#Shirley Grey
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
#1930s#1933#Shirley Grey#vintage fashion#vintage beauty#old hollywood#moda#uroda#retro#kino#ретро#мода#красота#кино
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
The Girl in 419 (1933) Alexander Hall
April 20th 2024
#the girl in 419#1933#alexander hall#james dunn#gloria stuart#vince barnett#david manners#william harrigan#shirley grey#johnny hines#kitty kelly#edward gargan#pre-code#PreCodeApril
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Shirley Grey (Naugatuck, Connecticut, 11/04/1902-Jacksonville Beach, Florida, 12/08/1981).
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
1933
#Out All Night#vintage#movie poster#Slim Summerville#Zasu Pitts#Laura Hope Crews#Shirley Grey#Alexander Carr#Mae Busch#1930s
28 notes
·
View notes
Text
-Goodbye goodbye goodbye you were bigger than the whole sky you were more than just a short time.- ❤️🩹
#my lady jane#prodigal son#ncis hawaii#shadow and bone#anne with an e#magnum pi#lockwood and co#dark matter#jane grey#malcolm bright#jane tennant#inej ghafa#kaz brekker#jesper fahey#anne shirley#thomas magnum#juliet higgins#lucy carlyle#anthony lockwood#george karim#two#three#four#five#six#one#kacy#WE WERE ROBBED#we could have had it all#never shutting up about this
253 notes
·
View notes
Text
Period Drama Appreciation 2024 Day Two: Favorite Character(s)
#perioddramaappreciation24#favorite characters#period drama#kathani sharma#kate sharma#bridgerton#simone ashley#elizabeth bennet#pride and prejudice#keira knightley#dido elizabeth belle#belle (2013)#gugu mbatha raw#israel hands#izzy hands#ofmd#our flag means death#con o'neill#tim laughlin#fellow travelers#jonathan bailey#margaret grey#my lady jane#robyn betteridge#birdy#catherine called birdy#bella ramsey#anne shirley#anne shirley cuthbert#anne with an e
141 notes
·
View notes
Text
Martha Brown, the loyal servant of the Brontë family revealed to a parsonage visitor about Charlotte Brontë's situation after her two younger sisters Emily and Anne died from consumption. The Brontë sisters used to walk around the dining table at night to discuss and share ideas about writing the plot for their novels.
#this was painful to read to be honest#charlotte bronte#emily bronte#anne bronte#bronte sisters#jane eyre#the professor#shirley#villette#wuthering heights#agnes grey#the tenant of wildfell hall#tenant of wildfell hall#lonely#loneliness
95 notes
·
View notes
Text
Ranking all the Brontë novels + briefly reviewing The Professor
I finally finished The Professor by Charlotte Brontë, which means I HAVE COMPLETED ALL THE BRONTË NOVELS, which means I can now rank them. This is a rough order, but brief explanations will be given...
As an aside, bc I don't want to make a separate post for my review of The Professor, but I did note several strong similarities to Jane Eyre (the female lead's description, her elvish comparisons) and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (Hunsden/Huntington as the cynic, although the former is mostly good and the latter mostly bad). Really all the Brontë novels are very similar so there are tons of more common themes I could mention but won't. Also, more references to Scottish besties Walter Scott & Lord Byron!
Now for my official Brontë Book Ranking (which may be subject to change over the years...)
7. Shirley - I would like to revisit this one. There are some great gems in it, and I'm fascinated by the Luddism subject matter. It is also a strong contender for the most feminist Brontë novel and has probably the most in-depth female relationships which does count for something. But it's SO UNNECESSARILY LONG! And often boring! And it took me the longest to finish. So it has to be last.
6. The Professor - this one benefits from not being Shirley. It's also a good attempt at a first novel I think. It has some gems, but it's often boring like Shirley is in my opinion. I thought the main male, Crimsworth, was a bit more exciting to follow than any of the men in Shirley. I actually think Crimsworth is a pretty inspiring figure and I enjoyed his observations and his anti-work rhetoric. Like most Brontë protagonists, he's a teacher who experiences classism, poverty, and oppression, and manages to overcome these things through frugality, faith, love, hope, etc.
5. Agnes Grey - it's hard to get through at times but it's generally worth it and has a strong pay off. I think Anne's writing style is generally enjoyable. It's has a lot of the horror of Wuthering Heights and the lighter parts of Jane Eyre but it lacks Charlotte and Emily's stronger passions and has more of Anne's calm reasoning, faith, and stoicism. That makes it sound more boring than it really is maybe. I also think it's fascinating for being largely semi-autobiographical like Charlotte's works can be. We get to "know" Anne more than we do in Tenant I feel, and I think she's pretty admirable. The bird scene was based on a real experience she had as a governess, and she wrote most of the novel as a rebellious act in her room right after work. All teachers and childcare workers – and really all women and members of the working-class – should take this novel as the cautionary tale it was written to be.
