The Kitty Packard Pictorial


Irving Penn (1917-2009)
October 8, 2009, 6:03 pm
Filed under: art, fashion, photography

One of the 20th century’s truly great artists, Irving Penn, died yesterday. He was 92. His celebrity portraits are the stuff of legend, his work for Vogue reinvented fashion photography and through his lens the ordinary nothings of life became art.

But don’t take my word for it. The following shots speak for themselves:

Penn1

Penn2

Penn3

Pablo Picasso

Pablo Picasso

Truman Capote

Truman Capote

April 1950 Cover, Vogue

April 1950 Cover, Vogue

Two moroccan women

Two moroccan women

Penn8

penn9

Penn’s work is currently the subject of a Getty exhibit called Small Trades, which runs until January 10.  If you live in the Southern California area, you owe yourself a visit.



… My Darling Niece …
October 5, 2009, 7:12 pm
Filed under: photography | Tags: , , ,

I’m an Auntie.

A very, very, very proud Auntie. Everyone thinks that their nieces and nephews are the most adorable little kids on the planet and I am no different. However, the fact of the matter is, my three year old niece Rylee IS the most adorable little girl on the planet.

So there! ;)

My dad is a photographer and recently took some gorgeous shots of my darling little Rylee that I felt absolutely necessary to share:

(All photos are copyright rjphotographie, 2009)

© rjphotographie, 2009

© rjphotographie, 2009

© rjphotographie, 2009

© rjphotographie, 2009

© rjphotographie, 2009

© rjphotographie, 2009

© rjphotographie, 2009

© rjphotographie, 2009

© rjphotographie, 2009

© rjphotographie, 2009

© rjphotographie, 2009

© rjphotographie, 2009



Brian Duffy and the Swinging ’60s

London’s Chris Beetles Gallery is one of my favorite art galleries and their exhibitions are always something truly spectacular. From October 12 through November 7, they are presenting a special presentation of Brian Duffy prints—Duffy being the Swinging Sixties photographer iconic fashion shoots and portraits of pop culture icons came to embody the energy and vitality of this explosively creative era.

Duffy (in)famously set fire to all of his original negatives back in 1979, but not all were destroyed and the Chris Beetles gallery is displaying the surviving images: the result of what they describe as “two years of painstaking archiving.” If you, like me, can’t make the trip across the pond to pay a visit, here’s a look at these dynamic prints, featuring everyone from John Lennon to California’s future Governator:

Jean Shrimpton

Jean Shrimpton, early 1960s

Michael Caine, 1964

Michael Caine, 1964

John Lennon, 1965

John Lennon, 1965

Sammy Davis Jr. & May Britt, 1960

Sammy Davis Jr. & May Britt, 1960

Sidney Poitier, 1965

Sidney Poitier, 1965

"Queen" Magazine, 1965

"Queen" Magazine, 1965

Vogue Magazine, 1964

Vogue Magazine, 1964

Vogue Magazine, 1964

Vogue Magazine, 1964



Colorized Vintage Photos by Claroscureaux

Right, so like most things in life, I am probably the last person in the blogosphere to know about this fella. Many thanks to Forget the Talkies for bringing it to my attention!

Claroscureaux colorizes vintage Hollywood photographs.

Normally the word “colorize” makes my skin crawl and I get a sudden urge  for sudden death. But Claroscureaux’s work is beautiful– if I might rhapsodize, I daresay his work is exquisite. Some are spine-tingling in their realism, some have an Earl Christy-ish painterly quality, but all are obvious works of tireless, tedious attention to detail.

He has a store online to fulfill all of your every day classic cinema needs– coffee mugs, et all– and the prints are priced very reasonably.

