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Tara Hanks

~ Author of 'The Mmm Girl' and 'Wicked Baby'

Tara Hanks

Category Archives: Film

Back Row Brighton

17 Thursday Dec 2009

Posted by marina72 in Art and Photography, Books, Brighton, Film, History, Non-Fiction

≈ Comments Off on Back Row Brighton

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Back Row Brighton, Brighton, Queenspark Books

Back Row Brighton: Cinema-Going in Brighton and Hove is the latest offering from Queenspark Books, a community publisher since 1974. Specialising in the reminiscences of local people, and writing and editing with volunteers, Queenspark has created a unique, alternate history of Brighton. It also provides a focus for aspiring writers with a number of ongoing courses, groups and workshops, and is used as a learning resource by schools in the area.

Given its cultural atmosphere and lively past, it is perhaps unsurprising that Brighton has played a part in the evolution of cinema, from the camera’s invention until the present day. Continue reading →

Marilyn and ‘Baby Doll’

04 Friday Dec 2009

Posted by marina72 in Film, Marilyn Monroe

≈ 6 Comments

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Baby Doll, Carroll Baker, Child Woman, Immortal Marilyn, Marilyn Monroe, Tennessee Williams

This article can also be read on the Immortal Marilyn website

American Child-Woman: Marilyn Monroe and Baby Doll

‘In her movies,’ Marie Clayton wrote in Unseen Archives, her 2005 pictorial biography of Marilyn Monroe, ‘she projected a unique and fascinating persona — a child-woman who was both innocent and full of sexuality, someone men desired, but women found unthreatening. In real life,’ Clayton adds, ‘she was a beautiful and complex woman with deep insecurities, who just wanted to be loved.’ Continue reading →

Penny McGuiggan

18 Wednesday Nov 2009

Posted by marina72 in Film, Marilyn Monroe

≈ 5 Comments

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Marilyn Monroe, Some Like It Hot

Sweet Sue's Band

'Some Like It Hot', 1959

Penny McGuiggan, a trumpeter and actress who appeared in Billy Wilder’s classic 1959 gangster spoof, Some Like It Hot, has died. Her (then uncredited) role was as a member of Sweet Sue’s Society Syncopators, an all-girl jazz band headed by conductor Sweet Sue (Joan Shawlee), singer Sugar Kane (Marilyn Monroe), and their hapless, bespectacled male manager, Bienstock (Dave Barry.) Continue reading →

Celebrating Madonna

30 Wednesday Sep 2009

Posted by marina72 in Art and Photography, Film, Madonna, Music

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Celebration, It's So Cool, Madonna, Mr Brainwash, Revolver

Mr Brainwash

Celebration is Madonna’s third greatest hits package, spanning her thirty–year career. She has also released collections of remixes and ballads, as well as eleven studio albums and several film soundtracks. A two-disc compilation, showcasing such a prolific artist, seems almost minimal.  It is accompanied by a double DVD featuring nearly fifty videos.

The cover, by street artist Mr Brainwash, is striking, if perhaps too obvious a riff on Warhol’s Marilyn. But Madonna is an icon in her own right, and Celebration’s booklet includes some of the best artwork on any of her albums. Browned newspaper featuring printed lyrics are overlaid by images from Madonna’s many incarnations; there are montages, a Banksy-style billboard, and my own favourite, a young Madonna surrounded by smashed records.

The artwork recreates the New York club scene of the 1970s and 80s where Madonna found her niche. That spirit of ‘reinvention’ has echoed through the following decades, and sets her apart from her imitators. Now she is a phenomenon on the scale of Elvis Presley, the Beatles, and Michael Jackson – the only woman in that select club, and by far the most provocative.

Some critics would argue that Madonna’s true genius lies in marketing, but the music tells another story. While the Beatles split acrimoniously, and Michael and Elvis faded away, Madonna remains a dominant force, running ahead of the pack. Continue reading →

The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe

15 Tuesday Sep 2009

Posted by marina72 in Books, Film, Marilyn Monroe, Non-Fiction

≈ 5 Comments

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Biography, Dr Ralph Greenson, Frank Sinatra, Gladys Monroe, Ida Bolender, J. Randy Taraborrelli, John F. Kennedy, Marilyn Monroe, Mental Illness, Norma Jeane, Robert Kennedy

J. Randy Taraborrelli is the leading celebrity biographer of our time. His subjects include contemporary stars like Michael Jackson and Madonna, and he has produced a string of bestsellers. Taraborrelli’s style is best described as gossip journalism – tabloid-style, perhaps, but widely read. Having published books on Frank Sinatra and the Kennedys, it was perhaps inevitable that Taraborrelli would turn his attentions to Marilyn Monroe, who knew them all. But Monroe represents a unique challenge to biographers because she has been written about extensively in the 47 years since her death, more than any other actress. Furthermore, accounts of her life and character vary widely and it is difficult to find a consensus on even the most basic facts.
Continue reading →

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