Cedars of Lebanon Hospital'.
August, 3: She appears on the cover of 'Life'.
August, 4: The last day Marilyn Monroe was alive.
August, 5: Marilyn Monroe is found dead in bed, autopsy reveals suicide. (possible)
August, 8: Funeral in 'Westwood Memorial Park Cemetery' 🙏💐🌸⚘️💐🌸⚘️
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sovietpostcards · 1 year
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I posted 1,829 times in 2022
1,559 posts created (85%)
270 posts reblogged (15%)
Blogs I reblogged the most:
@sovietpostcards
@vintage-ukraine
@russiawave
@rusiland
@sovietpaintings
I tagged 1,407 of my posts in 2022
Only 23% of my posts had no tags
#ussr - 829 posts
#soviet - 825 posts
#history - 809 posts
#russia - 769 posts
#photography - 536 posts
#vintage - 484 posts
#retro - 465 posts
#soviet union - 431 posts
#black and white - 406 posts
#1960s - 254 posts
Longest Tag: 39 characters
#всем кто ложится спать - спокойного сна
My Top Posts in 2022:
#5
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“No war!” Poster by Viktor Ivanov (1962)
4,031 notes - Posted February 26, 2022
#4
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See the full post
5,320 notes - Posted October 9, 2022
#3
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“At Knitting” by M. Gerasimov (1984)
7,941 notes - Posted August 21, 2022
#2
Where do you live and do you microwave tea
10,383 notes - Posted September 10, 2022
My #1 post of 2022
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“Date Night” by Anatoly Kuvin (1956)
12,303 notes - Posted January 25, 2022
Get your Tumblr 2022 Year in Review →
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