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June 14, 2026

The Real Cornwall: Everyday Scenes From the 1960s

The 1960s was a transformative decade for Cornwall, capturing a fascinating moment when the region still retained much of its traditional character while slowly embracing modern life. Taken by Adrian Gee, these authentic photos reveal the everyday reality of Cornish life beyond the tourist trails: from fishing villages and bustling harbors to quiet country lanes, local markets, and families going about their daily routines.

Far from the romanticized images of dramatic cliffs and golden beaches, these scenes show the true heart of Cornwall: hardworking fishermen, shopkeepers, schoolchildren, and residents living in a rugged yet beautiful corner of England during a time of gentle change. This collection offers a warm, nostalgic, and honest glimpse into the real Cornwall of the 1960s.

Hannafore point hotel, Looe, Cornwall, 1966

Ferryman, Fowey, Cornwall, 1966

Harbour, Polperro, Cornwall, 1966

Harbour, Polperro, Cornwall, 1966

Harbour, Polperro, Cornwall, 1966

Striking Publicity Portraits of Boy George for Virgin Records in the 1980s and 1990s

Boy George and Virgin Records share a deep history that spans over four decades, marking one of the most defining creative partnerships of the 1980s pop era.

Before signing with Virgin, Culture Club had recorded demos for EMI Records, who ultimately passed on them. Recognizing something special, Virgin Records executive Simon Draper scouted the group in 1981 and introduced them to Richard Branson. Branson was immediately struck by George’s dramatic, androgynous appearance and unmistakable star quality. Virgin signed the band in the UK for European distribution, while Epic Records handled North America.

The partnership initially yielded staggering global success, transforming Virgin from an edgy indie/progressive rock label into a mainstream pop powerhouse. The band’s first two singles failed to chart. When they recorded “Do You Really Want to Hurt Me” in 1982, George actually fought against releasing it, feeling it didn’t represent their sound. The Virgin executive team insisted, and it became an international #1 hit, launching the band into the stratosphere.

The band’s second album, Colour by Numbers (1983), sold over 10 million copies worldwide. Tracks like “Karma Chameleon” became massive cultural milestones, and George’s famous quote, that he preferred a “nice cup of tea” to sex, became marketing gold for Virgin’s rebel aesthetic.

By the mid-1980s, internal band tensions (notably between George and drummer Jon Moss) and George’s highly publicized struggle with heroin addiction caused Culture Club to implode. Virgin Records stuck by George as he went solo, though managing his output became notoriously complicated.

In 1987, after going into recovery, George released his solo debut Sold through Virgin. It found massive success in the UK with his reggae-infused cover of David Gates’s “Everything I Own” hitting #1, though it stalled in the US.

By the late 1980s, Virgin struggled with how to market George in the United States. His UK/European albums Tense Nervous Headache (1988) and Boyfriend (1989) were skipped over by Virgin’s US arm. Instead, the label mashed tracks from both albums together to create a unique US-only release called High Hat (1989).

Wanting to dive into the underground electronic club scene without the baggage of his pop persona, George formed the side-project Jesus Loves You and started his own subsidiary label, More Protein. Virgin still handled the major distribution, scoring club hits like “Generations of Love” and “Bow Down Mister.”

After his final heavily-backed Virgin solo album, Cheapness and Beauty (1995), a fallout over poor promotion and changing musical directions effectively ended his long-term tenure as a primary frontline artist for the label.

Despite past legal skirmishes over the music catalog, the personal relationship between Boy George and Richard Branson came full circle in recent years. In 2024, Boy George joined Branson on-board a series of special "Celebration Voyages" for Virgin Voyages cruise lines, performing poolside DJ sets, reminiscing about the early '80s, and celebrating the enduring legacy of the music that built both of their careers.






1968 Marcos 1600 GT: The Low-Slung Masterpiece of the Sixties

The 1968 Marcos 1600 GT is a quintessential British sports car that perfectly captures the bold, counter-culture spirit of the late 1960s.

