115 Vintage Hollywood Photos To Bring You Back To The Past (New Pics)

“Well, here’s another nice mess you’ve gotten me into!” 

Less mess, and more nostalgic flare I should probably say, although the past can be quite messy in its own right. Remember the time someone was taking a hot, relaxing shower after a long drive, only for the shower curtain to be pulled back, revealing a cold-blooded murderer with a knife in hand? 

Listen beautiful relax classics on our Youtube channel.

Oh wait, that’s the scene from Alfred Hitchcock’s movie Psycho! My bad! But speaking of movies and iconic moments in time, how about we dive into a list full of historical moments from Old Hollywood, when it looked as though a new star was born each and every day? 

The Instagram page, fittingly named “Old Hollywood” has been sharing incredible pictures that tell the stories of those who continue to make an impact on our society to this day. Movie stars, musicians, directors, and many more greet you today, dear reader, so don’t forget to upvote your favorites, and if you’re longing for more, here’s another Bored Panda article

More Info: Instagram

#1 Marlene Dietrich Kissing A Soldier Aboard The Uss Monticello, New York, 1945. Photo By Irving Haberman

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

There’s something incredibly familiar and nostalgic about vintage black-and-white pictures of those who’ve become inseparable from our understanding of pop culture. The legendary stars feel so familiar, so lifelike, as though they were actually human (surprise surprise, they were!). But there are certain nuances we don’t consider often; does the nostalgia resonate with everyone or only a very specific group of people? 

Let’s start with a few definitions. Many people get confused with terms such as ‘antique,’ ‘vintage’ and ‘retro.’ How are they different? Are they different? Yes, they are. According to Fargo Antiques, the main difference between these terms is the age of that which is being described. 

Antiques must be at least 100 years old. Most antique dealers consider an item to be vintage if it is at least 40 years old, and for an item to be classed as retro it must be at least 20 years old, but not yet 40. The latter two play into our feelings of nostalgia, as they’re just old enough to have played a part in our lives in one way or another. 

#2 Marilyn Monroe Talking On The Telephone At Her Home In Amagansett, New York, 1957. Photos By Sam Shaw

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#3 Anne Bancroft Preparing For Her Role In The Stage Production Of The Miracle Worker, 1959. Bancroft Reprised The Role In The 1962 Film Adaptation, Which Earned Her An Oscar For Best Actress. Photos By Nina Leen

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

Nostalgia is a weirdly bittersweet feeling. Rosalia Giammetta, psychologist and psychotherapist, argues that it reflects the paradoxical nature of memories. It links us to the past with a strange longing for the people, places, or experiences, yet it also brings forth a painful understanding that it’ll never be possible to relive those moments. 

As Baudelaire and Bloch pointed out, we can also be nostalgic about something that we’ve never actually known or felt ourselves. Therefore, we use vintage things as a means of acquiring company, security, support, and connections in the form of the imaginary. As Rosalia states, objects from the past are a remedy with which to temporarily access other possibilities, or a better, different life. 

#4 Makeup Artist Jack Pierce Getting Boris Karloff Into Character On The Set Of The Bride Of Frankenstein, 1935. Karloff Considered Pierce To Be, “The Best Makeup Man In The World. I Owe Him A Lot”

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#5 “I’m Not Good-Looking. I Used To Be But Not Any More,” The Actor Humphrey Bogart Once Reflected

“What I Have Got Is I Have Character In My Face. It’s Taken An Awful Lot Of Late Nights And Drinking To Put It There. When I Go To Work In A Picture, I Say, ‘Don’t Take The Lines Out Of My Face. Leave Them There'”

Listen beautiful relax classics on our Youtube channel.

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#6 Groucho Marx And Lucille Ball Goofing Off At Cbs’s Knx Radio Studios, 1945

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

Yet, that may seem like an elusive concept, as the reconstructed version of the past is not always innocent, especially when it comes to those who remember a different version of events. Photographer James J. Robinson aimed to shed light on the reality of existing as a marginalized person in that era when he realized that most of the directors who were romanticizing the past were white men.

“There’s been so much social change and so many people who have sacrificed their lives and tried to change the world to make the world a place where I can openly be queer, and be happy with myself as being Filipino,” says James. “It almost erases their stories for me to be wishing that I lived in a time where they were being actively oppressed.”

