#Nancy Malone
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georgeromeros · 2 years ago
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The Outer Limits - Season 1, Episode 27 (1964) Fun and Games
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denver-carrington · 9 months ago
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Remembering the late Nancy Malone, who was born on March 19, 1935. She's pictured here during the filming of episode 7x11, "The Ball", one of the many episodes of the show that she directed.
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loveboatinsanity · 1 year ago
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siegbert2354 · 1 year ago
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#nakedcity 2.1 #gif
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schwhoopsie · 1 year ago
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watching edits of a character/actor you got a crush on while you’re on your period is so dangerous
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marnigifshistory · 1 year ago
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Jena Malone as Nancy McCoy in Hatfields & McCoys
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dorothymaloneconstance · 21 days ago
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Dorothy et Lloyd Bochner
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vgtrackbracket · 5 months ago
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Video Game Track Bracket Round 2
Enclosure from Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots
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vs.
Malone from Nancy Drew: Ghost Dogs of Moon Lake
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Propaganda under the cut. If you want your propaganda reblogged and added to future polls, please tag it as propaganda or otherwise indicate this!
Enclosure:
a beautiful and sad song for the loss of a beautiful and sad character
Malone:
so catchy and fun!
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acapelladitty · 1 year ago
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that last twobats fic,,,, so hot,,,, but also i CHOKED when you got to the fake mustache bit and i realized he was matches!!! your mix of erotic and humour is so fun!!
Bruce as Matches is one of my favourite things. He's just playing dress-up and having a fucking great time. Also gives him an excuse to visit Harvey 👀💦 Sex is funny as fuck and it's sometimes fun to play with that dynamic more! Bruce has had to buy those mustaches in bulk because he keeps getting questionable stains on them. Thank you xx
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thelonelybrilliance · 7 months ago
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Fortnight ft. Post Malone = Daniel Deronda, George Eliot
The Tortured Poets Department = Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë
My Boy Only Breaks His Favorite Toys = Emily's Quest, L.M. Montgomery
Down Bad = Le Petit Prince, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
So Long London = Brideshead Revisited, Evelyn Waugh
But Daddy I Love Him = Far from the Madding Crowd, Thomas Hardy
Fresh Out the Slammer = Hello Beautiful, Ann Napolitano
Florida!!! = Demon Copperhead, Barbara Kingsolver
Guilty as Sin = Crush, Richard Siken
Who's Afraid of Little Old Me? = "Fan-Fiction," Tavi Gevinson
I Can Fix Him (No Really I Can) = Furious Love: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, and the Marriage of the Century, Nancy Schoenberger and Sam Kashner
loml = Averno, Louise Glück
I Can Do It with a Broken Heart = Tracy Flick Can't Win, Tom Perrotta
The Smallest Man Who Ever Lived = "Good Country People," Flannery O'Connor
The Alchemy = Pride & Prejudice, Jane Austen
Clara Bow = The Princess Diarist, Carrie Fisher
TTPD booklist! Connections and vibes, nothing set in stone. Credit for #4 to @itspileofgoodthings and for #14 to @thisisctrying
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vintage-every-day · 5 months ago
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Tab Hunter and Mona Freeman in 𝑩𝒂𝒕𝒕𝒍𝒆 𝑪𝒓𝒚, a 1955 Warnercolor film in CinemaScope, starring Van Heflin, Aldo Ray, James Whitmore, Nancy Olson, Anne Francis, Dorothy Malone and Raymond Massey.
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macrolit · 10 months ago
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Do You Have ‘Bookshelf Wealth’?
A TikTok home-décor trend has irked some bibliophiles.
By Madison Malone Kircher
Published in the New York Times, Jan. 15, 2024
When it comes to aesthetic trends, social media loves a catchy name.
Cottagecore. Dark academia. Eclectic grandpa.
Now there’s a new entry to the canon: bookshelf wealth.
On TikTok and other digital platforms, there has lately been much ado about people who own a great number of books and — this is critical — have managed to stage them in a pleasing manner.
If you’ve ever seen a Nancy Meyers movie, the look might ring a bell. Warm and welcoming. Polished, but not stuffy. A bronze lamp here. A vintage vase there (with fresh-cut flowers, of course). Perhaps there is a cozy seating area near the floor-to-ceiling display, with an overstuffed couch topped with tasteful throw pillows.