Designed by the visionary brothers Dennis and Peter Adams, the car is instantly recognizable for its radical, ultra-low profile, long swooping hood, and distinctive “all-enveloping” fastback styling. Underneath its dramatic fiberglass body lay one of Marcos’s most famous innovations: an incredibly rigid chassis constructed largely from marine plywood, which kept the car exceptionally lightweight. Powered by a spirited 1.6-liter Ford Crossflow engine, the 1600 GT offered a visceral, go-kart-like driving experience with razor-sharp handling that punched far above its weight class.

Today, the 1968 Marcos 1600 GT is celebrated as a rare, avant-garde masterpiece of automotive design, prized by collectors for its unique engineering and unmistakable retro-futuristic charm. Step into the golden age of automotive design: here is the legendary 1968 Marcos 1600 GT in all its timeless glory.






Inside a College Class in Luggage-Lifting in Northampton, Massachusetts in 1958

In the 1950s, the American railroad system was undergoing a massive shift. For decades, passengers, especially wealthy college students traveling back and forth for semesters and holidays, relied heavily on “Redcap” porters at train stations to carry, hoist, and manage their heavy trunks and suitcases.

By 1958, local railway stations near Smith College drastically cut back or entirely eliminated their Redcap services. Suddenly, young women accustomed to having their bags handled for them were forced to lug their own heavy, mid-century luggage (which lacked the convenience of modern wheels).

According to the LIFE article, the sudden manual labor was taking a toll on student posture. The physical education department noticed that the freshmen were displaying “un-Smithlike sags and sways” as they struggled across station platforms.

To preserve both the students’ spinal health and the college's standard of poise, Assistant Professor Anne Delano integrated baggage handling directly into the freshman PE posture classes. Written clearly on the gymnasium chalkboard was the class rule: “Use Your Head and Save Your Back.”

Students practiced proper lifting mechanics, squatting with a straight spine, lifting with the legs, and keeping the weight close to the body. They didn’t practice with empty bags; the college loaded test suitcases with 12-pound weights to simulate actual travel conditions. Beyond just lifting, the instruction covered how to walk elegantly while carrying asymmetrical weight and how to hoist bags onto overhead racks without straining.

The story captured the unique friction of the late 1950s, balancing traditional expectations of feminine elegance with a sudden requirement for physical self-reliance. While the college took the ergonomics seriously, the students themselves had mixed feelings.

The photo spread captured by LIFE staff photographer Yale Joel featured a mix of earnest practice and amused grins. One freshman famously dismissed the necessity of the lesson to the reporter, stating: “A girl who tries can almost always find some man to help her with her luggage.”

Despite that student’s optimism, the image of 1950s college women in gym shorts and crisp white socks, seriously studying a pile of vintage suitcases in a campus gymnasium, remains one of the most delightful and surreal visual artifacts of post-war higher education.

Assistant professor Anne Delano led a class on physical education that included instruction on handling luggage, with the motto “Use Your Head and Save Your Back” written out on a chalkboard, 1958.

Improving back flexibility was part of the physical education program at Smith College designed to make students better able to handle their own luggage, 1958.

Smith College college practiced the proper method for lifting luggage with bags that contained 12-pound weights, 1958.

Smith College college practiced the proper method for lifting luggage with bags that contained 12-pound weights, 1958.

Smith College students posed for a photo for a story about them being taught the best way to handle a suitcase, 1958.

June 13, 2026

30 Amazing Photos of Michelle Pfeiffer and Al Pacino on the Set of “Frankie & Johnny” (1991)

Michelle Pfeiffer and Al Pacino appeared together in the 1991 romantic comedy-drama Frankie & Johnny, directed by Garry Marshall. It was their second film together after Scarface (1983). The movie is an adaptation of Terrence McNally’s play Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune, with Pacino as Johnny (a recently released ex-con working as a cook) and Pfeiffer as Frankie (a cautious waitress). They share strong on-screen chemistry in this story about two lonely people finding connection.