He believes that the way we see our history has an impact on how we build our future. “Who benefits when the lived experiences of minorities are erased? It’s always going to be the people on the top of the systems,” says James. “Of course, it’s going to be [to] their benefit to be showing us versions of the past which keep them in power.”

#7 Director Richard Brooks Discussing A Scene With Paul Newman On The Set Of Cat On A Hot Tin Roof, 1958

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#8 Errol Flynn Photographed By Elmer Fryer, 1935

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#9 Behind The Scenes With Elizabeth Taylor And Rock Hudson On The Set Of Giant, 1956

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

Alexandra Benson further discusses this notion in her essay “The Complexities of Old Hollywood Nostalgia,” stating that Old Hollywood, typically reflected upon as a glamorous and romantic lost era, is a form of escapism that only caters to a white narrative. “The allure of time travel and restorative nostalgia emit social and political complexities of the past, important factors that we must acknowledge in order to move forward,” she states. 

One must consider the fact that Hollywood’s roots in segregation and racial inequality have distorted our perception of what the past was really like. Black actors were often substituted by white actors in blackface, and those who did get roles got paid nearly a quarter of a white actor’s salary, playing characters with little character development or social standing. 

#10 Behind The Scenes Of Rebel Without A Cause, 1955

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#11 Audrey Hepburn Relaxing On A Boat In Switzerland, 1954

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#12 Audrey Hepburn Wearing Dior For Harper’s Bazaar’s September Issue, Paris, 1959

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

“When the black community revisits these nostalgic films, they either do not see themselves represented or see themselves depicted as a stereotype and caricature,” Alexandra continues to say. “When the white population gazes at the screen, they not only see themselves in all facets of representation but see black people as ‘the other.’ Many forget how impactful these representations in pop culture can be to our society; they can have such a robust threshold over our expectations of reality and perceptions of the world.” 

Alexandra concludes by stating that by indulging in the past as better than the present, we deny the brutal truths that existed during the time we romanticize. However, navigating nostalgia is a slippery slope: it’s a struggle to decide whether we should criticize the past or celebrate it, mourn time’s passing or accept the necessity of moving on, or continue to learn from and update elements of the past to the continually changing demands of the present and future. 

#13 Elizabeth Taylor Visiting Elton John Backstage At The Spectrum In Philadelphia, 1976. Photos By David Nutter

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#14 Grace Kelly In Her Suite At The Intercontinental Carlton Hotel During The Cannes Film Festival, 1955. Photos By Jack Garofalo

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#15 Clint Eastwood And Shirley Maclaine During A Break In Filming Two Mules For Sister Sara In Durango, Mexico, 1969. Photos By Lawrence Schiller

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

The past is intriguing nonetheless, and acknowledging the good and the complex helps us all move forward toward a better reality for each and every one of us. For the moment though, I hope you continue to enjoy all these beautiful vintage photos, upvoting your favorites.

Let us know your thoughts and opinions in the comments below and I shall see you in the next one!

#16 George Cukor Directing Audrey Hepburn In The Embassy Ball Scene In My Fair Lady, 1964

“She Is A Truly Romantic Creature. She Doesn’t Just Profess Good Manners—she Is Really Well Mannered At All Times. She Is Not Driven In Her Career But She Gives Full Value And She Is Never Indifferent,” Cukor Said Of The Actress. The Film Would Go On To Win Eight Academy Awards, Including For Best Director

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#17 Richard Avedon And Sophia Loren At His New York Studio, 1966. Photos By Tazio Secchiaroli

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#18 Elsa Lanchester Touching Up Her Makeup On The Set Of Bride Of Frankenstein, 1935

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#19 Sammy Davis Jr. Visiting Elvis Presley Backstage At The Showroom International Hotel In Las Vegas, 1970

Sammy Later Shared In His Two Autobiographies, Yes I Can (1965) And Hollywood In A Suitcase (1980), What Drew Him And Elvis Into An Instant Friendship. “Both Of Us Were Rebels In Our Own Ways, And We’d Gravitated Toward Each Other,” He Noted. “We Both Had Motorcycles, I Had A Cut-Down Harley And We Ran Together Whenever We Were In The Same Town”

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#20 The Real Maria Von Trapp Visiting Director Robert Wise And Christopher Plummer On The Set Of The Sound Of Music, 1965. When Maria Met Christopher, She Exclaimed: “You’re Much More Handsome Than My Real Husband!”

