Tumgik
#Wonder Woman 1974
newgrean · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
My favorite classic Wonder Woman tropes: the sound it makes when she does a Big Jump, and her go-to fighting style: throwing henchmen into empty cardboard boxes!
26 notes · View notes
c-schroed · 4 days
Text
Spouse and I were watching Wonder Woman 1984 this weekend and somehow I had this feeling that...
Tumblr media
(Wonder Woman 1984, 2020)
... is very much like...
Tumblr media
Tumblr media
(Sailor Moon, 1992-1997)
But then I found out that...
Tumblr media Tumblr media
(Wonder Woman, 1974-1979)
So here I stand corrected.
Tumblr media
4 notes · View notes
Note
Hello! I recently found another villain/heroine ship you might enjoy. The very first Wonder Woman movie came out in 1974 and starred Cathy Lee Crosby as Diana/WW. The movie is cute, but Diana has INCREDIBLE chemistry with the villain, Abner Smith (played by the very charming Ricardo Montalban). Pretty rare occurrence for a 1970s superhero film, but their flirtatious dynamic is explored - in fact, Diana's last line references her relationship with Abner. I thought I'd see if you knew of it :)
I've watched it two days ago with my boyfriend and the final scenes are really charming T_T
The movie itself didn't age well (girl spy movie screaming 70s is not my thing), but once Abner Smith interacts with Wonder Woman you feel the charm pouring out from the screen.
My boy is such a good loser when she beats him in the end, like he really likes her style
And when he asks for a cigarette just to hold her hand...
Tumblr media
I didn't immediately realized the last line was about their relationship, but you're so right. Homegirl felt the chemistry too T_T
Thanks so much for the rec!
3 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
DC Comics on sale in May, 1974.
Even the puppy!
37 notes · View notes
vonter-voman · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Lynda Carter’s debut on the screen in Nakia (1974), starring Robert Forster.
127 notes · View notes
Text
Can you imagine an alternate universe where the classic tv shows of our favorite actors crossover with one another?
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
22 notes · View notes
darkeraven22 · 2 months
Text
WB Wonder Woman 1974 Movie Pilot Review Finale
Religious Apologetics Minimal Facts? Stand Aside! Here’s Wonder Woman 1974’s Minimal Action!Are you going to be surprised that Wonder Woman 1974 ends as it ran? Dull, plodding and boring?!? No? Didn’t think so. Plus side? We spend the end with the rich vocal tones of Ricardo Montalban. As far as this movie pilot is concerned? He’s the rich Corinthian Leather of this substandard Cathy Lee Crosby…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
weirdrandomkinky · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Cathy Lee Crosby
1 note · View note
vintagetvstars · 2 days
Text
Diana Rigg Vs. Nichelle Nichols
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Propaganda
Diana Rigg - (The Avengers, Diana) - Honestly? Just check her out as Emma Peel in any episode of The Avengers. The character herself was a legend - an exceptional spy, wonderful fighter, certified genius, a true feminist role model - not to mention a renowned sex symbol (that leather catsuit... heavens help me...) and fashion icon. As for Diana personally, she was once described by Michael Parkinson as "the most desirable woman he ever met, who radiated a lustrous beauty". She could pivot from funny quips and endearing jokes to stone-cold badassery like it was nothing, and she looked stunning either way. Whenever I look at a pic of her, I have this feeling she's planning some fun mischief and I get the strongest urge to ask her to take me along. Need anything more? Here, have some pics: (pics below the cut)
Nichelle Nichols - (Star Trek) - She speaks for herself. Legendary, iconic, at the forefront of feminism and civil rights in the 60s, she is a triple threat who did so much more. She volunteered from 1977 to promote recruitment diversity within NASA, including some of the first female and ethnic minority astronauts. Martin Luther King Jr. compared her work on Star Trek as a 'vital role model' to the civil rights marches. She refused to be dismissed, fought for visibility and shone whilst doing so. As a woman in stem, and simply a woman she means the world and stars above to me.