The production history of the film is famous for its casting controversy. The original stage play featured Kathy Bates and Kenneth Welsh as ordinary, weathered, “everyday” people looking for a late-stage shot at love. When Hollywood cast two of the most famously attractive movie stars on the planet, critics were initially skeptical.

To counteract their innate star power, Michelle Pfeiffer took on a deliberately muted appearance to play Frankie, a deeply guarded, emotionally scarred waitress. Al Pacino traded his usual explosive intensity for a softer, more persistent, and worn-around-the-edges charm as Johnny, a middle-aged ex-con trying to make a fresh start as a short-order cook.

While the original stage production was a claustrophobic, two-character play set entirely inside a one-room apartment, Marshall utilized the screenplay to expand the narrative world. On-set photography captured massive location shoots across New York City, incorporating 94 speaking parts and a bustling Manhattan café environment.

The title is a reference to the traditional American popular song “Frankie and Johnny,” first published in 1904, which tells the story of a woman who finds her man making love to another woman and shoots him dead. The film received generally favorable reviews and grossed $67 million with a $29 million budget.






Mary Wickes, the Original On-Screen Mary Poppins

Mary Wickes was the first actress to play Mary Poppins on screen, debuting in the role 15 years before Julie Andrews. Long before the iconic 1964 Walt Disney musical, Wickes brought P.L. Travers’ famous nanny to life in a live, one-hour television broadcast.

On December 19, 1949, CBS aired an adaptation of Mary Poppins as an episode of the popular anthology series Studio One. Wickes starred as the titular magical nanny. She was joined by E.G. Marshall as Mr. Banks and child actor Tommy Rettig as Michael Banks. Wickes’ performance closely mirrored P.L. Travers’ original 1934 book. Her version of Mary Poppins was much pricklier, stern, and authoritative than the sweeter version later popularized by Disney.

Because it was broadcast live, the production relied on crude yet impressive physical special effects. Wickes was flown across the studio airspace using a meat hook and pulley system, and a mechanical trick allowed her to appear to slide upward on a staircase banister.

The 1949 broadcast successfully reignited Hollywood’s interest in adapting the book series into a feature film. Years later, when Walt Disney secured the rights to produce his musical adaptation, author P.L. Travers actually favored Mary Wickes for the role because of how well Wickes fit her original literary vision. Wickes, who was already working with Disney at the time as the live-action reference model for Cruella de Vil in 101 Dalmatians (1961), actively asked to be considered.

However, Disney was determined to make a musical and went in a younger direction, casting Julie Andrews in her legendary film debut. Friends of Wickes later shared that she was deeply heartbroken by the snub. Despite this, she kept a framed photograph of herself in her 1949 Mary Poppins costume in her home for the rest of her life.

While she missed out on the Disney feature film, Mary Wickes enjoyed a highly successful six-decade career as one of Hollywood’s most recognizable character actresses.







Taina Elg: The Elegant Finnish Star of 1950s Hollywood

Taina Elg is a celebrated Finnish-American actress and dancer whose grace and versatility left a memorable mark on Hollywood during the Golden Age of cinema.

Originally trained as a prima ballerina with the Royal Swedish Ballet and the Grand Ballet du Marquis de Cuevas, her poise and striking beauty quickly caught the eye of Hollywood talent scouts, leading to a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) in the mid-1950s. Elg is best remembered for her radiant, Golden Globe-winning performance in George Cukor’s classic musical Les Girls (1957), where she starred alongside Gene Kelly and Mitzi Gaynor.

Beyond her film career, Elg found great success on the theatrical stage, earning a Tony Award nomination for her work on Broadway in the 1975 musical Where’s Charley?. Blending European elegance with classic Hollywood glamour, she remains a cherished icon of 1950s cinema and performing arts. These beautiful vintage photos capture the graceful poise, classical beauty, and refined charm of Taina Elg in the 1950s.









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