Shirley and Juliet

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um-hi

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“Prior to 1914 the majority of the world’s films were made abroad. When the war disrupted European film production, American filmmakers leapfrogged ahead to capture the world market. Concentrating film production in the Los Angeles area, with its sunshine, temperate climate, and abundant land, and emphasizing maximum efficiency, American companies turned out films on a large scale. By 1920 these companies produced 80 percent of the world’s movies; by 1930, 90 percent.””
   Dominating the industry were the “Big Five” motion picture conglomerates: Loew’s, Inc., owner of the nation’s largest theater circuit and the parent company of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer; Paramount; Warner Bros.;Fox; and Radio-Keith-Orpheum (RKO). All of these integrated film production, distribution, and exhibition on a massive scale, nationally and internationally. Among the next rank of motion picture corporation, the “Little Three,” Universal Pictures and Columbia Pictures were similarly organized, though with proportionally fewer theaters. The last of the Little Three, United Artists, functioned principally as a backer and distributor for independently produced films.”

“Shirley [Temple] is always the center of the camera’s attention. Wearing a very short, frilly dress and with her chubby legs and full cheeks,

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she seems scarcely more that a toddler, making her dancing ability seem almost preternatural. “Baby Take a Bow” proved to be among the most popular movies of the year.Her admirers respond to her dubious coquetry, to the sight of her well-shaped and desirable little body.”
  “Ironically named Joy and memorably played by eight-year-old Jane Withers,

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who became a child star in her own right in Fox’s B movies. Pampered and spoiled, she is mean, loud, and destructive.”   
(“The Little Girl who fought the Great Depression Shirley Temple and 1930s America” by John F. Kasson)

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Hasta be Shasta!

shasta

If the kids arrive unexpectedly, all Shasta has to do is pull down her top to cover her boobs, and jerk down her skirt!

22 year old Molly Rome

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from Pittsburgh Pa –fantastic pigtails!

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From: Karen Ramirez To: brie@brietv.com
earthly delight
11 Oct, 16 5:59:28 PM
I was google searching for “vintage bobby soxer” photos and found this:

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and this:

poodle_skirt_mommy
 
I LOVE, LOVE,LOVE your art and your website.  Thank you for putting it all out there!!!  Karen

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Wikipedia:
“Judith Carr (Juliet Anderson or Aunt Peg) was born and grew up in Burbank, California, the daughter of a jazz trumpet player and an aspiring nurse.  Graduating from Burbank High School in 1956 (where she was a straight-A student), she briefly attended Long Beach State College as an art major before relocating to Hayama, Japan, in 1961, with her then lover, a Navy sailor. A brief marriage to him did not work out, ending in 1964, and she spent the next thirteen years in various occupations, including clerical worker, teaching assistant in kindergarten and high school, and English as a Second Language teacher, and working as a radio journalist in Finland.

In 1963, while living in Miami, Anderson was secretary to a producer of “nudie” movies and a receptionist at the Burger King home office; she also worked for Avis during this period. In her website autobiography, she indicates that she appeared in an (unnamed) sexploitation film in 1963, portraying a police sergeant.

During this time, Anderson was known by her birth name of Judith Carr. She did not begin using the moniker “Juliet Anderson”

aunt-peg

until later in her adult film career, when she made the transition from 8mm productions to feature films.

 

 

Before Shirley

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Before Shirley Temple there was Baby Peggy!

Wikipedia:

 “Baby Peggy

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(Diana Serra Cary), is an American former child actress, author and historian. She is considered to be the last living film star of the silent era.

She was born on October 29, 1918, in San Diego, California, as Peggy-Jean Montgomery, the second daughter of Marian (née Baxter) and Jack Montgomery. Her older sister, called Louise or, occasionally, Jackie, was legally named Jack-Louise.

