Originally Posted By strangewood

Surely their other hands are making jazz hands, right?
strangewood:

Bob Fosse and Roy Scheider at the 1980 Cannes Film Festival. Fosse’s All That Jazz shared the Palme d’Or that year with Akira Kurosawa’s Kagemusha.

Surely their other hands are making jazz hands, right?

strangewood:

Bob Fosse and Roy Scheider at the 1980 Cannes Film Festival. Fosse’s All That Jazz shared the Palme d’Or that year with Akira Kurosawa’s Kagemusha.

I need this lady to zap into the future and get me dressed every morning.  Sure, it’s a high-er maintenance look, but city ladies really made an effort in 1944. 
I wish I knew what color those shoes were.
(via Bust and Miss Moss)

I need this lady to zap into the future and get me dressed every morning.  Sure, it’s a high-er maintenance look, but city ladies really made an effort in 1944. 

I wish I knew what color those shoes were.

(via Bust and Miss Moss)

Kate Bush as kid, full of deep thoughts - maybe the beginnings of “Army Dreamers?”
(via Dangerous Minds and Flavorwire)

Kate Bush as kid, full of deep thoughts - maybe the beginnings of “Army Dreamers?”

(via Dangerous Minds and Flavorwire)

Originally Posted By rookiemag

I really really hope they each have half-heart BFF necklaces hiding underneath those fashionable shirts. 
rookiemag:

<33333333 forever
-Anaheed

I really really hope they each have half-heart BFF necklaces hiding underneath those fashionable shirts.

rookiemag:

<33333333 forever

-Anaheed

Super-meta Liza Minnelli, as shot by Andy Warhol.  Party times.
(via Flavorwire)

Super-meta Liza Minnelli, as shot by Andy Warhol.  Party times.

(via Flavorwire)

Got some time to get sucked back into 1977?  Good.  NY 77: The Coolest Year in Hell is one of VH1’s “Rock Docs” and it’s definitely worth watching all seven parts that are uploaded on YouTube.  Sure, it shows that not everything was awesome back then (urban decay, murder, drugs, etc.), but the late 70s saw an explosion of some great art and music and cultural movements.  From IMDB’s summary:

Out of chaos came creation. From the South Bronx came hip hop. From the Lower East Side, the thrashing guitars of punk. And all over the city, a disco revolution was underway. Elaborate, finely crafted graffiti art decorated the subway cars and break-dancers shimmied in the streets. The sexual revolution was in full swing. In January 1977, most of this activity existed in its own underground bubble. Yet by the end of the year this artistic expression was on its way to mainstream America, and would be with us for generations to come.

So yeah: there was dirt, poverty, and crime BUT there was also hip hop, punk, and amazing outfits.  I’d still drop by in my time machine.

Originally Posted By marc-feld

Got enough tea there, David?

Got enough tea there, David?

(Source: marc-feld, via wesleeping)

You know this has been stuck in your head all week anyway.  And, sorry Megan Draper, but Gillian Hills is killing it more than you in the hair department. 

(via Flavorwire)

Originally Posted By hollyhocksandtulips

hollyhocksandtulips:

Audrey, 1956

hollyhocksandtulips:

Audrey, 1956

(via rayram)

Gothamist posted some super photos from 1966-era NYC in celebration of Mad Men&#8217;s return tonight.  Check out the rest here, as well as a couple of videos.
Get your scotch ready.

Gothamist posted some super photos from 1966-era NYC in celebration of Mad Men’s return tonight.  Check out the rest here, as well as a couple of videos.

Get your scotch ready.

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