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#21 Sharon Tate Photographed By Photographed By Peter Basch, 1967

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#22 Alfred Hitchcock Directing Kim Novak In Vertigo, 1958

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#23 Katharine Ross And Sam Elliott Holding Hands Between Takes In Filming The Shadow Riders, 1982. The Two Actors Have Been Married Since 1984

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#24 Catherine Deneuve Photographed By David Bailey For Vogue, 1966

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#25 Yul Brynner Photographed By Ernst Haas During The Production Of The Journey, 1959

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#26 James Dean People Watching In New York, 1955. Photographer And Friend, Dennis Stock, Later Recalled His Memories From That Day

 “We Were Walking Down Sixth Avenue And Suddenly Jimmy Spied A Furniture Store Near Rockefeller Center. ‘Performers Are Always Being Looked At,’ He Said. ‘I Wonder What It Feels Like To Be Inside And Look Out. Stay Outside And Photograph People’s Reaction To Me Just Sitting There Staring Out.’ How Did People React? Most Did Notice Him But Then Moved On. The Point Is, Few People React: This Is New York, And The Tempo Of The City In The Fifties Was Just About As It Is Today”

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#27 Grace Kelly Accompanied By Her Mother Margaret And Older Sister Peggy On The Day Of Her Bridal Shower, New York, 1956. Photos By Lisa Larsen

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#28 Sharon Tate At Heathrow Airport, London, 1966. The Actress Is Carrying A Bob Dylan Tote Bag Promoting His Then-Upcoming Poetry Book, Tarantula

Dylan Had Intended To Release The Book That Year, But A Motorcycle Accident Put It On Halt. After Being Widely Bootlegged, The Book Received Its First Official Release In 1971

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#29 Did You Know? Gale Sondergaard Was Originally Cast As The Wicked Witch Of The West In The Wizard Of Oz (1939), But Left Production When Producer Mervyn Leroy Insisted That They Play Down Her Glamorous Looks

“In Those Days, I Was Not About To Make Myself Ugly For Any Motion Picture,” The Actress Later Reflected. “I Have No Regrets, Absolutely No Regrets”

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#30 Frank Sinatra Recording “Somethin’ Stupid” With His Daughter Nancy, 1967

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#31 Judy Garland Filming The Iconic “Get Happy” Number In Summer Stock, 1950

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#32 Joan Crawford Photographed By George Hurrell For The Film, Laughing Sinners, 1931

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#33 Anne Bancroft Reacting To Her Academy Award Win For Best Actress In The Miracle Worker (1962), 1963

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#34 A 16-Year-Old Ruby Stevens (Better Known As Barbara Stanwyck) While Working As A Ziegfeld Girl, 1924

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#35 Jack Nicholson Photographed By Simon Michou At Cannes, 1981

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#36 Ella Fitzgerald And Marilyn Monroe At The Tiffany Club In Hollywood, 1954

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#37 Hollywood Newcomer, Debbie Reynolds Arriving On The Warner Bros. Lot, 1948

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#38 Blake Edwards Directing Natalie Wood In The Infamous Pie Fight From The Great Race, 1965

This Is The Longest Pie Fight Sequence In Movie History, Lasting Four Minutes, And Was Shot Over The Course Of Five Days. “I Actually Got Knocked Out A Couple Times,” Confessed Jack Lemmon. “Unless It’s Thrown Just Right, A Pie Hitting You In The Face Feels Like A Ton Of Cement”. Photo By Bob Willoughby

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#39 Behind The Scenes Of The Adventures Of Robin Hood, 1938. This Was The Third Of Eight Films To Feature Errol Flynn And Olivia De Havilland

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#40 Michael Caine Photographed By Stephan C Archett, 1965

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#41 Elvis Presley And Joan Bradshaw At Sy Devore’s Halloween Party, 1957

Devore Was Known As The “Tailor To The Stars”. Some Of His Most Notable Clients Included Bing Crosby, Nat King Cole, Jerry Lewis, Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis, Jr., John Wayne, Spencer Tracy, Ricky Nelson, And Sidney Poitier. Bob Hope Once Jokingly Said, “In A Very Good Year I Had My Choice Between A Rolls-Royce, A New House In Beverly Hills, Or A Suit From Sy Devore”

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#42 Ali Macgraw Photographed By David Gahr In New York City, 1969