Master Poll List of the Hot Vintage TV Ladies Bracket
Additional propaganda below the cut
Diana Rigg:
When people think of The Avengers, they think Steed and Peel (or they think the marvel property but that’s neither here nor there). I know people who thought Mrs. Peel was the ONLY woman Steed worked with, Diana Rigg was Just That Good (she was only on two seasons!). She was one of those actors that could so perfectly play comedy in any form, her dry, sardonic wit was marvelous, but so was her physical and slapstick comedy, and she could do drama too! If you’ve seen her in interviews you’d also know how fabulously humble and kind she was. I don’t know if I’ve ever been more attracted to a TV woman than I’ve been to Diana Rigg. Some photos of her:
Tumblr media
the SMILE!!!!
Tumblr media
I like a woman that could kill me in one shot
Tumblr media
tell me she's not endearing I DARE you
Tumblr media
Gorgeous, sexy, competent, superior, so much leather. Diana Rigg as Emma Peel in the Avengers was foundational to my sexuality and personality. She's classy, she's cute, she's cocky, in one episode she whips a bunch of guys while wearing a corset and a spiked collar...
excuse me I'm overcome with sinful thoughts
Tumblr media
 hello 911 I think I'm having a heart attack
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Here's an interview I fell for her in:
Diana Rigg | Interview | The Avengers | Good Afternoon | 1974 | Part one
youtube
Her first appearance in The Avengers (In series 4, if you can believe it):
The Avengers: Emma Peel First Appearance HD
youtube
Nichelle Nichols:
She is the original badass babe. She was a black woman in a leading role on TV in the 60s, a trailblazer for black actresses for years to come. She is so beautiful and so awesome.
Tumblr media
she's fantastic. have you seen her? paved the way for black actresses on TV even while her lines and scenes were being cut and improvised the most iconic uhura line in the series. (sulu: "I'll save you, fair maiden!" uhura, pushing him away: "sorry, neither!") she's incredibly talented and it's a crime the show didn't give her more screen time (or make her sing more often because she also has a beautiful voice!)
Tumblr media
“Sorry, neither” in response to “fair maiden” was ad libbed by her. There’s a lot more I could say but what else do you need??
Tumblr media
A sci-fi icon!
Tumblr media
She was such a trailblazer, and Uhura was such an important character for so many people to be able to see on TV. Apparently Mae Jemison (the first African American woman to go into space) cited her as a reason she wanted to become an astronaut. She was just an absolute legend!
Tumblr media
The story of Martin Luther King telling her not to quit Star Trek gives me chills. Representation matters. “Thank you so much, Dr. King. I’m really going to miss my co-stars.” Dr. King's smile, Nichols recalled, vanished from his face. "He said, 'What are you talking about?'" the actress explained. "I told him. He said, 'You cannot,' and so help me, this man practically repeated verbatim what Gene said. He said, 'Don’t you see what this man is doing, who has written this? This is the future. He has established us as we should be seen. 300 years from now, we are here. We are marching. And this is the first step. When we see you, we see ourselves, and we see ourselves as intelligent and beautiful and proud.' He goes on and I’m looking at him and my knees are buckling. I said, 'I…, I…' And he said, 'You turn on your television and the news comes on and you see us marching and peaceful, you see the peaceful civil disobedience, and you see the dogs and see the fire hoses, and we all know they cannot destroy us because we are there in the 23rd Century.'"
Tumblr media
She shared the first interracial kiss on Star Trek, helped propel real life African American women into space-related careers, and looks divine in a mini skirt.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
HOW DID UHURA WALK BACKWARDS SO FAR??? WOW!
129 notes · View notes
laundrycannon · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
So I was thinking about the name Marlo for the Welcome Home company and wondered if it meant anything. Looking up the name Marlo on baby names immediately relates to a woman named Marlo Thomas:
Tumblr media
"Free To Be... You and Me," huh. I looked that up and it brought up an album made in 1972 and a multimedia TV special that was made in 1974.