Here are some of my favorites:

Myrna Loy - © Claroscureaux

Myrna Loy - © Claroscureaux

Hedy Lamarr - © Claroscureaux

Hedy Lamarr - © Claroscureaux

Veronica Lake - © Claroscureaux (this is quite possibly my favorite photo of the year)

Veronica Lake - © Claroscureaux (this is quite possibly my favorite photo of the year)

Bette Davis - © Claroscureaux

Bette Davis - © Claroscureaux

Valentino - © Claroscureaux (smolder alert, ladies!)

Valentino - © Claroscureaux (smolder alert, ladies!)

Buster Keaton - © Claroscureaux

Buster Keaton - © Claroscureaux

Gloria Swanson - © Claroscureaux

Gloria Swanson - © Claroscureaux

Alice White - © Claroscureaux

Alice White - © Claroscureaux



“Ain’t We Got Style”: Vanity Fair’s Classic Movie Photo Shoot

I don’t know about you, but I’m a big fat sucker for Vanity Fair photo shoots.

And this one is right up my alley. Vanity Fair’s August issue features an “Ain’t We Got Style” portfolio of re-created scenes from Depression-Era films. Some of today’s freshest young talent slip into the shoes of classic film immortals Clark Gable, Carole Lombard and Joan Crawford to name the few.  It Happened One Night, The Grapes of Wrath, 42nd Street, Letty Lynton and My Man Godfrey are recreated alongside 1970s period dramas They Shoot Horses Don’t They and Paper Moon.

Norman Jean Roy’s work is fabulously fun, not to mention wondrously detailed– right down to the tweed in Peter Warren’s jacket. I beg you all to indulge yourselves with a gander.

(and please forgive the quality of the images—my scanner is in the throes of a midlife crisis…)

They Shoot Horses, Don't They?

They Shoot Horses, Don't They?

Kat Dennings, Anton Yelchin, Maya Rudolph, John Krasinski, Elizabeth Banks, and Hugh Dancy

As depressing Depression films go, Sydney Pollack’s 1969 opus takes the stale biscuit. Heart attacks, broken dreams, and breakdowns on the dance floor of a 30s dance marathon participants down on their luck compete for prize money. Rather like a reality show without the chance of “Page Six” celebrity. Here, our cast gives their thespian all, in everything from D&G to Brioni.

42nd Street

42nd Street

Krysten Ritter, Margarita Levieva, Willa Holland, Ari Graynor, Moon Bloodgood, Jon Engstrom, Nikki Reed, Greta Gerwig, Lucas Till, Jamie Chung, Emma Stone, Rashida Jones, and Chris Messina

The whole world’s going to the dogs, so what do we need? Battalions of tap-dancing girls in ankle socks and flimsy shorts! Then (1933), as now, the chorines pound the boards (in Emporio Armani). Hopefuls wait their turn in assorted prêt-a-porter while choreographer Engstrom and director Mesina emote. Will the show go on? When will it not?

It Happened One Night

It Happened One Night

James Marsden and Rose Byrne

Runaway heiress, love triangle, gruff but adorable journalist—Frank Capra’s 1934 classic has everything a screwball on-the-road comedy should have to take the mind off foreclosures and bank closures. The most ironic scene (apart from the one where Clark Gable removed his shirt, revealing no undershirt and wiped out an entire industry) is the hitchhiking sequence. Gable invokes the language of the thumb. Claudette Colbert trumps him with the power of her gams. Here Gable (Marsden, in Ralph Lauren) and Colbert (Byrne, in Sportmax) square off.

My Man Godfrey

My Man Godfrey

Channing Tatum and Amanda Seyfried

A scavenger hunt-cum-party game in this 1936 classic somehow involves Carlole Lombard’s madcap heiress wandering into the Depression-era streets, picking up hobo William Powell and turning him into an exquisitely dressed attired butler. Not, one feels, something to be attempted today. Here, as Powell, Tatum (in Armani) serves up serious tidbits as Seyfried’s Lombard (in Galliano) finds it all highly amusing.