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#43 Paul Newman Visiting Long Island, New York, 1958. Photos By John Kobal

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#44 Vivien Leigh As Titania In Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream At The Old Vic, London, 1937. The Production Also Starred Robert Helpmann As Oberon. Photos By J.w. Debenham

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#45 Clint Eastwood And Director Sergio Leone On The Set Of A Fistful Of Dollars, 1964

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#46 Marilyn Monroe And Singer Maria Callas Backstage At President John F. Kennedy’s Birthday Gala, May 19, 1962

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#47 Behind The Scenes Of Cool Hand Luke, 1967

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#48 Peter Lawford, Frank Sinatra, Al Hart, And Sammy Davis Jr. Relaxing In The Sands Hotel Steam Room, Las Vegas, 1960

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#49 Elvis Presley And Priscilla Beaulieu During Their Wedding Ceremony At The Aladdin Hotel In Las Vegas On May 1, 1967

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#50 Greer Garson Sorting Through Her Record Collection In The Living Room Of Her Los Angeles Home, A Month After Her Best Actress Oscar Victory For Mrs. Miniver (1942), 1943

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#51 Mary Tyler Moore During A Table Read For The Dick Van Dyke Show, Los Angeles, 1963. Photos By Earl Theisen

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#52 Frank Sinatra Leaving His Hand And Foot Prints At Grauman’s Chinese Theater, 1965. His Daughters Nancy, Tina, And Friend Dean Martin Were Also Present For The Event

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#53 “I Want My Two Hundred Dollars.” Tatum O’neal Acting Opposite Her Father, Ryan O’neal In Paper Moon (1973)

Tatum’s Performance As The Child Con Artist, Addie Loggins, Earned Her An Academy Award For Best Supporting Actress The Following Year. At The Time Of The Ceremony She Was Just Ten-Years-Old, Making Her The Youngest Competitive Winner In The History Of The Academy Awards

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#54 Katharine Hepburn Photographed By George Hoyningen-Huene, 1934

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#55 Behind The Scenes Of The Godfather (1972) In Savoca, Sicily. Photos By Jack Stager

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#56 George Reeves Hanging Out With Lucille Ball And Keith Thibodeaux On The Set Of I Love Lucy, 1958

Reeves Guest Starred As Himself On The Episode, Lucy And Superman. “It Was A Great Treat To Have Him On,” Recalled Keith. “He Was Just An Amazing Guy. I Could Tell That He Really Loved Kids In Real Life, Too. And He Wasn’t Just Some Guy Playing A Part In A Weird Suit Running Around In Tights And Stuff. He Was A Really Cool Guy”

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#57 Director Tay Garnett, Lana Turner, And John Garfield On The Set Of The Postman Always Rings Twice, 1946

Turner Considered The Part Of Cora Smith To Be Her Favorite, Telling The Saturday Evening Post: “It May Seem Strange That I Should Choose The Part Of A Completely Bad Woman As My Favorite. The Fact Is, Playing A Wicked Woman Makes The Audience More Aware Of You As An Actress. This Role Gave Me Something To Work With.” Author James M. Cain Was So Impressed With Her Performance That He Presented Her With A Leather-Bound Copy Of The Book Inscribed, “For My Dear Lana, Thank You For Giving A Performance That Was Even Finer Than Expected”

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#58 Dustin Hoffman And Peter O’toole Greeting Each Other In The Foyer Of The Odeon In Leicester Square, London, 1971

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#59 Director Billy Wilder Sharing A Laugh With Shirley Maclaine And Jack Lemmon During The Production Of The Apartment, 1960

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#60 Francis Ford Coppola And His Daughter Sofia On The Set Of The Godfather Part II (1974) And New York Stories (1989)

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#61 Julie Andrews In Wardrobe Tests For The Sound Of Music, 1965

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#62 Frank Sinatra, Betty Garrett, Jules Munshin, Ann Miller, Gene Kelly, And Vera-Ellen In Publicity Stills For On The Town, 1949

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#63 Shirley Maclaine With Her Daughter Sachi, 1959

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#64 Alfred Hitchcock Showing Off All 53 Of His Films, 1976

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#65 Natalie Wood And Warren Beatty Attending The 34th Academy Award Ceremony In Los Angeles, 1962

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#66 Lauren Bacall Photographed By Jack Mitchell, 1966

