An excellent film about Brian Duffy one of the top 3 London photographers of the 60′s who made his name along side David Bailey and Terence Donovan. Its a compelling look at a real photographer who worked in real photography and at a time before Photoshop. At the hight of his career he burned his negatives and walked away from photography not returning until his Son Chris found some of his work and inspired his dad back behind the camera.
Lytham held the first of what could turn out to be a very good annual event on the weekend of 21st and 22nd August 2010. The 1940s war weekend was a celebration to mark the 70th anniversary of the Battle of Britain and to help raise funds for a memorial to the members of the RAFs Fighter and Bomber Command which, when erected, will stand on Lytham Green where the event took place. The weekend which kicked of on Friday evening with a 1940s dance held in the park pavilion, included Re-enactors from The Northern World War Two Association who put on excellent living history displays and a battle re-enactment. There was also full size replica spitfire complete with aircrew waiting for the call to scramble, period military vehicles including a German Sd.Kfz. 251 Auf C half-track and a mini assault course for the kids. The period atmosphere was helped along by re-enactors from the North West Military Colletors group, live 1940s music and dancing all in period costume during the Saturday and Sunday bringing in crowds of sightseers. The whole weekend was topped by a flypast on the Saturday by a Dakota of the type that would have dropped allied paratroops into France on D-day and Arnhem later in the war. Sundays fly past was by the last Hurricane ever built, PZ865 was finished in summer 1944, there were 14,533 of them built throughout the war. She bares the inscription ‘The Last of the Many’ on her port and starboard sides.
There is also a video report here from the weekend from Blackpool TV
The Rat Pack: Rare Photos of Sinatra and Friends - February 6, 2012 at 20:38 “Forget the movie, let’s pull the job!” That, legend has it, is what Frank Sinatra joked upon hearing the plot for Ocean’s 11, the 1960 Vegas heist flick that went on to become the Rat Pack’s signature big-screen adventure. ItR [...]
LIFE Rides With the Hells Angels - February 5, 2012 at 16:14 From Jesse James and Butch Cassidy to Scarface and Tony Soprano, outlaws have always held a singularly ambiguous place in America’s popular imagination: we fear and loathe gangsters’ appetite for violence; we envy and covet their freedom. In early [...]
Picasso: Drawing With Light - February 4, 2012 at 12:00 LIFE magazine’s Gjon Mili, a technical prodigy and lighting innovator, visited Pablo Picasso in the South of France in 1949. The meeting of these two marvelous minds and sensibilities was bound to result in something extraordinary. Mili showed the artist [...]
The Day MLK Died: A LIFE Photographer’s Story - February 3, 2012 at 17:16 On April 4, 1968, LIFE photographer Henry Groskinsky and writer Mike Silva, on assignment in Alabama, learned that Martin Luther King, Jr., had been shot at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis. The two men jumped into their car, raced the [...][...]
Larry Burrows’ Classic Photo Essay: ‘One Ride With Yankee Papa 13′ - February 3, 2012 at 16:18 Over the decades, while LIFE magazine published dozens of photo essays by the 20th century’s greatest photographers, few combined the raw intensity and technical brilliance of Larry Burrows’ seminal “One Ride With Yankee Papa 13″ — [...]
Marilyn Monroe: Early Unpublished Photos - February 3, 2012 at 16:10 Few Hollywood stars of the 1950s and 1960s were so compelling, so utterly unique, that they actually came to define the era in which they worked and played. Marilyn Monroe was one of those stars. From her earliest days as [...][...]
Woody Guthrie Serenades New York City, 1943 - February 1, 2012 at 19:14 In 1943, the modern-day troubadour and national treasure, Woodrow Wilson “Woody” Guthrie, was about to publish his now-classic, semi-fictionalized autobiography, Bound for Glory, in which he wrote vibrantly about his childhood, his love of American [...]
Leonard McCombe: Unpublished Oscar Rehearsal Photos, 1958 - February 1, 2012 at 17:47 During Hollywood’s Golden Age, being a star entailed more than just acting: leading men and women had to sing, dance, play it straight, play the clown — in short, they had to know how to entertain. Little wonder, then, that [...][...]
Margaret Bourke-White: Segregation in South Carolina, 1956 - February 1, 2012 at 17:30 In 1956 LIFE magazine dispatched reporters and photographers to the American South to explore how the emotionally and politically charged issue of segregation manifested itself at a time when the Civil Rights movement was barely in its infancy. Here, LIFE [... [...]
World War II: London in Color - February 1, 2012 at 09:18 The air raids by German Luftwaffe planes on English cities and towns in 1940 and 1941 — attacks known collectively and famously as The Blitz — were terrifying, but they failed in their key aims: namely, to demoralize the British [...][...]
RT @adebradley: Brilliant - police officer spent 20 minutes chasing himself, after CCTV operator thought he was a burglar. http://t.co/w ............37 minutes ago
RT @Russian_Photos: RT @PhotoGordon: Photos taken in public do not infringe privacy says Euro Court Human Rights in important judgement. ............42 minutes ago
RT @TheBPPA: "If 'stalkerazzi' images are used, it is down to the publication to adhere to the PCC Code" - Neil Turner, Vice Chairman Th ............2 hours ago
RT @TheBPPA: "We want to be part of the solution…" - Neil Turner, Vice Chairman TheBPPA #leveson.........2 hours ago
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