The Grapes of Wrath

The Grapes of Wrath

Kelli Garner, Eugene Levy, Dan Fogler, Emile Hirsch, Demitri Martin and Mamie Gummer

A sacred piece of John Ford cinema. Poignant, powerful, troubling—with hats to die for. Or is that a tad inappropriate? Whatever, the Dust Bowl style of 1940 is freight-training back toward us, and some September fashionable dames will surely embrace Stella McCartney’s granny-ish knits, Bottega Veneta’s drapey dresses, and Burberry’s drapier separates while the guys adopt newsboy caps and suspenders to make it “Two for the Joad.” Our irreverent cast (from Ang Lee’s latest, Taking Woodstock) shows how it’s done.

Letty Lynton

Letty Lynton

Mila Kunis

Before gigantic eyebrows and shoulders engulfed her, Joan Crawford played numerous birdlike shopgirls, socialites and gold-digging secretaries filed under the category Clotheshorse. A well-dressed nowhere film, Letty Lynton (1932) contained gold dust in its heroine’s dreamy wardrobe (by Adrian) and the Letty Lynton dress, with billowing diaphanous sleeves, became an overnight sensation. More than 500,000 copies sold in the depths of the Depression. Our Crawford give Givenchy’s feathery autumn offering a similar come-and-get-me allure.

Paper Moon

Paper Moon

Josh Duhamel and Elle Fanning

Peter Bogdanovich’s breathtakingly black and white homage to 30s filmmaking introduced eight-year-old Tatum O’Neal in her first (and Oscar-winning) film performance as the illegitimate daughter of a small-time con man, played by daddy Ryan, with better looks and smaller ambitions than Bernie Madoff. Here, the road trip scene from the 1973 film is so masterfully re-interpreted by Duhamel (in Zegna) and Fanning (in Miu Miu and vintage Gap), you can still hear the little mite testily demanding, “I want my $200!”



The Kitty Packard Pictorial of the Month: Barbara Stanwyck

barbarastanwyck1ac0Stany. Beautiful, ballsy, brainy and just plain brilliant, Barbara Stanwyck was the ultimate actor’s actor. Before there was such a thing as “method” acting, Stanwyck had already perfected the art of the lifelike performance. From Night Nurse to Double Indemnity, there is never a moment when Stany doesn’t own each and every frame of film she occupies. She was widely regarded as Hollywood’s consummate professional, a hard-working nose-to-the-grind career woman who, at the same time, shied away from words like ‘career’: “Career is too pompous a word,” Stanwyck once said. “It was a job, and I have always felt privileged to be paid for what I love doing.”

For Brooklyn born Ruby Stevens, work was always a foremost part of her life. She spent most of her childhood (or lack thereof) in foster homes after losing her mother to a tragic accident after which she was subsequently abandoned by her father, which forced her to start working for herself at the age of 13. These turbulent formative years are almost certainly what equipped Stanwyck for a life spent exploring the deeply complex nature of human behavior. She entered the chorus at 15 and at 19 she was christened Barbara Stanwyck by the producer of a Broadway play who not only cast her but also rewrote her part to take advantage of her considerable talent.

Annex - Stanwyck, Barbara_07Stanwyck, Barbara_01

Stany’s rise to film stardom was not a case of being just a pretty face—she had unquestionable talent as an actress. And while Stanwyck was a beautiful woman with an undeniable sensual presence, she was not the conventional Hollywood beauty. It was therefore her talent that caught the eye of a film producer and, with fellow Broadway actor and husband Frank Fay, brought her to Hollywood.

And while the marriage soon failed, her career did not. She signed on with Columbia after coming to national attention with Frank Capra’s, and with films like Ten Cents a Dance, Stanwyck began to solidly establish herself as an actress to be reckoned with.