Baby Peggy was “discovered” at the age of 19 months, when she visited Century Studios on Sunset Boulevard, Hollywood with her mother and a film-extra friend. The Montgomery family was already somewhat involved in the motion picture industry: Her father, Jack, a former cowboy and park ranger, had done work as a stuntman and stand-in for Tom Mix in a number of his cowboy movies. Impressed by Peggy’s well-behaved demeanor and willingness to follow directions from her father, director Fred Fishbach hired her to appear in a series of short films with Century’s canine star, Brownie the Wonder Dog. The first film, Playmates in 1921, was a success, and Peggy was signed to a long-term contract with Century.

Between 1921 and 1924, Peggy made close to 150 short comedy films for Century.

In 1923, Peggy began working for Universal Studios, appearing in full-length dramatic films. Among her works from this era were The Darling of New York, directed by King Baggot, and the first screen adaptation of Captain January.

The success of the Baby Peggy films brought her into prominence. When she was not filming, she embarked on extensive “In-Person” personal appearance tours across the country to promote her movies. She was also featured in several short skits on major stages in Los Angeles and New York, including Grauman’s Million Dollar Theatre and the Hippodrome. Her likeness appeared on magazine covers and was used in advertisements for various businesses and charitable campaigns. She was also named the mascot of the 1924 Democratic Convention in New York, and stood onstage waving a U.S. flag next to Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

By the age of 5, she had her own line of various endorsed items, including dolls in her likeness, sheet music, jewelry, and even milk. As a child, Frances Gumm (later Judy Garland), owned at least one Baby Peggy doll. Cary would later befriend Garland, and wrote in her autobiography that she believed Garland’s mother had pursued fame for her children based on Baby Peggy’s success.

While under contract with Century and Universal, Peggy commanded an impressive salary. By 1923 she was signed to a $1.5 million a year contract at Universal (equivalent to $20.6 million in 2014 dollars); on her vaudeville tours she made $300 per day. Her parents handled all of the finances; money was spent on expensive cars, homes, and clothing. Nothing was set aside for the welfare or education of Peggy or her sister. Peggy herself was paid one nickel for every vaudeville performance. Through reckless spending and corrupt business partners of her father, her entire fortune was gone before she hit puberty. When fellow child star Jackie Coogan sued his parents in 1938, Peggy’s parents asked her if she was going to do the same. Believing it would do no good, Peggy did not pursue legal action. Coogan’s case, and cases like Baby Peggy’s, eventually inspired the Coogan Act to protect child actors’ earnings. Working conditions

Schooling for both Peggy and her sister, Louise, was sporadic at best. Neither attended school until the end of the vaudeville era;[Fairfax High in Hollywood didn’t work for her because she needed to work mostly as an extra to support her family during the Great Depression!} for their secondary education, they worked to pay for their tuition at Lawlor Professional School, which offered flexible schedules and allowed them to continue performing in films.

Baby Peggy’s film career abruptly ended in 1925 when her father had a falling out with producer Sol Lesser over her salary and cancelled her contract. She found herself essentially blacklisted and was able to land only one more part in silent films, a minor role in the 1926 picture April Fool.

From 1925 to 1929, Peggy had a successful career as a vaudeville performer. Although her routine, which included a comedy sketch, singing and a dramatic monologue, was initially met with skepticism, it soon became a popular and respected act. Although she was prohibited from “playing the Palace” because of her young age, she appeared onstage there as a special guest. Peggy and her family toured the United States and Canada, performing in major venues, until the family tired of touring.

While on the vaudeville circuit, Peggy was frequently ill with tonsillitis and other ailments; however, she continued working.

Peggy’s father planned to buy a ranch and convert it into a high-end getaway [dude ranch]. However, the stock market crash of 1929 put an immediate halt to the plans. Having made a $75,000 deposit on the land and existing property, the Montgomerys were forced to move to rural Wyoming where they lived near the Jelm Mountains. Peggy found the change in pace refreshing and hoped her stage days were over. However, the family struggled to make a living, and as a last-ditch effort returned to Hollywood in the early 1930s, much to the teen-aged Peggy’s chagrin.

Peggy posed for publicity photos with Douglas Fairbanks Sr. and signed George Ullman as her manager. Hopes of a comeback were mostly dashed by false rumors of a bad screen test that had never taken place. The entire family was forced to take extra work. She loathed screen work and retired soon after appearing in Having Wonderful Time in 1938.