Tumblr media
The whole supporting gender neutrality seems to relate to Welcome Home a lot along with the usage of the word "You" that is also important in Welcome Home. But what really struck me was the year that the TV special was made in 1974. That was the same year Welcome Home immediately was taken off the air:
Tumblr media
I went and watched the "Free to Be You and Me" TV special and I was really amazed by how similar it was to what was show in the new hidden commercials video on www.awayfrompryingeyes.net (spoilers for the new update). Here are some screenshots of the TV special and the Welcome Home images. I think they really show an inspiration for some of Welcome Home:
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
It's kind of hard to describe how similar the TV special is to what was shown with the Welcome Home commercials without someone just watching the old special but I think Welcome Home got a sort of inspiration from the TV special. It is kind of dystopian how the old "Free to Be You and Me" special pushed for tolerance and love with commercials that bled straight into the programming and how back at the time there was still a lot of controversy around these gender ideas. The ideas were important though and I think Welcome Home maybe was inspired by this but may go more into the true horror of the gender issues in real life that will surround the characters of Welcome Home. That or the old TV program was just a pretty big inspiration for the style. Who knows?
129 notes · View notes
chthonic-cassandra · 2 months
Note
Hello friend, I was thinking about the Mina-as-a-reincarnated-love-of-Dracula's plot element from the 90's movie and once more wondering where the hell it came from. Do you have any idea if the germ of that element was present in some other vampire/dracula-related media?
Hello my friend! This is an excellent question that others have sought to answer over the years. This is my best recollection right now without consulting all my sources; if others (@atundratoadstool, @forthegothicheroine, anyone else?) remember something I'm forgetting here, feel free to jump in.
The Coppola film was not, properly speaking, the first Dracula adaptation to include a reincarnated wife plotline; that dubious honor goes to the 1974 Dan Curtis adaptation starring Jack Palance, though there the reincarnated wife is Lucy rather than Mina, and also takes much less of the attention and runtime than it does in the Coppola. Blacula, made around the same time as the Curtis film, also has a reincarnation plotline, though there it's of course not involving the characters of Stoker's novel directly.
Dan Curtis was previously the creator of the long-running vampire soap opera Dark Shadows, which I have not myself seen but which I understand has a prominent 'vampire finds the reincarnation of his love' story, and really popularized it as a trope.
Most people trace the origins of the trope to a different undead narrative - the 1932 The Mummy, directed by Karl Freund (cinematographer on Tod Browning's Dracula) and starring Boris Karloff. The Mummy, which I finally watched for the first time a few years ago, is a strikingly compelling though unambiguously orientalist film, and there's a lot in it from which I think subsequent Dracula adaptations have pulled.
The relationship between the undead Imhotep and Helen, who recovers memories of their tragic past life together, is in many ways persuasive. Like the occult opportunist Kay in Son of Dracula to whom I think Helen is rather akin, Helen seems stifled in the modern world (in her case the impression is exacerbated by the hints we get of racism she experiences as a half-Egyptian woman), and it's a rather direct line from her characterization to Lucy Seward in the Badham Dracula, Mina in the Coppola, and ultimately Vanessa Ives. Helen and Imhotep's love cannot succeed because he has the unfortunate impression that he has to kill her and resurrect her as a mummy so they can be together, but the sense the movie conveys of her connecting with her whole self when she recovers her earlier memories, and especially of her devotion to Isis, is quite moving.
Stepping back from the specificity of Dracula as a story, I actually think the reincarnation plotline makes a lot of sense as something that comes into play when you're dealing with immortality and undeath. One of the things that I think makes the way that the Dracula adaptations use it so weird and awkward, aside from the pure arbitrariness, is that they're divorcing the trope from the spiritualist connotations it clearly has in The Mummy, leaving it flat and metaphysically inexplicable. The Mummy is a text with clear origins in the spiritualist movements of its time, with their attendant orientalism - questions about reincarnation are all over those.
I played once myself with trying to recuperate the reincarnated wife trope in a Dracula fic, though I didn't touch the spiritualism stuff. I've been thinking about it, though, because I'm trying to work on Penny Dreadful fic and it's all over that canon (and also because I've been reading some Dion Fortune). I'll keep thinking about it.
63 notes · View notes
medusamagic · 1 month
Text
So you want to know more about Big Barda
Tumblr media
As Tumblr's resident expert on all things Barda, and as Kelly Thompson's Birds of Prey run brings far more attention to the character, I figured it was high time someone stepped in and gave the tumblr world a primer on DC's biggest and boldest heroine.