Kailee Blalock, an interior designer in San Diego, posted a video to TikTok last month that sought to define bookshelf wealth and school viewers in achieving the aesthetic in their own homes.
“These aren’t display books,” Ms. Blalock, 26, cautions in the video, which has been viewed over 1.3 million times. “These are books that have actually been curated and read.”
This literary look, she went on to say, goes well with pictures hung willy-nilly on the walls, sometimes even partly blocking the shelves, as well as mismatched fabric patterns and a bit of clutter.
In an interview, Ms. Blalock expanded on her advice. “I think to really achieve the look and the lifestyle, someone has to be an avid reader and has to appreciate the act of collecting things, especially art and sculpture,” she said.
Though Ms. Blalock did not originate the term “bookshelf wealth,” her video has spurred plenty of online discussion. “The day I ‘cultivate’ books instead of buying what I like to read is the day I’ll know I’ve truly failed as a human,” one user commented. Others remarked how bookshelf wealth was less about reading and more about regular old wealth.
Breana Newton, a legal coordinator in Princeton, N.J., who posts regularly about books on TikTok, was one of the people who responded to Ms. Blalock’s video. “I am going to show you bookshelf wealth,” Ms. Newton, 33, says in a video of her own. “Ready?”
She then gives viewers a brief tour of her home, showing books everywhere — on shelves, in overflow piles here and there, and strewed across the bed. Absent is the sense that the rooms have been staged, or that the books were bought with the consideration of how they would look on Instagram.
In an interview, Ms. Newton said that she worried trends like bookshelf wealth encourage overconsumption. This year, she added, she is trying not to buy any new books.
Another critic of the trend, Keila Tirado-Leist, said in a reaction video: “Who does it benefit to constantly have to name and qualify and attach wealth to any kind of style or home-décor aesthetic?”
Ms. Tirado-Leist, a lifestyle content creator in Madison, Wis., likened bookshelf wealth to “quiet luxury” and “stealth wealth,” styles that have recently made social media waves.
Still, she was understanding that what drives a home-décor trend like this one is a desire to create a home that feels, well, homey. In another video, she described the idea of layering — that is, slowly acquiring pieces and building up to a finished look, rather than trying to buy a bunch of things all at once in an effort to chase a trend.
“Styling a home takes time,” Ms. Tirado-Leist said.
Another TikTok user put it more bluntly in a response to Ms. Blalock’s video: “Bookshelf wealth does not mean you have books. It means you have built-ins.”
Editors’ Picks
A Practical Guide to Quitting Your SmartphoneHow Sad Love Songs Tap Into the Chaos of DatingWhen WeightWatchers Ended In-Person Meetings, They Held Their Own
Madison Malone Kircher is a Times reporter covering internet culture. More about Madison Malone Kircher
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denver-carrington · 2 years ago
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Remembering the late Nancy Malone, who was born on March 19, 1935. She directed several episodes of Dynasty and is pictured here with John Forsythe during the filming of episode 7x11, “The Ball”. 
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acerobbiereyes · 2 years ago
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Whale World! I could (and have lol) spent hours playing all the games, and reading the whale facts 🐋
Favorite places in Nancy Drew games, go
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skyward-floored · 7 months ago
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Wait, how did all your IAU boys end up with the name Link?
I know Time was the OG and that Wars was named after his big brother.
Sky I think was just coincidental?
For the kids, I feel like I read something like "Malon sneezed and all their names are Link" but that felt like a joke and I'm not actually sure haha
Well... more or less XD
I haven’t decided everyone, but you’re right abou Time and Warriors. Sky was coincidental, as were Wild and Hyrule since they were adopted, and Twilight was named after Time.
Legend ended up with it because his parents were extremely distracted when he was born and signed the wrong papers (Time thought they wanted his name). Nancy suggested the doctor misunderstanding them as the reason for one, and I liked that so I think that’s how Wind ended up with it.
And Four... I don’t have a specific reason, but honestly they might’ve just given him the name so he wouldn’t be left out XD Perhaps they named him Link with the specific intention of him going by his middle name.
