Showing posts with label comic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comic. Show all posts

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Hidden Treasures

Hello Be-Bops! How are you doing?

Although I've read many posts about the great artist Gil Elvgren, this will be my turn but I don't want to write about his life and career because I bet you know it.
gil elvgren
Self portrait
I always felt attracted to his art. It reads, he was one of the most important Pin Up and glamour artists of the 20th century.
Elvgren never portrayed women like femme fatale. His illustrations were cute, sweet and cheeky at once. His gals could be 'the girl next door', who revealed their lingerie and stockings in embarrasing situations: a breeze, an arrow, a posture, a whiteware, a playful pet...Anything was the perfect pretext for lifting their skirts up and showing their lovely legs. I do recommend you this article: Gil Elvgren and his real Pin Ups. Have a look! you will love it!

Gil Elvgren Cooling Off A C
Cooling Off (A Cool Number) (1958)
Gil Elvgren Finders Keepers
Finders Keepers (1945)
Gil Elvgren Hold Everything
Hold Everything (1962)
Gil Elvgren Screen Test 1968
Screen Test (1968)
Gil Elvgren The Wrong Nail
The Wrong Nail (1967)
Next picture shows my custom Pin Up floor lamp. It's decorating my living room from now on :)
lamp1
Custom Pin Up Floor Lamp ♥
Did you like it?
What would you need to have one?
ingredients
Ingredients :)
I bought a cheap paper floor lamp, you can find lots of them in IKEA. The Pin Up illustrations belonged to an old calendar, but you can print some of them from the internet. It's so easy to do! :)
If you need some inspiration, just have a look around this beautiful blog: Vintage. El Glamour de AntañoNena Kosta designs some cute collages and they would be grand for your custom lamp! :)

To finish, next picture was taken by my boyfriend 
and I was the humble model.
It's my little tribute to Gil Elvgren 

yo
My name is Guybrush Threepwood
and I want to be a pirate! hahaha ;)
This was the inspirational picture: Hidden Treasures (1954)
hidden
Hidden Treasures (1954)
Love,
♡Lorena Be-Bop♡

Thursday, November 15, 2012

The Black Orchid

Hello Be-Bops! Yesterday, it was 14th November that's why in order to celebrate Louise Brooks' birthday, I want to pay tribute to her on my blog. Since I last watched her silent film 'Pandora's box' (1929), she became my favorite flapper, the queen of silent-movies. I couldn't look her away. She radiates a incomparable captivating sensuality. Brooks' portrayal of a seductive, thoughtless young woman whose raw sexuality and uninhibited nature bring ruin to herself and those who love her. This film was initially unappreciated, eventually made her a star.
Pandora's box (1929)
Provocative Louise Brooks in Pandora's Box
In 1906, Louise Brooks was born in Cherryvale, Kansas into a difficult family. Her father, Leonard Porter Brooks, was a busy solicitor, who wasn't very strict with his practice to discipline his children. Her mother, Myra Rude was an autistic pianist and their relationship was always at each other's throats. Since she was 5 years old, Brooks was an unfriendly girl who looked her famous hairdo; the bob cut in which the hair is typically cut straight around the head at about jaw-level, often with a bang at the front.
Young Louise Brooks 
The Bob Cut was copied by thousands of women
She spent her childhood  surrounded by books and listening to music. She used to perform in front of the neighbourhood children, being her main hobby. It reads, her father had stored so many books that the foundations collapsed in the library area. Growing up, she fervently read Dickens, Thackeray, Carlye, Darwin, Emerson, and Twain masterpieces, nevertheless her favorite author was Goethe who always went with her at dressing rooms. Louise Brooks was a cultured gal, at the school she got good grades in English, Latin, Social Sciences and Maths. She was always reading pieces of literature and writing a diary when she took a break in the shootings. She starred in 17 silent films and, late in life, that diary helped her to write the  witty memoir, 'Lulu in Hollywood'. In the neighbourhood, she was fiercely criticized, chit chat everywhere because Brooks was a rebel, perceptive and unusual girl.