The Basics:
Introduced in Mister Miracle #4 by Jack Kirby, Big Barda was once the leader of Apokolips' premier death squad, the Female Furies. Trained from birth for a life of violence by Granny Goodness, Barda spent the first 250 years of her life as a living weapon. This all changed when she met Scott Free, a gentle Parademon-in-training with a mysterious past and a knack for escapes. Eventually, she and Scott both escaped to Earth, where they fell in love with both the Earth and each other. She's a lover, she's a fighter, she's a Pokémon card expert, but most of all, SHE BIG.
Barda's signature defining attribute is her raw strength. Her raw muscle allows her to keep up with heavy hitters like Wonder Woman. This isn't to suggest that she's a simple-minded brute, however-- Barda has centuries of military experience under her belt as leader of the Female Furies. She's mastered multiple weapons, including spears, swords, and her signature Mega-Rod.
Below are some reading recommendations for anyone interested in Big Barda:
Essential Runs:
Mister Miracle Vol. 1 #4-18 by Jack Kirby (1971-1974)
This was the run that introduced the world to Big Barda, as well as the Female Furies. If you want to know the basics of Barda, there's no better place to start. This run is collected in a trade, as well as a part in The Fourth World Omnibus Vol. 1.
(NOTE: Even though Barda doesn't appear until issue #4, I suggest you start with Issue #1. It'll help you get acquainted with the rest of the mythos.)
Justice League International #14-24 by Keith Giffen and J.M. DeMatteis (1988-1989)
Big Barda was on the JLI! She plays off the other characters as well as ever, and a lot of what's great about her in Jack Kirby's original run is still here! Definitely check this one out if you want to see her in another team setting. This has been collected in this omnibus.
(NOTE: Once again, I recommend you start from issue #1.)
Popular Runs:
Mister Miracle Vol. 4 #1-12 by Tom King and Mitch Gerads (2017-2018)
Yeah, I know.
Listen, Tom King is a writer with... idiosyncrasies to put it nicely. The characters in the periphery of his stories tend to act really out of character, and his dialogue can be clunky at times. That being said, The Scott/Barda dynamic in this book is excellent, and this book has some of the best art that the Fourth World has seen since the 80s. The series has been collected in a trade.
(NOTE: Did you know that the CIA has over 2003 files on Tom King? Look up "Tom King CIA 2003" for more info!)
Mister Miracle: The Great Escape by Varian Johnson and Daniel Isles (2022)
If you're at all interested in the idea of a Young Adult reimagining of Mister Miracle and Big Barda's origin story with an all-black cast, this book was made for you. It's a bit heavy on the YA tropes, but the Scott/Barda dynamic is really solid. It was released as a standalone graphic novel.
Birds of Prey Vol. 5 #1-??? by Kelly Thompson and Leonardo Romero (2023-)
Admit it, this is the reason you're here. The Cassandra Cain & Big Barda is so instantly iconic, I'm surprised no writer has paired them up sooner. It also helps that this book has the single best Barda look since Jack Kirby's original run. Plus, she gets to throw down with Wonder Woman! What's not to love? This run is still ongoing, but the first 6 issues should be getting a trade pretty soon.
(NOTE: I started writing this before BOP #8 dropped, I had no idea about that thing that happens in the newest issue.)
Stories to Avoid:
Action Comics #592-593 by John Byrne (1987)
This is not a comic book-- it's an infohazard designed to cause pain and suffering to anyone who knows of its existence. Its premise is vile and disrespectful on the surface, and it becomes more insidious when you learn the context of its creation. This pair of issues is profoundly evil, rivaling even Avengers #200 in terms of loathsomeness.
For those who dare to investigate this, Content Warnings for rape, mind control, and human trafficking.
Anyway, let's end on something a bit lighter, shall we?
Remember that Mister Miracle YA graphic novel I mentioned earlier? Barda is getting a graphic novel of her own this summer! It's not out at the time of writing, but the preview pages look promising!
Anyway, I hope you enjoyed that introduction to one of my favorite superheroes ever. Please get back to me on this, I have no one else to talk to about Fourth World stuff.
51 notes · View notes
Tumblr media Tumblr media
I love how Christine Chubbuck has somehow become a femcel icon in the past few years after the 2016 film about her life (which was actually so good) because a lot of women can relate to her which is actually pretty sad tbhh!
