Lions and Tigers and Bears, oh my!


Another in our series on "lovely ladies draped seductively atop dead carnivores." This time it's silent screen legend Evelyn Nesbitt gracing the carcasses. Oh my!







Reflections: Shelley Winters


Shelley Winters and William Powell in Take One False Step (1949)

Outlandish Hats: Mae Murray


Mademoiselle Midnight (1924)


Bevy of Beauties 28: The Gale Sisters


The Gale sisters, Jane, June and Joan, in Melody in Spring (1934)

Light and Shadow: Janet Leigh and John Gavin


Janet Leigh and John Gavin in Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960)

Hot Thanksgiving Dish


I'm thankful for this pic of Marilyn in denim! :)

On the Set: Lee Remick & Pat Owens


on location during filming of These Thousand Hills (1959)

Adventures in Androgyny: Jessie Matthews


Jessie Matthews in First a Girl (1935)


Modern Femmes Fatale: Part 43


Christy Turlington

Jennifer Jason Leigh

Elizabeth Hurley

Alison King

Cate Blanchette

Evan Rachel Wood

Gwyneth Paltrow in Sydney (1996)

LeeLee Sobieski

Mandy Moore

Nutsa Kukhianidze

Still More Glamorous Gaps


So, a number of my erstwhile followers have made clear that they are unimpressed with my nascent diastemia fetish, so this is the last time I'll inflict it on you. You are on notice that I will not be abandoning any of my other fetishes, however!



Model Abby Lee Kershaw (above and below)




Model Ashley Smith (above and below)




Actress Beatrice Dalle (above and below)




Model Jessica Hart (above and below)




Actress Jorja Fox (above and below)



Inside Looking Out: Ladies Behind Bars 17


Diana Dors in The Unholy Wife (1957)


Smoking in Bed: Jane Greer


Set of publicity photos for the noir classic Out of the Past (1947)













Sweater Girl: Geraldine Fitzgerald


The Mill on the Floss (1937)

For the Boys: Paul Robeson



Original Caption: Paul Robeson, world famous Negro baritone, leading Moore Shipyard [Oakland, CA] workers in singing the Star Spangled Banner, here at their lunch hour recently, after he told them: `This is a serious job--winning this war against fascists. We have to be together.' Robeson himself was a shipyard worker in World War I." September 1942