Annex - Stanwyck, Barbara_06

Stanwyck’s films during the early-mid thirties often feature her as tough-skinned and even a bit tawdry working dames—roles that could easily be clichéd by lesser actresses in films that often went way over the top, but Stanwyck infuses biting emotion and complicated vulnerability that makes her screen presence in these films nothing short of magnetic. So even if we don’t believe the plot for even one New York minute, we believe Barbara right down to the bone. (The Forbidden Hollywood Collection features a few of these sassy pre-codes, particularly Baby Face, Night Nurse and The Purchase Price.)

Despite her tough-talking roles, she was already demonstrating an impressive emotional range, taking on the role of a leftist college student in Red Salute, Annie Oakley in the titular role, and an American missionary in The Bitter Tea of General YenYen being an example of how early 30sHollywood was both riddled with unfortunate stereotype, while still audacious enough to flirt with a theme that borders on interracial love—two years before Mr. Hayes and his army of puritanical hypocrites over at the MPAA expressly banned such references from film.

Stanwyck, Barbara_02

Annex - Stanwyck, Barbara_02

By the mid thirties, Stanwyck was one of the most popular leading actresses in Hollywood. In 1937, Stany garnered her first Oscar nomination for her turn as Stella Dallas—King Vidor’s powerful weeper in which she plays a common-as-the-cold mother whose determination to give her daughter the best life possible moves her to make the ultimate sacrifice. She lost to Luise Rainer for The Good Earth. Shockingly, Stanwyck would never win a competitive Oscar despite being nominated 4 times. She would instead receive the Academy’s ‘we made an ass of ourselves please forgive us’ honorary award 40 years later.

stelladallas

The roles she was being offered simply got better and throughout the late thirties and forties Stanwyck starred in a slew of solid, unforgettable roles in what are now timeless films. From screwball (The Lady Eve, my personal Stany film) to noir (the iconic Double Indemnity) to social statements (Meet John Doe) and back again (Ball of Fire), Stanwyck’s emotional range was rivaled by few actors—male or female. As always, she brought her own searing emotion to each role, reaching deep into her soul and making even the simplest words take on a world of meaning. This ability is beautifully captured in Preston Sturges’ marvelous The Lady Eve when card shark Jean Harrington, whose plan was to bamboozle hapless millionaire Henry Fonda, tells him: “You see Hopsi, you don’t know very much about girls. The best ones aren’t as good as you think they are and the bad ones aren’t as bad. Not nearly as bad. “ The camera is close on her as she says the last words … and we know exactly how much she loves him.

Annex - Stanwyck, Barbara (Ball of Fire)_06Annex - Stanwyck, Barbara (Lady Eve, The)_03Annex - Cooper, Gary (Meet John Doe)_02Annex - Stanwyck, Barbara (Double Indemnity)_02

And then there was Robert. Taylor, that is. The two were paired in MGM’s very forgettable 1936 melodrama His Brother’s Life (Stanwyck by then had a non-exclusive contract with RKO), and while their romance was genuine, it was also partly the work of studio publicity. They started living together and three years later, they were married. Stanwyck was thoroughly taken with the handsome young leading man and, when asked about marrying a man 4 years her junior, Stany fired back with sparkling wit: “the boy’s got a lot to learn, and I’ve got a lot to teach.”

hisbrotherswife

But it is little secret however that Taylor, whose affection for Barbara was less than hers for him, engaged in several extramarital affairs with some of the most beautiful women in Hollywood—and the world—including Ava Gardner and Lana Turner. The marriage stumbled along through the 40s before she finally filed for divorce in 1950.

Stany never married again.

Annex - Corey, Wendell (File on Thelma Jordon, The)_02

Once again, it was work that kept Stanwyck going with a string of low budget Westerns (notably 1955’s The Cattle Queen of Montana) and her own television program, The Barbara Stanwyck Show, for which she won an Emmy in 1960. She never stopped working, it seems, and even got an Emmy from a role in 1983’s classic miniseries The Thorn Birds. At the 50th Academy Awards in 1978, she was reunited with her old friend William Holden when the two appeared to present the award for best sound. (Fittingly, Holden noted, as the show was held on the 50th anniversary of the year of the talking picture.)