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ladyjaneasherr · 8 months ago
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April 5th 2024, happy beloved 78th birthday to the one and only Jane! She’s been my inspiration for around 12 years since I first discovered about her. It’s been a wonderful journey getting to share new pictures I find, my scans, colourisations and accurate information in regards of the pictures I found. May I be able to meet her one day. 🤍
This post will be divided in two, as the picture shown was used for two different newspapers that I scanned therefore the subtle mark on the photos. And you might have seen the photos with my old username so I am sharing them with the new one!
Jane Asher and Gawn Grainger as Juliet Capulet and Romeo in “Romeo and Juliet” presentation while being on tour in the USA, 1967.
First picture is my edition and enhancement from historical picture auction scan, second one is my scan from the newspaper, and third one is the scan of the newspaper.
Jane Asher-More Than a Beatle's Bird
In cities all across the U.S. this spring Beatle fans are swarming to a touring production of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet staged by the Bristol Old Vic Company. When Juliet appears on stage for the first time the reaction is almost always the same. Applause thunders through the theater. Flash bulbs pop—electrifying the scene like summer lightning. At the end of the play young girls scream the name of the actress who plays Juliet: "Jane Asher! Jane Asher!" This is the girl they have come to see. To a Beatle fan Jane Asher's romance is even more exciting than the story of Romeo and Juliet. Jane Asher, in case you haven't heard, is the girl friend of Paul McCartney-the last unmarried Beatle.
An Interview With Jane
To find out what kind of girl dates a Beatle and also has enough talent to
perform in one of England's most respected theatre groups, CURRENT EVENTS Editor Nancy Malone talked to Jane Asher in New York City. The 20-year-old actress seemed puzzled when asked why teen-age girls scream for her. "I don't really know," she said “and I don’t think they’re quite sure themselves. Once they’re with me, they seem a little lost and aren’t sure what to do or say”.
Miss Asher, in contrast to her fans, is not at all confused. She is looking the forward to a successful career in the theatre—on her own merit, not because of her friendship with a Beatle. The actress with the golden-red hair is well on her way to stardom. Her portrayal of Juliet with England’s Bristol Old Vic company has been highly praised. The company is nearing the end of 16-city american tour, which began in Boston last January. After appearances next month in Bloomington, Ind., Detroit, and Cleveland, the company will perform at expo 67 in Montreal. Then the actors and actresses will retur to England.
Does Jane Asher hope to do more Shakespeare? "Oh, yes." she said, “I'd like to do all the Shakespearean heroines-especially Lady Macbeth. But I'd also like to do modern comedy. I wouldn't like ever to stick to just one thing. For example, I don't want to do all movies or all stage. Though if I had to choose, I'd choose stage. I like having a live audience.
Movie Fame Unimportant
"I know you can become more famous by being in movies,", Jane said. "but I've had a taste of that kind of glamor, and I know I don't want it. I want to be a good actress." Jane, who has been acting since she was five years old, comes from a show business family. Her brother, Peter Asher, has toured the U.S. several times. He makes up one-half of the popular singing duo Peter and Gordon.
But Jane hesitates to encourage outer young people to become entertainers. "It's really not the glamorous life people imagine. It's hard work with rehearsals all day and shows every night. And when you come right down to it, acting is really only pretending you're something else on stage." Although Jane made several films during her childhood, she attended regular m schools—not acting schools for m professionals. "I'm glad I got a normal education," she said. "I think it gave me a more balanced view of life. In addition to several Shakespearean roles, Jane has played Alice in Alice in Wonderland, Wendy in Peter Pan, and Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion. Juliet, however, is the highlight of her career.
Jane and the Bard
She is particularly delighted that she is helping to acquaint American teenagers with Shakespeare. She commented on her own attitude as a 13-year-old: "I suppose I felt as all English schoolchildren do-that Shakespeare was pretty dull stuff with lots of language I didn't understand. I know I wasn't mad about it." Now, at 20, she believes that Shakespeare wrote "the greatest roles in the world." She added: "On this tour, I've gotten a lot of mail and it has meant a great deal to me. Some of the letters from kids say “We came to see you. We were so surprised. We really liked the play.” “That’s great. That’s a real accomplishment to me —as an actress”.
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