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June 11, 2026

Photos of Judy Garland and Terry the Dog Posing Together in “The Wizard of Oz” (1939)

One of the most beloved relationships in film history is that between Judy Garland, who played Dorothy Gale, and Terry, the female Cairn Terrier who played Toto in The Wizard of Oz (1939).

During filming in 1938–39, Garland was only 16 years old, and she quickly became fond of Terry. The little dog appeared in many of the film’s most memorable scenes, faithfully following Dorothy down the Yellow Brick Road and helping expose the Wizard’s secrets. Terry was already an experienced canine actor, having appeared in several Hollywood films before landing her most famous role.

Behind the scenes, Terry suffered a sprained foot when a Winkie guard accidentally stepped on her paw. She had to leave production for about two weeks to recover, and during that time she stayed at Garland’s home. The young actress became so attached to the dog that she reportedly offered to buy Terry from her owner and trainer, Carl Spitz. Spitz declined, keeping the valuable movie dog in his care.

Terry’s importance to the production was reflected in her pay. Her trainer earned about $125 per week for her work, more than some of the actors who played the Munchkins received.

After the enormous success of The Wizard of Oz, Terry became so closely identified with Toto that her name was officially changed to “Toto” in 1942. She remains one of the most famous dogs in movie history.

The photographs of Garland and Terry together are especially charming because their affection was genuine. What audiences see on screen, a lonely Kansas girl devoted to her little dog, wasn’t merely acting. Garland truly loved Terry, and Terry’s calm, intelligent presence helped make Dorothy and Toto one of cinema’s most enduring partnerships.






June 10, 2026

Rudolf Swoboda: Master of Orientalist Portraiture

Rudolf Swoboda (1859–1914), often referred to as Rudolf Swoboda the Younger, was an Austrian painter renowned for his vivid and empathetic depictions of people from India and the Middle East. Trained at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts, he rose to international prominence after Queen Victoria commissioned him to paint Indian subjects following her Golden Jubilee in 1887.

Swoboda traveled extensively across India, creating sensitive and dignified portraits of locals, soldiers, musicians, and everyday life. Unlike many Orientalist artists of his time who often relied on exotic stereotypes, his works stood out for their warm realism, rich colors, and genuine respect for his subjects.

These beautiful and evocative paintings highlight Swoboda’s exceptional ability to capture the humanity, character, and quiet nobility of his sitters, securing his legacy as one of the finest Austrian Orientalist painters of the late 19th century.

A Mussulman

Ahmad Khan

Ala Yar

An Indian

An Unidentified Man

Brazil National Team Training Aboard the Ship “Conte Biancamano” for the 1934 World Cup in Italy

Brazil’s second appearance at a World Cup came in 1934, in Italy. For the first and only time in history, the reigning world champion did not take part in the following edition. Champions on home soil four years earlier, Uruguay chose not to participate in the tournament in retaliation for the absence of European teams at the 1930 World Cup in Montevideo. At the time, many countries claimed the long journey to South America was too difficult.

Sixteen teams qualified for the World Cup through the first-ever qualifiers, including the host nation: Sweden, Spain, Italy, Hungary, Austria, Switzerland, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Romania, the Netherlands, Germany, France, the United States, Egypt, Brazil, and Argentina. Among these teams, only Brazil and Argentina did not need to take the field, due to the withdrawals of Chile and Peru.

Managed by coach Luiz Augusto Vinhaes, Brazil went to the World Cup without having played a single friendly in 1933. To reach Italy, the delegation left Brazil by ship on May 12. During the more than ten days aboard the ship Conte Biancamano, the players trained on deck.

Brazil national team training aboard the ship Conte Biancamano for the 1934 World Cup in Italy.

In a bizarre twist of fate, the Conte Biancamano docked in Barcelona to pick up the Spanish national team, who were drawn as Brazil's first-round knockout opponents. According to historical FIFA tournament trivia records, Spain’s legendary goalkeeper Ricardo Zamora reportedly spied on Brazilian star forward Waldemar de Brito practicing penalty kicks on the ship’s deck. Zamora later used this knowledge to save de Brito’s penalty during their actual match.