My Disquieting girl
Despite her mother's protection her nine-year old was shattered when a neighbour sexually abused her. Myra was very cruel because she said that Brooks led him on. That fact deeply marked her life, she was incapable of real love and what she defined as 'sexual pleasure' must have bondage features. When she was 14, Brooks became a Lolita because she fell in love with a married man, 'He was one of my cradle snatcher', she said.
Love this pic ♥
After that, she left Kansas and moved in Los Angeles, where she started her career as a dancer joining the Denishawn modern dance company (whose members included founders Ruth St. Denis, and Ted Shawn, as well as a young Martha Graham) in 1922. Next year, Brooks had advanced to a starring role in one work opposite Shawn. A long-simmering personal conflict between Brooks and St. Denis boiled over one day, however, and St. Denis abruptly fired Brooks from the troupe in 1924, telling her in front of the other members that 'I am dismissing you from the company because you want life handed to you on a silver salver'. The words left a strong impression on Brooks; when she drew up an outline for a planned autobiographical novel in 1949, 'The Silver Salver' was the title she gave to the tenth and final chapter.
Also, she had a very high level of culture and this didn't help her in the relationships. Men felt awkward in front of her because they couldn't speak about authors and masterpieces as she did. This was the main reason because of she went to Algonquin Hotel, where bohemian people used to live in.
A woman and two men: Rolled Stockings (1927)
She was nicknamed 'The Black Orchid' due to her hectic life. Getting fed up with double standard, she went away Europe thanks to her friend Barbara Bennett and overthere she was the first woman who danced charleston. She met Marlene Dietrich in a rich decadent European environment, however she was going to see each other some years later.
She was the first woman who danced charleston
At 18 years old, she wrote an article for The New York Times, about the comedy film 'No, no, Nanette' (1940) because whoever must be its author, fell asleep when the movie opened. It was such a successful article that the most famous critics imitated her style. People strongly criticized her, because she was only interested in books, fashion, alcohol and intellectuals such as Aldous Huxley.
Louise Brooks was a cultured person
In 1925, there was another sexual scandal. She met Charles Chaplin and they were shutted away in a room at Ambassador Hotel for 2 months. They did sex orgies with another couple, and at the same time they were playing the piano, dancing, perfomancing, singing...a little bit of everything...
Louise Brooks was object of desire for many people, including Marlene Dietrich, however it was Charles Chaplin who pulled it off.
She enjoyed fostering speculation about her sexuality, cultivating friendships with lesbian and bisexual women including Pepi Lederer and Peggy Fears, but eschewing relationships. She admitted to some lesbian dalliances, including a one-night affair with Greta Garbo. She later described Garbo as masculine but a 'charming and tender lover'. Despite all this, she considered herself neither lesbian nor bisexual.
What was her most famous quality? Brooks had sex appeal. In the 20's , nobody knew what that word meant, however directors took advantage of it. Louise was a pioneer girl, sex isn't taboo for her.
The hottest pic of Louise Brooks
In the summer of 1926, Brooks married Eddie Sutherland, and their honeymoon was at Ambassador Hotel , but this time it took her two days. By 1927 she had fallen 'terribly in love' with George Preston Marshall, owner of a chain of laundries and future owner of the Washington Redskins football team, following a chance meeting with him that she later referred to as 'the most fateful encounter of my life'. She divorced Sutherland, mainly due to her budding relationship with Marshall, in June 1928.
Eddie Sutherland and Louise Brooks
In 1929, she starred German silent melodrama 'Pandora's Box', directed by Georg Wilhelm Pabst in his New Objectivity period. The film is based on two plays by Frank Wedekind and Brooks plays the central figure, Lulu. This film is notorious for its frank treatment of modern sexual mores, including one of the first screen portrayals of a lesbian. It reads, this role was going to be to Marlene Dietrich, and she was furious as she didn't get the role.
Brooks then starred in the controversial social drama 'Diary of a Lost Girl' (1929), based on the book by Margarete Böhme and also directed by Pabst. In this film, she dances, has sex and drinks alcohol...A new scandal in Europe, as you can imagine. Next year, she starred 'Prix de Beauté' . All these films were heavily censored, as they were very 'adult' and considered shocking in their time for their portrayals of sexuality, as well as their social satire. In North America, producers ignored her.
Pandora's Box theatrical poster
Brooks was fed up with Hollywood and retired from the screen after completing one last film, the John Wayne western 'Overland Stage Raiders' (1938) in which she played the romantic lead with a long hairstyle that rendered her all but unrecognizable from her 'Lulu' days. After that she came back to New York and finally she  returned to her hometown, Wichita, where she was raised. Overthere, she became Catholic. She loved being in state of sin, to go to a confession and to have sex as a prostitute. She loved being in state of sin over and over again, in a vicious circle.