Annex - Holden, William (Golden Boy)_02

But Holden did something unexpected and first prefaced with this heartfelt thank you to Barbara that moved her to tears:

“Before Barbara and I present the next award, I’d like to say something. 39 years ago this month, we were working on a film together called Golden Boy. It wasn’t going well because I was going to be replaced. But due to this lovely human being, and her understanding and her professional integrity and her encouragement and above all her generosity— I am here tonight.”

“Oh Bill,” she replied and buried herself into his embrace.

Four years later, the Academy would bestow Stanwyck with an honorary Academy award for “superlative creativity and unique contribution to the art of screen acting.”

Since Stanwyck’s passing on January 20, 1990, those words have only strengthened in their weight.Because Barbara Stanwyck not only ‘contributed’ to the art of screen acting, she defined what it meant to be an actor.

Previously featured on the Kitty Packard Pictorial of the Month:: Erroll Flynn and Jean Harlow.



Jack Cardiff, Master of Cinematography, Dies at 94

Jack Cardiff, legendary British cinematographer, passed away today at the age of 94.

His painterly eye brought color film into its own, expressing human depth and emotion and passion through his radiant, imaginative swirl of a palette. Martin Scorsese once said that Cardiff is “synonymous with Technicolor,” and I think it can be rightly said that, when it comes to color cinematography, he wrote the book.

Cardiff’s prolific career began back in the silent days when he appeared as an actor through the 1920s—not surprising as his parents were of the English music hall and his childhood was mostly spent traveling from theatre to theatre. During his youth, Cardiff was exposed to painting and was fascinated by the use of paint and color and texture. Perhaps this is why, by the end of the 20s, Cardiff had wandered from acting and plunged full speed ahead into movie production. By 18 he was an assistant at British International Pictures and by the 30s, he was a respected camera operator at Denham Studios. The progression from clapper boy to production runner to camera operator to cinematographer was quick: by 1935, Cardiff had shot Britain’s first Technicolor film, Wings of the Morning and, after doing 2nd unit work for an Archers production, the legendary Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger put him on board for their ambitious 1947 feature Black Narcissus. The Himalayan drama was shot entirely at London’s Pinewood studios and earned Cardif an Academy Award. Cinematographer Herb Lightman is quoted as saying that Cardiff’s work on Narcissus demonstrated “hitherto unrealised possibilities for the kinetic use of colour on the screen.” 1948’s The Red Shoes was his final Archers project, and it remains a cinematic benchmark for sheer artistic creativity. (Interestingly enough, Cardiff did not receive the Oscar for Red Shoes, arousing suspicion of the Academy’s reluctance to give the honor to a foreigner two years in a row.) Cardiff’s work with the Archers was pioneering in its use of colour and his input was a large part of what made their success internationally and differentiated them from the far less flamboyant British film industry of the time. “I was the sort of person to suggest a lot of crazy ideas, “ Michael Powell once said, “and Jack took them seriously.”

Then there were the legends. The African Queen, the Prince and the Showgirl and The Barefoot Contessa had Cardiff lighting the likes of Bogart, Monroe and Gardner. Marilyn Monroe and Cardiff became good friends on the set of Showgirl, (he was a confidant of Monroe’s amidst the notorious battles between her and director co-star Laurence Olivier), and she once gave him a signed picture of herself, inscribed with the words “Dear Jack, if only I could be the way you have created me.” His leading ladies often posed for him for professional portraits, some of which have even been exhibited.

The New York Times wrote reverently of Cardiff’s legend back in 2002 when he received his honorary Oscar, calling him “Cinema’s Vermeer.” “The most interesting lesson in painting is clean-looking light and dramatic emphasis,” Cardiff said in the article, “whether it stands out in a countryside or in a bowl of fruit. Economy and simplicity – that was Caravaggio. Drama and organization – that was Turner. This is what I think about when lighting a scene.”**

Thankfully, his images will live on as long as the masters whom he championed so well.