She was pretty but in a supposedly severe and intimidating way because she had a strong face and persuasive manner, so the impression was that her resting bitchface and sardonic sense of humour frightened people away. And her talent for excelling in broadcast journalism at such a young age, with a bright future ahead of her renders her fate even more bizarre.
But it begs the question: if a more beautiful, intelligent, talented, and successful woman than many blew her brains out live on TV in 1974, what remains for the rest of us?
There’s this impression that in the 2020s women have it easy bc of dating apps and incel concepts like hypergamy. Why in an era where we are more connected than ever does Christine become a meme queen among weird edgelord girls? She lived in an era before the internet and dating apps, yet she is still relevant to loveless modern females to this day.
It turns out that even if you are an attractive and educated female with a modicum of success, you can still live an empty, isolated and void life where nobody even acknowledges your existence or wants to be around you.
But Christine stands apart from the rest of us because she was bold and deranged enough to kill herself live on air, which still shocks in an era of Bestgore, Liveleak and murderous shooting spree Go-Pro vids.
Christine always said that only blood and guts spoke to the larger public, and she used the gore of her own body to etch herself into the broader social memory and psychological fabric of 20th century pop culture and media.
She was the premier femcel martyr of the 70s, and we still look to her and wonder why she turned that gun on herself when she had a sleek modelesque exterior, drive for intellect and self-education, and a polished public persona at the mere age of 29. Her spirit still speaks to each individual woman who somehow sees herself in Christine. Also her horoscope was Cancer so go figure.
Edit: ok she was a Virgo but my point still stands 🫠
345 notes · View notes
bitter69uk · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
"I loved Candy, and she adored me. She had such a strong sense of femininity … her femininity was even stronger than mine. I'd sometime slip and uncross my legs, but you'd never see Candy doing that. She always had her legs crossed just right. She'd fluff her hair and even flirt with my boyfriend, but I was never threatened by her. She so strongly appealed to me as a wonderful human being. The last time I saw her she was wearing this fabulous purple Harlow-ish nightgown. She was eating chocolate."
/ From Julie Newmar’s eulogy at Candy Darling’s funeral at The Frank E Campbell Funeral Chapel /
“Warhol superstar Candy Darling is synonymous with doomed glamour — a gorgeous woman playing a dying gorgeous woman. The image of her laid up in hospital, looking ready for her close-up in full makeup with one black rose on the pillow beside her, looks like a staged photo for a fashion magazine. But that picture, taken by Peter Hujar, is as staged as it is real. Candy Darling died of lymphoma in that hospital room in 1974. She was 29.”
/ From “50 years after Candy Darling’s death, Warhol superstar’s struggle as a trans actress still resonates” by Jessica Ferri, The Los Angeles Times, 18 March 2024 /
Died on this day fifty years ago: ethereally beautiful, memorable and funny transgender Warhol Superstar Candy Darling (24 November 1944 - 21 March 1974). (Yes, THE Candy “from out on the Island” commemorated in the 1972 Lou Reed song “Walk on the Wild Side”). Coincidentally, the ambitious new ten-years-in-the-making biography Candy Darling: Dreamer, Icon, Superstar by Cynthia Carr just dropped this month, and I can’t wait to devour it. Pictured: portrait of Darling on her deathbed by Peter Hujar (1934 – 1987).
24 notes · View notes
harrisonarchive · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Photo by Pattie Boyd.
A look at interior decorating at Friar Park in the early ‘70s — “Pattie has methodically and lovingly put the place together. Lalique and Tiffany lamps blend with the inlaid parquet floors. The Gothic ceilings are painted a wonderful mixture of mauve, rust, green and yellow. In the study, based on Marie Antoinette’s bedroom, lavender, pink, blue, peach, eau de nil, cream and rose are reflected in the shine on the marble floor. From Hollywood she brought green grape lights, snapped up at an auction when MGM was closing down. In the North she found a factory to weave carpets in Art Deco styles. From India she brought back ivory inlaid desks, Buddhas and miniatures. When she finally tracked down just the right shade of creamy slub silk for her drawingroom curtains she had a friend print a swirl of art nouveau patterns in turquoise, blue, and mauve. She’s left them unlined so the sunlight can filter through.” - Ossie Clark, Woman’s Own, 1974 “[On vacation in Portugal in 1973] we would even go to tile stores, as George loved ceramic tile. During one of the visits, he custom-ordered enough tile to make a mural of the Hare Krishna mantra for one of the areas in Friar Park, closely instructing the tile designer. The language barrier was a bit of a hurdle, but I speak Spanish, which is close enough to Portuguese so that I could be of some help. A year or so later, the tile arrived at his home and the mural was finally completed. I remember how happy he was. God-reminding artifacts and environments — glimpses into eternity — were high on his list of priorities, whether expressed in murals, paintings, photos of saints, his gardens, or of course his music.” - Gary Wright, Dream Weaver: Music, Meditation, And My Friendship With George Harrison (2014) (x)
43 notes · View notes
threadfall · 26 days
Text
Pern Resources
This is an ongoing collection of links* that should cover a whole range of bits and pieces relating to Dragonriders of Pern and Anne McCaffrey – from interviews to interesting articles!