4. Villette - this is the weirdest Brontë novel. Some interesting scenes and characters. Charlotte's last novel shows far more writerly evolution than in Shirley where she was again trying for more progressive social commentary (and mostly succeeded I think) but often fell back into the more sedate or conventional nature that parts of The Professor has (saving Crimsworth's sometimes strong, sassy, rebellious attitude). Villette was written in a strange period of grief for Charlotte and it shows. Villette is basically Jane Eyre's weirder older sister.
3 and 2 are almost tied for me. I have also written about 3, 2, and 1 so much on my blog that I probably won't go into as much detail as I have with the others.
3. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall - shockingly underrated. Hard to get through, but so is Wuthering Heights which it's pretty similar to at times. Radically progressive and daring, it is a strong contender for being the most feminist Brontë novel and the most oriented toward social justice (although they really all are). Brilliant use of mystery and gothic allure with a social realism that was too ahead of its time to fall into the common traps of that genre. Has everything you could want in a Brontë novel.
2. Wuthering Heights - a bomb in your face. Full of passion. Grand drama. What can I say? It's infamous for valid reasons. Never a boring moment, which instantly pushes it to the top of the list for me who am easily bored. I have elaborated on this work very often on my page so I don't feel the need to reiterate everything here but I will say that this novel has basically everything you could want.
1. Jane Eyre - has all the gothic mystery and passion of Wuthering Heights but focuses on fewer characters whose arcs thus feel more personable and fulfilling in my opinion. We get to know Jane and Rochester much more fully than almost any of the other Brontë characters I feel. And it is my love for the characters that really makes this one my favorite Brontë novel as well as one of my favorite tales of all time (whereas Heights is notorious for its unlikeable characters which actually repel many readers from enjoying it). No wonder it's the most adapted and tied with Wuthering Heights for being the most famous (although I think it may have surpassed Wuthering Heights in pop culture at times). I also think there are a lot of really meaningful themes, morals, and subjects that are explored in this novel, which again can be said of all Brontë novels, but it all feels so much more full in this one. The plot itself is also the most well-crafted in my opinion, and it has one of the greatest twists in all of literature/media imo.
#the brontes#the brontë sisters#the brontës#charlotte brontë#emily brontë#anne brontë#jane eyre#wuthering heights#villette#shirley#the tenant of wildfell hall#agnes grey#the professor#books#book reviews#book rankings#literature#english literature#lit#victorian era#book blog#bookish#rankings#my writing#dark academia#book commentary
29 notes
·
View notes
Text
La Pluie Et Vous.
#charlotte bronte#emily bronte#anne bronte#the bronte sisters#jane eyre#Shirley#villette#agnes grey#the tenant of wildfell hall#the professor#wuthering heights
22 notes
·
View notes
Text
Brontë Bites
Just a reminder that we start Wuthering Heights tomorrow! Subscribe to our Substack here to read along with us!
#brontë bites#bronte bites#charlotte brontë#charlotte bronte#emily brontë#emily bronte#anne brontë#anne bronte#book club#read along#wuthering heights#jane eyre#the tenant of wildfell hall#agnes grey#villette#shirley 1851#the professor 1857#classic literature#gothic literature#19th century literature
17 notes
·
View notes
Text
Golden Age of Hollywood Actors Born Before (And Including) 1936 Still Alive
This only includes actors that had at least one credited role in a Hollywood feature film or short up to 1959.