**Special Thank you to the Powell and Pressburger Pages for their exhaustive sources!

Here’s a look back at some of the man’s most important work:

Black Narcissus, 1947

Black Narcissus, 1947

Debroah Kerr and Jean Simmons in Black Narcissus

Debroah Kerr and Jean Simmons in Black Narcissus

The Red Shoes, 1948

The Red Shoes, 1948

Moira Shearer & Anton Walbrook

Moira Shearer & Anton Walbrook

Moira Shearer, The Red Shoes

Moira Shearer, The Red Shoes

Ingrid Bergman in Under Capricorn, 1949

Ingrid Bergman in Under Capricorn, 1949

Katharine Hepburn & Humphrey Bogart in The African Queen, 1951

Katharine Hepburn & Humphrey Bogart in The African Queen, 1951

Katharine Hepburn, in The African Queen

Katharine Hepburn, in The African Queen

Ava Gardner in Pandora and the Flying Dutchman, 1951

Ava Gardner in Pandora and the Flying Dutchman, 1951

Ava Gardner, in The Barefoot Contess 1954

Ava Gardner, in The Barefoot Contessa 1954

Sophia Loren in Legend of the Lost, 1957

Sophia Loren in Legend of the Lost, 1957

Marilyn Monroe in The Princess and the Showgirl, 1957

Marilyn Monroe in The Princess and the Showgirl, 1957

Marilyn Monroe & Laurence Olivier in The Princess and the Showgirl

Marilyn Monroe & Laurence Olivier in The Princess and the Showgirl



Cecil Beaton Exhibition Hits Londontown

As something of a cantankerous twitterer, I have as of today softened somewhat in my outright cynicism towards the juggernaut.  Thanks to Stephen Fry’s twitter page (yes, I’m a voracious snoop), I am thrilled to learn that the Chris Beetles Gallery in London is hosting an exhibition of photographs taken by the legendary photographer, artist, writer, designer and all around pop culture icon, Cecil Beaton.  This exclusive collection of Beaton’s prints is certainly the most extensive such exhibition to date. For those of us unable to attend thanks to rather formidable masses of land and ocean, there is a special 92 page illustrated catalogue of the exhibition available for purchase directly from the gallery. On a personal note, this exhibition ends the day that I land in London for a holiday and I have every intention of braving the jet lag in order to get an up-close-and-personal look at some of Beaton’s most jaw-dropping work:

Sylvia Sidney

Sylvia Sidney

Gwili Andre

Gwili Andre

Julie Andrews

Julie Andrews



Out of the Vaults: Picture of the Week

Mr. Perfect Profile himself, Robert Taylor, as photographed by the unparalelled George Hurrell. Constance Bennett, Myrna Loy, Jean Harlow and Joan Crawford are amongst the starlet beauties that frame him. Ohhh if that wall could talk … ;)

Robert Taylor

Robert Taylor



Favorite Website of the Week: Skid Row Photography Club

Art is a healing salve for the soul, and nowhere is this more wonderfully evident than with the Skid Row Photography Club. Their show at Downtown L.A.’s Artwalk last week was poignant and powerful–the images capturing the grim realities of life on the streets while being in themselves ethereal in their beauty. It is certainly due to the fact that the photographers themselves are Skid Row residents. This extraordinary club was created to provide Skid Row residents with a ‘healthy artistic outlet’ and to bring them new possibilities of self expression and self development and growth.” Skid row residents were given digital cameras and, after some basic instruction, were let loose to document their home–over 20,000 photos in all were taken.

The empowerment of creative expression simply cannot be overemphasized. And in this time of economic stress, it is ever so refreshing to focus on something optimistic and upbuilding. If ever ther was a cause worth supporting, this is it and support is dearly needed to keep the movement alive. Visit the site for information on how to donate your time and money, if possible, as well as to find out about upcoming shows.

skidrowphotos1