Overland Stage Raiders (1938)
She wrote a memoir 'Lulu in Hollywood'. One of her fan started to write some love letters to her, and Brooks answered him. He was very surprised, discovering she was a great writer, and it reads he became her lover. 
'Lulu in Hollywood' was a great success, I recommend you, next article: Tales from Louise Brooks.
Lulu in Hollywood
Brooks also had an influence in the graphics world – she had the distinction of inspiring some famous comics: the long-running Dixie Dugan newspaper strip by John H. Striebel that started in the late 1920s and ran until 1966, and the erotic comic books of Valentina, by the late Guido Crepax, which began publication in 1965 and continued for many years. Crepax became a friend and regular correspondent with Louise late in her life. Her famous hairdo is present at strips, as you can see :)

Valentina

Dixie Dugan
On August 8, 1985, Brooks was found dead of a heart attack. She was buried in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Rochester, New York. Her death was a great shock to many European newspapers ,however in North America, she was ignored.
One of her last pic :(

Happy Birthday Mrs Brooks! 

This is my little tribute for you, my couple of hair black orchids.

Hair Black Orchids

Monday, October 29, 2012

╬ Be-Boo series: Vampirella ╬

Forrest J. Ackerman was an American collector of science fiction books and movie memorabilia. In 1969, he was the creator of one of the sexiest women in comics: The superheroine Vampirella, in the company founded by James Warren, Warren Publishing
This company published his first magazines in 1957 and continued in the business for decades. These magazines, which were only for adults amusement, had the American letter format and offered brief articles, well-illustrated with publicity stills and graphic artwork, on horror movies from the silent era to the current date of publication, their stars and filmmakers.

Warren Period: From 1969 to 1983

Vampirella was born by chance. Firstly she was a secondary character for the magazine 'Creepy'. However a voluptuous vampire had to own her magazine. She was drawn by the artists Frank Frazzetta and the Spanish Pepe González

Vampirella #1 (Sept. 1969). Cover art by Frank Frazetta
In spite of the fact that the comics were a big success, the true reason behind was both their covers and illustrations. Pepe González was a great pin up artist, but he wasn't a good comic creator. It reads, he wasn't crazy about the comics, and he used to draw characters out of proportions without previous sketches, poor-quality staging and strip layouts. However his pin up illustrations were masterpieces, he used to contract real people as models. Moreover, Vampirella's adventures took up 5 or 6 inside pages and the rest of the magazine was other comics, therefore readers were utterly pleased. Vampirella had been enchanting fans around the world with her eroticism.
James Warren, little by little, replaced Pepe González on the 'Vampirella throne'. One of my favorite is Enrique Torres. If you want to see the best top ten of Vampirella artists, check out this link.