Peggy married Gordon Ayres in 1938 and a few years later adopted the name Diana Ayres in an effort to distance herself from the Baby Peggy image. Working at the time as a writer for radio shows, she found that people who figured out who she was were more interested in her Baby Peggy persona than in her writing abilities.

Eventually, after years of emotional struggle and open derision from Hollywood insiders and the media, Cary made peace with her Baby Peggy past. She has had successful careers as a publisher, historian, and author on Hollywood subjects, writing, among other works, an autobiography of her life as a child star, What Ever Happened to Baby Peggy: The Autobiography of Hollywood’s Pioneer Child Star, and a biography of her contemporary and rival, Jackie Coogan: The World’s Boy King: A Biography of Hollywood’s Legendary Child Star.

As an adult, Cary has worked on numerous books about the early film industry, Hollywood cowboys, and harsh working conditions for child stars in Hollywood. At the end of her own autobiography, she recounts the fates of numerous child stars, including Judy Garland and Shirley Temple. She has also advocated for reforms in child performer protection laws, most recently as a member of the organization A Minor Consideration.

She has appeared in numerous television documentaries and interviews about her work, and she has made guest appearances at silent film festivals.

At the age of seventeen, trying to escape the film industry and her parents’ plans for her life, Cary ran away from home and rented an apartment with her sister Louise. She married actor Gordon Ayres, whom she met on the set of Ah, Wilderness!, in 1938. They divorced in 1948.

In 1954, she married artist Robert “Bob” Cary (sometimes listed as Bob Carey). They had one son, Mark. They remained married until Bob Cary’s death in 2001.

On December 3, 2012, Turner Classic Movies presented the 2011 documentary Baby Peggy: The Elephant in the Room.

The vast majority of Cary’s Baby Peggy films have not survived and records related to their production have been lost. Century Studios burned down in 1926.”

& from “What ever happened to Baby Peggy” by Diana Serra Cary:

“Okay,” Gould interrupted, “so you can sing. Now let’s see your gam!” He pointed his cigar at my hemline.    I’d played this game before with casting directors. Sometimes it led to a lively chase around the office and, if you were lucky, out the door. Other times it got you the job without a struggle. I lifted my skirts. “Higher!” he ordered.

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“Yeah!” he breathed, fixing me with a lecherous gaze. Then his mood changed sharply. “You eighteen?” I nodded, visions of seventy-five dollars a week dancing before my eyes. “Of course I am!” I said in a throaty, Kay Francis voice. His eyes bored right through me. Quick as a cat he threw his cigar to the floor. “Like hell you are. You’re San Quentin quail. I don’t waste my time on jail bait. Beat it!”

Also elsewhere in the book:

“When I objected, he slipped his hand under my skirt

hand under my skirt

and said, “You told me you wanted to be a writer. Well, you can’t write about life if you don’t experience it!”

“Still, a child-star mania of the magnitude and intensity that had surrounded me in the twenties did not occur again until 1934, when Shirley Temple burst upon the screen. With her arrival public adoration of child stars once again became a worldwide phenomenon, and every major studio had to have one.”      “MGM had Judy. Fox had Shirley Temple and Jane Withers, Paramount boasted Virginia Weidler, Edith Fellows starred at Columbia, and Deanna Durbin’s box-office magic was bringing Universal back from the brink of bankruptcy.” 

[Baby Peggy currently resides in Merced County California. Also, She is the oldest living silent movie star.]

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Someone’s mom bobby-soxer:

middle aged

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Red ballerina flats!

red shoes

Just like mine from Walmart:

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& Brie as Shirley:

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peggy and flo

um hi

brie the bobby-soxer:

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Jane Withers


mostly from wikipedia:

[my cousin donna looks like jane withers –just ask mom!] is an American actress best known for being one of the most popular child film stars of the 1930s and early 1940s, as well as for her portrayal of “Josephine the Plumber” in a series of TV commercials for Comet cleanser in the 1960s and early 1970s.

