Just felt like doing a re-roundup of all the pics I could find. Frank Wedekind's "Spring Awakening" at Volksbühne, Berlin, 1929.
Peter Lorre as Moritz Stiefel, Lotte Lenya as Ilse, and that gentleman in the one pic is Carl Balhaus, who went on to play Moritz in the 1929 silent movie.
gorillaz will make the most beautiful song you've ever heard then 2D will say it was inspired by that time he pissed his pants in kohls because someone was hogging the bathroom or some shit
MY GOD HES REAL
Hi! I just wanted to say that I REALLY LIKE YOUR WORK. REALLY. Your drawings are wonderful, so gentle and warm, I want to look at them endlessly.
I admire the way you pick colors and YOUR SCOUT, MY GOD-
100% tastes like delicious and soft waffles with jam... Keep up the good work, I hope you will be fine! *hugs*
THANK YOU SO MUCH
YOUR ART IS SO GOOD MY MY, ITS SO SOFT AND JUST LIKE CALMING TO LOOK AT, I am always glad when your stuff pops up ITS SO GOOD
Also you characterize them so well, I love your soldier he is so silly, him and spy r the best
I hope you are also doing well *hug returned* :)
(Gift scrout)
Last night they were acting Moliere in Fourteenth Street; Dickens was being played through the auspices of Nigel Playfair. Further uptown, George M. Cohan was unveiling the latest George M. Cohan musical comedy. But Broadway, being eternally curious, turned out in greatest numbers at the Biltmore Theater in Forty-Seventh Street, where the result of Mae West's latest encounter with the drama was being performed. This was the exhibit—play is not precisely the word—with a vaudeville background, whose preliminary trip through the Bronx and Queens had been followed by rumors that here was something that might arouse the police to action.
So began the review by an unnamed theater critic for the Times on October 2, 1928. It appeared, not in the arts section, but following a front-page story about the police ... taking action.
The play was Pleasure Man, a reworking by Mae West of her earlier play The Drag. It dealt not with vaudeville, as the critic said, but burlesque, and finished with a lavish drag ball.
Cops were stationed at all theater exits and just as the play was ending, reserves surrounded the front. When the cast tried to leave, they were arrested—56 in all, including West, who also acted in the show.
Of course this attracted audience members (some in evening dress, the Times noted) from other theaters nearby. The presence of cabs and other cars waiting to pick up theater-goers and actors added to the chaos.
Flashlights exploded as news photographers tried to capture the actors being led into paddy wagons. The police had to make five trips to get everyone to the station house on 47th St., where they were charged with indecency.
By 2:30 in the morning, Actors Equity posted bail. West's was $500, which may have been more than the others because she was doubly guilty, having written the play as well as acted in it. The producer, director, and theater staff were not arrested.
For some reason, the cops let the next day's matinee start, but raided it halfway through and arrested everyone once more. They had their own theatrical flair.
The trial wasn't held until April of 1930, and resulted in a hung jury. By that time West was a star, having triumphed in another play of her own called Diamond Lil. The next year she went to Hollywood.
Top photo: J.D. Doyle via Digital Transgender Archive Second photo: NY Daily News
“If anyone needs to go camping in my state…” “If anyone needs to visit their aunt/cousin/friend…”
I know how obnoxious this is to say, but please: reblog this. I see these posts a lot, and I know most of you have good intentions. But these unoffical auntie networks are dangerous, both for those trying to help, and those seeking help. Law enforcement sees you. Violent anti-abortion extremists see you.
[Twitter thread]
I really wanted to draw this because it’s just a cool scene they chillen
happy summer update!
Buster Keaton (writer, uncredited), Groucho Marx, and Chico Marx during the making of "At the Circus" (1939)
Claude Cahun (1894-1954) - Autoportrait (I’m in iraining don’t Kiss Me), 1927
Tirage argentique (10,5 x 7,6 cm)
A stone horse and a ticking clock
Gambit being a little shit cause why not