Elisabeth Waldo (b. 1918)
Caren Marsh Doll (b. 1919)
Patricia Wright (b. 1921)
Jacqueline White (b. 1922)
Annette Warren (b. 1922)
Ray Anthony (b. 1922)
Tommy Dix (b. 1923)
Eva Marie Saint (b. 1924)
Anne Vernon (b. 1924)
Maria Riva (b. 1924)
June Lockhart (b. 1925)
Lee Grant (b. 1925)
Peggy Webber (b. 1925)
Lise Bourdin (b. 1925)
Brigitte Auber (b. 1925)
Kerima (b. 1925)
Terry Kilburn (b. 1926)
Marilyn Erskine (b. 1926)
Bambi Linn (b. 1926)
David Frankham (b. 1926)
Tommy Morton (b. 1926)
Jill Jarmyn (b. 1926)
Marilyn Knowlden (b. 1926)
Genevieve Page (b. 1927)
Donna Martell (b. 1927)
William Smithers (b. 1927)
Peter Walker (b. 1927)
H.M. Wynant (b. 1927)
Betty Harford (b. 1927)
Cora Sue Collins (b. 1927)
Marilyn Granas (b. 1927)
Ann Blyth (b. 1928)
Nancy Olson (b. 1928)
Peggy Dow (b. 1928)
Kathleen Hughes (b. 1928)
Colleen Townsend (b. 1928)
Marion Ross (b. 1928)
Gaby Rodgers (b. 1928)
Jan Shepard (b. 1928)
Walter Maslow (b. 1928)
Tom Troupe (b. 1928)
Sidney Kibrick (b. 1928)
Garry Watson (b. 1928)
Fay Chaldecott (b. 1928)
Mark Rydell (b. 1929)
Terry Moore (b. 1929)
Vera Miles (b. 1929)
Ann Robinson (b. 1929)
Liseotte Pulver (b. 1929)
James Hong (b. 1929)
Rachel Ames (b. 1929)
Olga James (b. 1929)
Michael Forest (b. 1929)
Vikki Dougan (b. 1929)
Steve Terrell (b. 1929)
Margaret Kerry (b. 1929)
James Congdon (b. 1929)
Betsy Gay (b. 1929)
Jack Betts (b. 1929)
Clint Eastwood (b. 1930)
Joanne Woodward (b. 1930)
Mara Corday (b. 1930)
Nita Talbot (b. 1930)
Taina Elg (b. 1930)
Robert Wagner (b. 1930)
John Astin (b. 1930)
Tommy Cook (b. 1930)
Mary Costa (b. 1930)
Lois Smith (b. 1930)
Will Hutchins (b. 1930)
Peggy King (b. 1930)
Lynn Hamilton (b. 1930)
Don Burnett (b. 1930)
Clark Burroughs (b. 1930)
Robert Hinkle (b. 1930)
Sheila Connolly (b. 1930)
Barbara Bestar (b. 1930)
Rita Moreno (b. 1931)
Leslie Caron (b. 1931)
Carroll Baker (b. 1931)
William Shatner (b. 1931)
Mamie Van Doren (b. 1931)
Robert Colbert (b. 1931)
Barbara Eden (b. 1931)
Angie Dickinson (b. 1931)
Claire Bloom (b. 1931)
Marianne Koch (b. 1931)
Sylvia Lewis (b. 1931)
Carmen De Lavallade (b. 1931)
Zohra Lampert (b. 1931)
Michael Dante (b. 1931)
Ann McCrea (b. 1931)
Jack Grinnage (b. 1931)
Maralou Gray (b. 1931)
Billy Mindy (b. 1931)
Sugar Dawn (b. 1931)
Joanne Arnold (b. 1931)
Joel Grey (b. 1932)
George Chakiris (b. 1932)
Felicia Farr (b. 1932)
Abbe Lane (b. 1932)
Steve Rowland (b. 1932)
Jacqueline Beer (b. 1932)
Colleen Miller (b. 1932)
Joanne Gilbert (b. 1932)
Olive Moorefield (b. 1932)
Neile Adams (b. 1932)
Jacqueline Duval (b. 1932)
Edna May Wonnacott (b. 1932)
Richard Tyler (b. 1932)
Mickey Roth (b. 1932)
Leon Tyler (b. 1932)
Peggy McIntyre (b. 1932)
Christiane Martel (b. 1932)
Elsa Cardenas (b. 1932)
Claude Bessy (b. 1932)
Kim Novak (b. 1933)
Julie Newmar (b. 1933)
Debra Paget (b. 1933)
Constance Towers (b. 1933)
Joan Collins (b. 1933)
Kathleen Nolan (b. 1933)
Brett Halsey (b. 1933)
Robert Fuller (b. 1933)
Pat Crowley (b. 1933)
Barrie Chase (b. 1933)
Jackie Joseph (b. 1933)
Geoffrey Horne (b. 1933)
Tsai Chin (b. 1933)
Lita Milan (b. 1933)
Vera Day (b. 1933)
Diana Darrin (b. 1933)
Ziva Rodann (b. 1933)
Jeanette Sterke (b. 1933)
Marti Stevens (b. 1933)
Annette Dionne (b. 1933)
Cecile Dionne (b. 1933)
Johnny Russell (b. 1933)
Patti Hale (b. 1933)
Gary Clarke (b. 1933)
Shirley MacLaine (b. 1934)
Sophia Loren (b. 1934)
Shirley Jones (b. 1934)
Russ Tamblyn (b. 1934)
Pat Boone (b. 1934)
Audrey Dalton (b. 1934)
Claude Jarman Jr. (b. 1934)
Tina Louise (b. 1934)
Karen Sharpe (b. 1934)
Joyce Van Patten (b. 1934)
May Britt (b. 1934)