Because the 1934 World Cup featured a straight single-elimination knockout format, Brazil’s tournament was over almost as soon as it began. They landed in Italy completely unacclimatized just 48 hours before their opening match. On May 27, 1934, Spain defeated Brazil 3-1 in Genoa, instantly eliminating the Seleção after just 90 minutes of World Cup play.

The Brazilian team team on the bus prior to their first round match vs Spain which they lost and were eliminated from the tournament.

Brazil bowed out of the 1934 World Cup in the Round of 16 after a 3-1 defeat to Spain.

Before Fame, Elizabeth Hurley Was a Young Punk in the Early 1980s

Long before her glamorous red-carpet days, actress Elizabeth Hurley embraced a striking punk and goth aesthetic during her teenage years in the early 1980s. Growing up in Hampshire and spending time in Brighton and London, she fully immersed herself in the subculture. She dyed her hair bleach blonde, wore a nose ring, backcombed her hair into massive spiky styles, and even sang for a local punk band called the Vested Virgins.

She recalled about that time, “I used to hang out with the local punks. They were a mixed crowd, mostly unemployed or laborers and we were banned from most of the pubs in the area, mostly because of the way we looked. How we looked was quite deliberate though, as far as I was concerned. The look was a rebellion in itself. I found that many men took an interest in me and at that age it got on my nerves so I made myself look as awful as possible.”

Hurley studied dance and theatre at the London Studio Centre, made her film debut in Aria (1987), and appeared in projects like Rowing with the Wind (1988, where she met Hugh Grant). Her style evolved toward edgier but more polished looks – leather jackets, bold fashion – while she took modeling gigs.

By 1989, she was often seen with a more glamorous, voluminous 1980s hair and sophisticated edge alongside peers like Patsy Kensit. Strikingly beautiful even then, with a rebellious, cool, “fresher” energy compared to her later ultra-glam image. She was known as fun, nice, and stylish within the scene.






Dogs of the Civil War: Loyal Companions in a Time of Conflict

During the American Civil War, dogs played a surprisingly significant and emotional role on both Union and Confederate sides.

Soldiers brought their beloved pets from home, while many others adopted stray dogs that became regimental mascots. These dogs provided companionship, comfort, and a sense of normalcy amid the brutality of war. Some served practical purposes: acting as messengers, guards, or even informal scouts; but most were valued simply for their loyalty and ability to boost morale.

Their stories highlight the deep bond between soldiers and their dogs, offering touching glimpses of humanity and devotion during one of America’s darkest periods. These touching vintage photos capture the deep bond between soldiers and their dogs, reminding us that even in the midst of America’s bloodiest conflict, loyalty and affection endured.

7th New York State Militia, Camp Cameron, D.C., 1861.

7th New York State Militia, Camp Cameron, D.C., 1861

22d New York State Militia near Harpers Ferry, Va., 1861

Group of Co. A, 8th New York State Militia, Arilington, Va., June, 1861

Centreville, Va. Confederate fortifications, March 1862

Rare Photos of Johnny Depp as a Kid in the 1960s and 1970s

Johnny Depp (born John Christopher Depp II on June 9, 1963, in Owensboro, Kentucky) had a turbulent and unstable childhood marked by frequent moves, family stress, parental divorce, and reported abuse.

He was the youngest of four children. His mother, Betty Sue Palmer, worked as a waitress. His father, John Christopher Depp (a civil engineer), had adopted two older children from Betty Sue’s previous relationship: Daniel and Debbie. The couple later had Christi and then Johnny.

Depp has described his father as kind, shy, and stoic, while his mother was often volatile. He has spoken publicly about physical and emotional abuse from his mother, including being hit with objects like belts, shoes, ashtrays, phones, or sticks, as well as verbal and psychological abuse. He witnessed similar treatment toward his siblings and father. Depp has reflected that this taught him “how not to raise kids” and influenced his own approach to fatherhood.