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#67 Marilyn Monroe Photographed By J.r. Eyerman, 1951

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#68 Paul Newman And Princess Margaret During A Benefit For The New York Association For Brain Injured Children At The Rainbow Room, 1968. Photos By Lawrence Fried

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#69 Elizabeth Taylor And Rock Hudson Leaving Their Hand And Foot Imprints At Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, 1956. George Stevens, Who Directed Them In Giant, Was Also Present For The Event

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#70 Burt Reynolds And Ryan O’neal Watching A Boxing Match At The Grand Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, 1974

Seated On Their Right Is Boxing Promoter, Aileen Eaton. In 2002, She Became The First Woman To Be Inducted Into The International Boxing Hall Of Fame. Photos By Theo Ehret

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#71 Veronica Lake Showing Off Her Long Locks, 1941. Lake Was Best Known For Her Femme Fatale Roles In Film Noirs During The 1940s, As Well As Her Iconic Peek-A-Boo Hairstyle

“I Never Did Cheesecake Like Ann Sheridan Or Betty Grable. I Just Used My Hair,” The Actress Later Wrote In Her Autobiography. Photos By Bob Landry

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#72 Jacques Demy Directing Catherine Deneuve In The Umbrellas Of Cherbourg, 1964

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#73 Today Marks The 60th Anniversary Of James Bond. Here Is Author Ian Fleming With Producers Cubby Broccoli, Harry Saltzman, And Actor Sean Connery To Discuss Dr. No, 1961

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#74 Harry Belafonte And Dorothy Dandridge On The Set Of Bright Road, 1953

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#75 Gary Cooper, Miriam Hopkins, Director Ernst Lubitsch, And Fredric March In Promotional Photos For The Pre-Code Screwball Comedy, Design For Living, 1933

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#76 Joanne Woodward And Paul Newman Ice Skating During A Break In Filming From The Terrace, 1960

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#77 Rita Hayworth Preparing For The “Amado Mío” Sequence In Gilda, 1946

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#78 Alfred Hitchcock Directing James Stewart In Rear Window, 1954

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#79 Dustin Hoffman Sporting Three Pairs Of Sunglasses, New York, 1969

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#80 A Cameraman And A Sound Technician Capturing The Iconic Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Logo, 1928

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#81 Henry And Phoebe Ephron At Their Beverly Hills Home, 1956

The Husband And Wife Screenwriting Duo Wrote Several Notable Hollywood Films Together Including There’s No Business Like Show Business (1954), Daddy Long Legs (1955), Carousel (1956), Desk Set (1957), And Captain Newman, M.d (1963). The Latter Earned Them An Oscar Nomination. All Four Of Their Daughters Went On To Become Professional Writers, One Of Which Was The Late Nora Ephron. Nora Attributed The Phrase “Everything Is Copy” To Her Mother Who Advised Her That Life Never Hands You Material That You Can’t Use. “I Now Believe That What My Mother Meant Was This: When You Slip On A Banana Peel, People Laugh At You,” Nora Once Said. “But When You Tell People You Slipped On A Banana Peel, It’s Your Laugh, So You Become A Hero Rather Than The Victim Of The Joke”

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#82 Gwen Verdon Rehearsing A Series Of Dance Steps With Jane Russell And Marilyn Monroe For The “Two Little Girls From Little Rock” Number In Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, 1953

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#83 Peter O’toole And Rosemary Harris In Laurence Olivier’s Stage Production Of Hamlet At The National Theatre, 1963. Photos By Ralph Crane

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#84 Tony Curtis At His Beverly Hills Home, 1960. Photos By Dennis Stock

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#85 Angela Lansbury Stretching Backstage Before A Performance Of Mame At The Winter Garden Theatre, 1967

“Work In The Theatre Just Keeps Revitalizing Me, It Keeps Giving Me The Excitement And The Fun Of Something New Coming Up And That’s A Great Gift,” Said Lansbury, Who Passed Away Today At The Age Of 97. What Is Your Favorite Film Of Hers? Photos By Mark Kauffman

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#86 Sam Elliott During His Senior Year At David Douglas High School In Portland, Oregan, 1962

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#87 Jean Harlow Making Her Second Imprints At Grauman’s Chinese Theater, September 29, 1933

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#88 On The Eve Of Her 19th Birthday, Julie Andrews Made Her American Broadway Debut In The Musical, The Boy Friend, 1954