Joby Baker (b. 1934)
Jamie Farr (b. 1934)
Myrna Hansen (b. 1934)
Priscilla Morgan (b. 1934)
Aki Aeong (b. 1934)
Robert Fields (b. 1934)
Dani Crayne (b. 1934)
Donnie Dunagan (b. 1934)
Richard Hall (b. 1934)
Charles Bates (b. 1934)
Marilyn Horne (b. 1934)
Marilee Earle (b. 1934)
Rod Dana (b. 1935)
Pippa Scott (b. 1935)
Ruta Lee (b. 1935)
Barbara Bostock (b. 1935)
Johnny Mathis (b. 1935)
Leslie Parrish (b. 1935)
Salome Jens (b. 1935)
Yvonne Lime (b. 1935)
Jean Moorehead (b. 1935)
Marco Lopez (b. 1935)
Joyce Meadows (b. 1935)
Christopher Severn (b. 1935)
Richard Nichols (b. 1935)
Carol Coombs (b. 1935)
Nino Tempo (b. 1935)
Patricia Prest (b. 1935)
Dawn Bender (b. 1935)
John Considine (b. 1935)
Jerry Farber (b. 1935)
Clyde Willson (b. 1935)
Bob Burns (b. 1935)
Susan Kohner (b. 1936)
Millie Perkins (b. 1936)
Burt Brickenhoff (b. 1936)
Mason Alan Dinehart (b. 1936)
Anna Maria Alberghetti (b. 1936)
Lisa Davis (b. 1936)
Joan O'Brien (b. 1936)
Richard Harrison (b. 1936)
Tommy Ivo (b. 1936)
John Wilder (b. 1936)
Gary Conway (b. 1936)
Michael Chapin (b. 1936)
Carol Morris (b. 1936)
Fernando Alvarado (b. 1936)
#dannyreviews#eva marie saint#june lockhart#lee grant#marion ross#terry moore#vera miles#clint eastwood#joanne woodward#robert wagner#mamie van doren#barbara eden#angie dickinson#claire bloom#rita moreno#joel grey#leslie caron#william shatner#george chakiris#kim novak#julie newmar#shirley maclaine#sophia loren#joan collins#russ tamblyn#pat boone#jamie farr#ruta lee#shirley jones#joyce van patten
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
5/10/24.
I'm going to guess that The Garrys don't sound like any other band ever to come out of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. They sound like a combination of 60s girl band with surf music. In fact, in the Bandcamp notes for "Get Thee to a Nunnery", their style is described as a combination of "The Ventures, the drama of Ennio Morricone’s spaghetti westerns, the dreamy psychedelia of Kurt Vile, France Gall’s brand of mod-pop cheek, and the lo-fi garage noir of Los Saicos."
I would add Electrelane and Barbara Manning to that description.
The Garrys are made of up of the three Maier sisters and they have releases going back to 2015. They have a new single, "Cakewalk" which may signal a new release in the future.
"Get Thee to a Nunnery" and many of their other releases are through Saskatoon label Grey Records (the label has also released work from Shirley & The Pyramids).
#The Garrys#Saskatoon#Saskatchewan#Canada#Grey Records#The Ventures#Ennio Morricone#Kurt Vile#Los Saicos#Electrelane#Barbara Manning#Shirley & The Pyramids#Bandcamp
12 notes
·
View notes
Text
Shirley Grey-Edmund Lowe "El correo de Bombay" (Bombay mail) 1934, de Edwin L. Marin.
1 note
·
View note
Text
#booklr#the brontes#charlotte bronte#emily bronte#anne bronte#wuthering heights#jane eyre#the tenant of wildfell hall#agnes grey#villette#shirley#the professor
91 notes
·
View notes
Text
#polls#books#the bronte sisters#charlotte bronte#emily bronte#anne bronte#jane eyre#wuthering heights#the tenant of wildfell hall#agnes grey#Shirley#the professor#vilette#bronte sisters
53 notes
·
View notes
Text
Category is: Me spending hours making gifsets only to get 20 notes because I always pick the ships with the smallest fandoms😂
#community#phastos x ben#jeff x shirley#maggie x winston#durotan x draka#warcraft#grey's Anatomy#eternals#edwina x anthony#bridgerton#The fandoms being small is the reason why I have to make my own gifs btw lol
30 notes
·
View notes