Withers began her career as a child actress, first on local radio broadcasts in Atlanta, Georgia as “Dixie’s Dainty Dewdrop”. By the age of three, she was singing and imitating adult celebrities. In the early 1930s Withers and her family moved to Hollywood; she worked as an extra and a bit part player in several films in 1932 and 1933.

Withers’s big break came when she landed a supporting role in the 1934 Shirley Temple film Bright Eyes. Her character Joy Smythe was spoiled and obnoxious, a perfect foil to Temple’s sweet personality. In a 2006 interview on TCM’s Private Screenings with Robert Osborne, Withers recalled that she was hesitant to take this role because she had to be so “mean” to Shirley Temple and she thought the public would hate her for it. In a humorous scene of the two little girls playing with dolls, Withers tells Temple that she is going to the kitchen to get “the biggest knife I can find and operate on YOUR doll!” She also tells Temple: “There ain’t any Santa Claus, because my psychoanalyst told me!” Withers received positive notices for her work, and was awarded a long-term contract with Fox.

Withers became one of the top 10 box-office stars in 1937 and 1938. Her popularity was such that Fox gave her “name” co-stars: the Ritz Brothers (in Pack Up Your Troubles) and Gene Autry (in Shooting High). Withers also took a flyer in screenwriting: she wrote the original story filmed as Small Town Deb, under the pseudonym “Jerrie Walters.”

Withers kept working in the 1940s; she made 16 films for Fox, Columbia, and Republic Pictures. Her “sweet sixteen” birthday party was filmed by Paramount for the Hedda Hopper’s Hollywood series.

In 1947, in her early twenties, Withers retired for several years from acting, after marrying wealthy Texas oil man, William P. Moss Jr., and had three children by him. The marriage was not a happy one and lasted only six years. Though she suffered from rheumatoid arthritis, it never stopped Jane’s spirit.

In 1955, she remarried, this time to Kenneth Errair, one-quarter of the harmonizing group “The Four Freshmen.” They had two children. The same year, she earned a supporting role in the film classic, Giant.

In 1955, while filming the movie Giant Jane developed a friendship with James Dean. In the DVD special features she tells the story that Dean had a favorite pink cowboy shirt he wore all the time. He never let it go the laundry for fear it would be lost like the other shirts he had. Withers convinced him to let her wash it for him. She did this often and when he left to go to the race he gave her his shirt to wash and have ready for him when he came back. James Dean died that day in the fateful fatal car wreck in California. Withers still keeps his shirt and the fond memories of him.

By the mid-1960s, Withers gained fame again as “Josephine the Plumber,” a character in a long-running and popular series of television commercials for Comet cleanser, and the veteran TV-ad pitchwoman’s beloved character lasted into the 1970s.

A December 15, 2008 Advertising Age article about Flo, the Progressive Insurance TV commercial character played by Stephanie Courtney, said that Flo, “… is a weirdly sincere, post-modern Josephine the Plumber who just really wants to help. She has: The brand is flourishing.”

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speaking of which, they should do one commercial with perky Flo the insurance lady wearing a dress:


It would be sensational!

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Elisabeth Moss

(born July 24, 1982) is an American actress.

Elisabeth Moss was born in Los Angeles, California, the daughter of musicians. She began acting in 1990.

Since July 2007, she has played secretary turned copywriter Peggy Olson on the AMC dramatic series Mad Men, about Madison Avenue professionals, during the era from 1960 to 1965. In 2009, Moss was nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series.

anyway, she is the perfect peggy!

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bobby-soxing


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rebecca starr:

with glasses and bangs, while wearing school-girl loafers and bobby socks (pigtails too!):

this is a really good look for her!

here she is with mister 18 inch tony duncan:


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brie mom:

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here is PTA soccer mom janet mason (again!) on a date at lexington steele’s house, while her husband films the action:


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there is something really special about this video!

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oh! almost forgot!

here is 23 year old mom Violet dressed for school:


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last month’s mystery photo was marcella (russian?):


although her videos are too extreme for my taste, i really love the cute outfits she wears!