This is the most famous illustration by Pepe González.
Have you ever read a Vampirella comic? (I used to borrow them from the library). They epitomize a purely 70's aesthetic! The superheroine wears 70's makeup trends such as false lashes, bold eyeliner, the ever-present blue/green eyeshadow and tanned body (although she's a vampire). She is always drawn by artists as a busty woman, wearing a red suit with gold bat emblem, with a white cotton collar attaches to suit, gold ringa, bangs, snaps, and a pair of black leather boots. Vampirella always shows a suggestive pose, that's why male audience loved her comics.
It's not only Vampirella and other characters, the comic's atmosphere is full of 70's references: cars, upholstered sofas and walls, mirrors, furniture, psychedelic backgrounds etcetera.

Unfortunately, the company Warren Publishing demised in the early 80's, Vampirella slept in her coffin during a limbo period. Then, Harris Comics bought the Vampirella stories....and so on But as far as you know... Be-Bop Lashes doesn't like either 80's or 90's ;) so if you want further information check out this website

Who is Vampirella according to Warren Publishing?


Vampirella is an inhabitant of the planet Drakulon, a world where a vampiric race live because blood flows in the rivers. Drakulon orbits around two suns, Satiro&Circe. The first one usually erupts and causes droughts across the Drakulon,  marking certain doom for Vampirella and her race. Due to those effects, the race of which Vampirella is born, the Vampiri, are able to transform themselves into bats at will, have superhuman physical attributes, spread wings when require to fly, and of course they drink blood.
The story begins with the inhabitants of Drakulon dying slowly due to the drying up of its blood. The last few lie dying when a spaceship from Earth crashes on the planet. Vampirella, sent to investigate, is attacked; retaliating, she discovers that the astronauts have blood in their veins. In order for her race to survive, she manages to pilot the ship back to Earth where her adventures begin. Vampirella becomes a 'good' vampire, and devotes her energy to ridding our world of the homegrown 'evil' kind.

Suggestive poses
Vampirella strip comic
Vampirella by Pepe González
Warren Publishing calendar in 1977
Do you want to see more covers? Check out this gallery.
Hope you like the first Be-Boo post!
◕‿◕
Lorena Be-Bop

Friday, August 17, 2012

Korky, Bully Beef & Chips, we'll miss you

Today, I am posting what I read on Metro Herald this morning...The Dandy has gone into lockdown. I am feeling down, because I really love this comic strip. We'll have to read it online, but it won't be the same, I am sure, Fans would rather read them as printed editions.
POOR old Beryl- now she really is in Peril. And for Desperate Dan, that chomp into a cow pie is about to become his last.
Britain's longest-running children's comic The Dandy is to shut after plummeting sales, it was leaked yesterday. Publisher DC Thomson says the final edition will be published on December 4 this year- its 75th birthday.

Company bosses were livid when news of the comic's demise leaked to the outside world and claimed operations were 'in lockdown' to prevent further security lapses.
 Ellis Watson, chief executive of DC Thomson's newspaper and magazine publishing operations, said: 'Now that the cat's out of the bag, I can confirm that this will be our last print edition.
'I've closed down loopholes to ensure much tighter internal security. We've heard about people trying to find out the plans by hacking into www.dandy.com so we've taken it all offline and moved into core project offices.We're in lockdown.'
The closure follows a long-term decline in circulation. Sales stand at about 8,000 copies a week, down from more than 2 million during The Dandy's in the 1950s.
However, cartoon strips will continue in an online-only version of the comic while yhe Dundee-based publisher continues with a review of its portfolio because of 'challenges' in the industry.
The Dandy, which launched in 1937,  has featured characters such as Bananaman, Korky the Cat, Cuddles and Dimples,  Beryl the Peril.
The final comic will include a copy of the first edition. A souvenir book marking the Dandy's 75th anniversary was also launched at a book festival in Edinburgh this week. 
Unfortunately, little by litttle, we'll never be able to see an image like next one, nowadays. 
Computers are destroying childhood and children's play.
Lorena Be-Bop