Jane Russell one of Hollywoods leading sex symbols in the 1940s and 1950s



Jane Russell (born June 21, 1921) is an American film actress and was one of Hollywood's leading sex symbols in the 1940s and 1950s. Jane Russell was born Ernestine Jane Geraldine Russell in Bemidji, Minnesota, she was eldest child and only daughter of the five children of Roy William Russell (January 5, 1890 – July 18, 1937) and Geraldine Jacobi (January 2, 1891 – December 26, 1986). Her parents were both born in North Dakota. Three of her grandparents were born in Canada, while her paternal grandmother was born in Germany. Her parents married in 1917. Her father was a First Lieutenant in the U.S. Army and her mother was a former actress with a road troupe. Her parents spent the early years of their marriage in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. For her birth her mother temporarily moved back to the U.S. to ensure she was born a U.S. citizen. Later the family moved to the San Fernando Valley of Southern California. They lived in Burbank in 1930 and her father worked as an office manager source

Gallery for vintage actress Jane Russell

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Steve McQueen The King of Cool





Steve McQueen was always a highly respected actor, often doing all of his dangerous stunts and high-speed chase scenes himself, and this combined with his great fashion sense even earned him the nickname "The King of Cool". He wore the Persol 714 in films such as The Thomas Crown Affair but they were also his favourite pair of sunglasses and quickly became his trademark look. His original pair sold for $70,000 at auction

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Vittorio de Sica


Vittorio de Sica, originally uploaded by Truus, Bob & Jan too!.

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Alice White


Alice White, originally uploaded by Truus, Bob & Jan too!.

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Maria Brockerhoff


Maria Brockerhoff, originally uploaded by Truus, Bob & Jan too!.

German actress and model Maria Brockerhoff (1942) was a popular starlet and magazine pin-up in the late 1960’s.

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Venus in Furs


Venus in Furs, originally uploaded by Truus, Bob & Jan too!.

German postcard by Krüger, nr. 900/271.

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Dolores del Rio


Dolores del Rio, originally uploaded by Truus, Bob & Jan too!.

German postcard by Ross Verlag, nr. 3905/2, 1928-1929. Photo: Fox.

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Love and Sand


Love and Sand, originally uploaded by Truus, Bob & Jan too!.

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Mrs. Patrick Campbell

British postcard by The Biograph Studio, London. Sent by mail in 1902.

British actress Mrs Patrick Campbell (1865-1940) was by far the biggest name on the London stage of the belle époque, famous for her wit, temperament and beauty. She was the original Eliza Dolittle in Pygmalion (1914) a part written especially for her by her lifelong friend George Bernard Shaw. In her later years, ‘Mrs. Pat’ made notable film appearances as a dowager in One More River (1934) and in Crime and Punishment (1935).

Mrs. Patrick Campbell was born Beatrice Stella Tanner in Kensington, London, in 1865. Her parents were John Tanner and Maria Luigia Giovanna, daughter of Count Angelo Romanini. She studied for a short time at the Guildhall School of Music. She was well-known as an amateur before she made her stage debut in 1888 at the Alexandra Theatre, Liverpool, four years after her marriage to Patrick Campbell. In March, 1890, she appeared in London at the Adelphi, where she afterward played again in 1891–93. She became successful as a result of starring in Sir Arthur Wing Pinero's play, The Second Mrs Tanqueray, in 1893, at St. James's Theatre where she also appeared in 1894 in The Masqueraders. As Kate Cloud in John-a-Dreams, produced by Beerbohm Tree at the Haymarket in 1894, she made another success, and again as Agnes in The Notorious Mrs. Ebbsmith at the Garrick (1895). Among her other performances were those in Fédora (1895), Little Eyolf (1896), and her notable performances with Forbes-Robertson at the Lyceum in the roles of Juliet in Romeo and Juliet, Ophelia in Hamlet, and Lady Macbeth (1895–1898) in Macbeth. Her first marriage to Patrick Campbell in 1884, from which she took the name by which she is generally known, produced two children, Alan Urquhart ('Beo'), who was killed in WWI, and Stella, who married an American and moved to Chicago. Campbell’s own marriage ended with the death of her husband in the Boer War in 1900. Fourteen years later, she became the second wife of Major George Frederick Myddleton Cornwallis-West, a dashing writer and soldier previously married to Jennie Jerome, the mother of Sir Winston Churchill.

In 1902, Mrs. Patrick Campbell made her debut performance on Broadway in New York City in Hermann Sudermann’s Magda, a marked success. Subsequent Broadway roles included The Joy of Living (1902), as Melisande to the Pelleas of Sarah Bernhardt in Maurice Maeterlinck’s Pelléas et Mélisande (1904), as Hedda Gabler in Henrik Ibsen’s play of the same name (1907), The Thunderbolt (1908), Lady Patricia (1911), and Bella Donna (1911). She would return to perform there on a number of occasions until 1930. She was described by one American producer as a temperamental actress whose "grand sense of humor and outstanding charm made you laugh instead of strangle her". One of her most famous quotes was " It doesn't matter what you do in the bedroom as long as you don't do it in the streets and frighten the horses." In 1914, she played Eliza Doolittle in the original production of George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion; though much too old for the part at 49, she was the obvious choice, being by far the biggest name on the London stage, and Shaw would have seen it no other way since he wrote the play for her in particular. She and Shaw conducted a famous correspondence for many years. Despite her second marriage, to George Cornwallis-West, she continued to use the stage name Mrs Patrick Campbell. Her last stage appearance came in 1933.

Mrs. Patrick Campbell had made her film début in the silent film The Money Moon (1920, Fred Paul). When the sound film came along, she went to Hollywood and appeared in The Dancers (1930, Chandler Sprague) with Lois Moran and Mae Clarke. She also became a speech teacher and dialogue coach and made instructional films for aspiring actors who wanted to break into the sound film. Campbell herself made some notable film appearances, including Riptide (1934, Edmund Goulding) starring Norma Shearer, One More River (1934, James Whale) with Diana Wynyard, and as the villainous pawnbroker in Crime and Punishment (1935, Josef von Sternberg) featuring Peter Lorre. She was legendary for making astonishingly inappropriate remarks. She undoubtedly lost her chance for a career in Hollywood when, at a party, she approached MGM executive Irving Thalberg, married to Norma Shearer, and said: "Dear Mr. Thalberg, how is your lovely, lovely wife with the tiny, tiny eyes?". Mrs. Patrick Campbell died in 1940 in Pau, France, at age 75. The onset of WWII had caught her in the French Pyrenees, ill and destitute. She could not return to England because quarantine laws would have imprisoned her Pekinese, Moonbeam. Her nurse cabled Sara and Gerald Murphy for funds, which were sent but arrived too late and were used to bury the former diva in the Cimetiere Urbain at Pau.

Sources: Hans J. Wollstein (All Movie Guide), Harry Rusche (Shakespeare’s World), Encyclopaedia Britannica, Wikipedia, and IMDb.

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Jacques Sernas


Jacques Sernas, originally uploaded by Truus, Bob & Jan too!.

Lithuanian-born French actor Jacques (sometimes: Jack) Sernas (1925) had an international film career of more than sixty years. First the handsome blonde appeared as the hero of peplum spectacles and adventure films and later he worked as a character actor. Sernas is perhaps best-known as Paris in the Hollywood epic Helen of Troy (1956)

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