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#89 Terry Moore And James Dean Arriving At The Los Angeles Premiere Of Sabrina, 1954

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#90 Doris Day Leaving Her Handprints At Graumans Chinese Theater, 1961

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#91 Gary Cooper Photographed By Cecil Beaton, 1931

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#92 Rudolph Valentino And Gloria Swanson In Publicity Stills For Beyond The Rocks, 1922

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#93 Cary Grant Taking Pot Shots With His Camera Of The New York Skyline, As He Comes Up The Bay On The S.s. Ile De France, 1938

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#94 Faye Dunaway And Warren Beatty Leaving The Moulin Rouge Following The French Premiere Of Bonnie And Clyde, Paris, 1968. Photos By Raymond Depardon

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#95 Errol Flynn In Publicity Stills For Gentleman Jim, 1942

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#96 Rita Hayworth And Glenn Ford Playing A Game Of Cards On The Set Of Gilda, 1946

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#97 Patty Duke Meeting The Real Helen Keller On The Set Of The Miracle Worker, 1962

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#98 George Sidney Directing Esther Williams In Jupiter’s Darling, 1955

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#99 June Lockhart Swimming With Her Cat George At Her Hollywood Home, 1963

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#100 Alfred Newman Walking Off Stage After Winning Best Original Score For The Song Of Bernadette (1943) At The 16th Academy Awards, 1944

The Score Was Recorded Over A Four-Week Period With An 80-Piece Orchestra. In His Lifetime, Newman Received An Unprecedented 44 Oscar Nominations And Won 9

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#101 Vivien Leigh In A Streetcar Named Desire, 1951. Unlike Her Fellow Cast Members, Leigh Didn’t Study Acting At The Actor’s Studio

“I’ve Read Stanislavsky, Naturally, And It Seems To Me That The Method Is: If You Say Something, You’ve Got To Mean It, And You’ve Got To Say It As Interestingly As Possible. But That Applies To Life—and Acting Is Life, To Me, And Should Be,” Stated The Actress

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#102 Marilyn Monroe Visiting A Museum Dedicated To Abraham Lincoln In Bement, Illinois, 1955

“Most People Can Admire Their Fathers, But I Never Had One. I Need Someone To Admire,” Marilyn Once Wrote To Arthur Miller. He Wrote Back, “If You Want Someone To Admire, Why Not Abraham Lincoln?” As A Result, Marilyn Went Out And Purchased A Biography Of The Former President Written By Carl Sanburg, With Whom She Later Befriended. Photos By Eve Arnold

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#103 Makeup Artist Ben Nye Applying False Blood On Actor Tyrone Power Between Takes In Filming In Old Chicago, 1938

Nye Worked On Over 500 Feature Films Spanning Four Decades; Including Gone With The Wind (1939), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), And The Sound Of Music (1965)

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#104 Peter Lawford And Fiancée Patricia Kennedy Walking In Central Park, New York, 1954

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#105 Patrick Wayne (Son Of John Wayne) And Natalie Wood Hanging Out On Location In Monument Valley, Az During The Production Of The Searchers, 1956

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#106 Mitzi Gaynor Doing A Stretch Routine At A Home, 1962

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#107 Fred Crane, Vivien Leigh, And George Reeves Filming The Opening Scene In Gone With The Wind, 1939

Reeves Went On To Portray Superman In The Television Series, Adevntures Of Superman (1952-1958)

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#108 Leonard Bernstein Photographed By Gordon Parks, 1956

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#109 Robert Redford, Katharine Ross, And Paul Newman On A Conveyor Belt For The Filming Of A Process Shot During Production Of Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid, 1969

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#110 Julie Andrews And Her First Husband Tony Walton Welcoming Their Daughter Emma, 1962

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#111 James Dean Prepping For The Iconic Knife Fight In Rebel Without A Cause, 1955

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#112 Steve Rowland And Natalie Wood At The Thailans Beach Ball In Malibu, California, 1956

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#113 James Stewart And Olivia De Havilland Testing Their Model Airplane, 1940

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#114 Charlie Chaplin Meeting Helen Keller At His Hollywood Studio During The Filming Of Sunnyside, 1918

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

#115 Sophia Loren Leaving Her Handprints At Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, July 26, 1962

Image credits: vintagemoviestars

Source: boredpanda.com

No votes yet.
Please wait...
Loading...