Lilyan Tashman first wore these fantastic earrings as Alice-Duchess of Lincolnwood in the 1926 film Love’s Blindness.
The earrings are a bit early to have been made by Joseff of Hollywood, though it is not impossible. The costume designers attached to the film were André-ani, Kathleen Kay, and Maude Marsh, so it is likely one of them was responsible for making or purchasing the pieces.
The earrings were later worn by Carmel Myers in a promotional photo for MGM sometime in the late 1920s.
Donna Reed in a studio portrait by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, April 1955. It was MGM who had Donna change her last name from Mullenger to Reed in 1941 due to anti-German sentiment. "A studio publicist hung the name on me, and I never did like it", she later said. "I hear 'Donna Reed' and I think of a tall, chic, austere blonde that isn't me. 'Donna Reed' – it has a cold, forbidding sound."
Barry Keoghan and Jacob Elordi star provocatively as Oxford freshmen in a satirical riff on The Talented Mr. Ripley's exploration of British class warfare by way of Brideshead Revisited. It's ultimately a hollow pastiche of a psychosexual thriller without much of any substance. Fennell toys with a seductive queer obsession but quickly trades in the intrigue for cheap thrills in a boring dive into the excess of obscene privilege.
Despite some delicious performances from Rosamund Pike, Richard E. Grant, and Alison Oliver as an insidiously rich family with a palatial estate, the glossy nature of the film's high-class production cannot hide its superficially insubstantial gothic interpretation of eating the rich. It's only so much fun watching stylishly bad people behaving poorly all the time.
Happy Late 60th Anniversary to The Pink Panther!!!!
According to Wikipedia, The Pink Panther movie was actually released first in Italy in December 18, 1963 before the character made his debut in United States on March 18, 1964: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pink_Panther_(1963_film)