* I check these regularly, but I cannot vouch for if the domains still exist and, if not, what is currently on them. A lot of resources relating to Pern are from the 90s/early 2000s and liable to be replaced by random hosting spam. EDIT: walks-the-ages has added some excellent comments about the Wayback Machine! (And many thanks for backing the pages up on it.)
World Building – Canon
Dragon Lover's Guide to Pern, by Jody Lynn Nye – Link
Hosted by peoplepern.narod.ru, this website is in Russian but has a full English digitised DLG complete with pictures.
All the Songs of Pern – Link
Song Lyrics and Poetry – Link
Music From the World of Anne McCaffrey's Pern by Tania Opland and Mike Freeman – Link
It's worth noting that while the songbooks and CDs are available to buy, all the music is also available through Spotify.
Curses, Oaths, and Maledicta – Links
Pernese Sayings/Curses from Pern Etc. – Links
World Building – 'Fanon'
News From Bree – Multiple links below!
Threadfall Patterns – Link Pern Demographics – Link Can Menolly Outrun Thread? – Link Dragon Demographics – Link Bargaining for Bubbly Pies – Link Originally a Tolkien fanzine between 1970-1988, the site is now a resource that covers multiple topics of interest to Hartley Patterson.
On Impression, by Faye Upton – Link
A multi-part essay on Upton's thoughts about how Impression does/should work, and its relation to the canon of the fanwork Dragonchoice.
Kadanzar Weyr Handbook – Link
While no longer active (since 2013 as of 2024), Kadanzar has multiple articles talking in depth about the 'canon' of their site, which are interesting reads for how Pern may have functioned. The link is specifically to a text page sharing all of the files uploaded to Kadanzar, and may take some time to load. Not all of the files are world building information (some are just site lists), however many are.
Living On Pern – Link
Shoulder Knots by Wicked Zoeygirl on Deviantart – Link
Oath Roleplay Resources – Link
Notable for its page on dragons and its 'non-canon' charter, which collects or infers mentioned rights from the books.
Fandom Topics
A Dragonlover's Guide to Pern Fandom from Kadanzer Weyr – Link
Anne McCaffrey – Interviews
Luna Monthly #56, November 1974 – Link
Hosted by FanAc.org, a fan history archive, and conducted by Paul Walker. This heavily discusses gender in the Sci-Fi genre.
Princessions #14, Summer 1983 – Link
Hosted on Google Drive, by this blog runner. Princessions was a Wonder Woman newszine, but switched to being about uplifting women's voices in the Scifantasy space. The interviews take place during the White Dragon book tour.
The Power of Science Fiction and Fantasy with Anne McCaffrey & Elizabeth Ann Scarborough – Link
Hosted on Youtube by A DISCUSSION WITH National Authors on Tour, conducted by Kay Drache of Hennepin County Library.
Collaborating with Anne McCaffrey: An interview with Elizabeth Moon – Link
Hosted on katemacdonald.net, conducted by Kate Macdonald. This talks at length about Moon writing the Planet Pirate series.
Anne McCaffrey - Women Writers, Channel 4 1988 – Link
Hosted on Youtube by Nearrrggghh.
Anne McCaffrey: Norwescon 16 Interview & House Tour – Link
Advice from a Master: Anne McCaffrey – Part 1, Part 2, Part 3
18 notes · View notes