The family moved often, reportedly more than 20 times (Depp once mentioned around 40), due to his father’s work, living in various places before settling in Miramar, Florida, around 1970 when Johnny was about 7. They even lived in a motel for nearly a year at one point. Depp later said always being “the new kid” was difficult, and he felt like a withdrawn “oddball.”

His earliest memories included simple joys like catching lightning bugs. He helped his mother count tips after her shifts at coffee shops and felt close to her despite the hardships. Nicknames from family included “Johnny Dip” and “Dippity Dog.”

Family problems intensified in his pre-teen and teen years. By age 12, Depp began smoking, experimenting with drugs, and engaging in self-harm (resulting in scars he has described as a “journal” on his body) due to the stress.

His parents divorced in 1978 when he was 15. His father reportedly told him, “You’re the man now,” before leaving. Depp’s mother later married Robert Palmer (who died in 2000), whom Depp called “an inspiration.”

At age 12, his mother gave him a guitar, which became a major outlet. He started playing in garage bands. In 1979, at 16, he dropped out of Miramar High School to pursue music full-time (he briefly tried returning but was encouraged by the principal to follow his dream). He played with bands like The Kids, which had some local success in Florida.

These early experiences—instability, abuse, and a love for music—shaped Depp’s resilient, eclectic personality. He moved to Los Angeles with his band, took odd jobs, and eventually transitioned into acting after his first wife’s connections led to his film debut in A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984).

Depp has drawn on his challenging upbringing in interviews, framing it as a formative (if painful) period that fueled his creativity and determination. While not without controversy in public retellings, the core facts of instability and family difficulties are widely corroborated across biographies and his own statements.






June 9, 2026

Photos of Michael J. Fox on the Set of “Doc Hollywood” (1991)

The 1991 romantic comedy Doc Hollywood is a beloved, feel-good “fish out of water” classic, but behind the scenes, its production marked a massive, life-altering turning point for its star, Michael J. Fox.

The set of Doc Hollywood is historically significant because it was during this production that Fox first noticed the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease. While filming on location in Florida, he woke up one morning and noticed a distinct, uncontrollable twitch in his left pinky finger. He initially brushed it off as exhaustion or a pulled muscle from carrying heavy props, but the tremor persisted. Shortly after, at just 29 years old, he was officially diagnosed with young-onset Parkinson’s.
“It was message therapy from the universe. I had been going so fast for so long, and suddenly my body was telling me to slow down.” — Michael J. Fox, looking back on the 1990/1991 diagnosis.
Fox chose to keep the diagnosis entirely private from the public and the film industry for seven years, finally sharing his condition with the world in 1998.

While the fictional town of Grady, South Carolina (“The Squash Capital of the South”) feels like a quintessential Carolinas backwater, the film was actually shot entirely on location in north-central Florida. The production team chose the historic, oak-canopied towns of Micanopy and McIntosh (just south of Gainesville).

Grady’s charming downtown was actually Micanopy’s NE Cholokka Boulevard, a strip famous for its moss-draped trees and antique shops. The garage where Ben Stone’s iconic 1956 Porsche Speedster gets repaired was a real building on Cholokka Blvd. Today, it still stands as an antique store, and the vintage intercom box Fox speaks into is still preserved in the window.

The film boasts a phenomenal supporting cast, including a breakout performance by Woody Harrelson as the local insurance salesman and rival suitor, Hank Gordon. Harrelson and Fox were close friends off-camera, which translated into fantastic comedic friction on screen. To pass the time between takes in rural Florida, the duo frequently staged elaborate, improvised “fake bar fights” to startle the crew and locals. The roughhousing was all in good fun, though Fox jokingly noted later that he occasionally walked away with a genuine bruise that the makeup team had to meticulously cover up before the cameras rolled.

Doc Hollywood ultimately stands as a beautiful snapshot of Michael J. Fox at the height of his comedic, high-energy leading-man era, made all the more poignant by the quiet resilience he was discovering just behind the camera.









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