Miss Ethel Warwick
Ethel Warwick (1882 – 1951) was a British stage actress, appearing in both plays and films.
Study of miss Ethel Warwick, by John William Godward
Miss Ethel Warwick - Actress - (Rotary Postcard)
Ethel Warwick - National Portrait Gallery - 1906
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Hot Vintage Stage Actress Round 1
Edna Goodrich: Paprika in The Runways (1903 Broadway); Felicia in The Rollicking Girl (1905 Broadway); Maude in A Jolly Baron (1906 Broadway)
Ethel Warwick: Lady Macbeth in Macbeth (1920 Stratford); Mrs Tidmarsh in The Man From Blankley's (1930 West End); Mrs Scaife in Poison Pen (1938 West End)
Propaganda under the cut
Edna Goodrich:
Ethel Warwick:
Ok so this is kind of a weird niche thing to write propaganda about but I’m about to start an art history degree and my all time favorite art is Pre-Raphaelite stuff, and while I was looking for credits for Ethel Warwick’s submission I found out that she was the model for my favorite painting!
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promotional photo for British stage and film actress, Ethel Warwick c.1900
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rules: spell your url with song titles and then tag as many people as there are letters
thank you sm for the tags @persephone-girl @mandoisapunk @ilovepedro i really appreciate u all still including me in tings even tho i haven't been active, my heart is sooooo big
bless the telephone - labi siffre
romeo and juliet - dire straits
englishman in new york - sting
a house is not a home - dionne warwick
knee socks - arctic monkeys
francis forever - mitski
a&w - lana del rey
sun bleached flies - ethel cain
tender - blur
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across the universe - fiona apple
turbines/pigs - black country, new road
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just crazy love - fleetwood mac
oblivion - grimes
everybody's talkin' - harry nilsson
lover, you should've come over - jeff buckley
smackwater jack - carole king
tagging: anyone who hasn't done it yet! just tag me in urs so i can be nosey xxx
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Rolling Stone Magazine Top 200 Singers - The Omissions List
Once in awhile, I’ll do a music themed blog post and boy do I have a post for you. Rolling Stone Magazine opens 2023 with a list that no one asked for. Their 200 Singers list is an all time low for the once flourishing magazine. When you include auto-tuned singers like Billie Eilish, Taylor Swift, Beyonce, Ariana Grande, Lana Del Ray and dull as dishwater singers (again, my opinion) like Morrissey, Courtney Love, Michael Stipe, Bono, Bruce Springsteen and Eddie Vedder, you lose credibility in my book. Here are the singers of different backgrounds, genres, and vocalizations (in alphabetical order) that Rolling Stone failed to include on their inept list:
Jon Anderson
Julie Andrews
Paul Anka
Tina Arena
Charles Aznavour
Michael Ball
Jimmy Barnes
The Bee Gees (Barry, Maurice and Robin Gibb)
Pat Benatar
Tony Bennett
Andrea Bocelli
Jay Black
Colin Blunstone
Michael Bolton
Gary Brooker
Jack Bruce
Eric Burdon
Maria Callas
Eric Carmen
Paul Carrack
Enrico Caruso
Shirley Cesar
Peter Cetera
Eric Clapton
Petula Clark
Joe Cocker
Nat King Cole
Phil Collins
Perry Como
Burton Cummings
Bobby Darin
Sammy Davis Jr.
Neil Diamond
Judith Durham
The Everly Brothers (Don and Phil)
John Farnham
Dan Fogelberg
Marie Fredriksson
Art Garfunkel
Judy Garland
Vince Gill
Ian Gillan
Lou Gramm
Daryl Hall
Johnny Hallyday
Morten Harket
George Harrison
Russell Hitchcock
Noddy Holder
Mick Hucknall
Billy Joel
Brian Johnson
Tom Jones
Eddie Kendricks
Carole King
Johnny Maestro
Steve Marriott
Dean Martin
Michael McDonald
Meat Loaf
Ethel Merman
Klaus Meine
Liza Minnelli
Jim Morrison
Anthony Newley
Harry Nilsson
Luciano Pavarotti
Gene Pitney
Leontyne Price
Maddy Prior
The Righteous Brothers (Bobby Hatfield and Bill Medley)
Paul Rodgers
Sam and Dave (Sam Moore and Dave Prater)
Neil Sedaka
Bon Scott
Beverly Sills
Carly Simon
Paul Simon
Levi Stubbs
James Taylor
Frankie Valli
Sarah Vaughan
Anthony Warlow
Dionne Warwick
Ann Wilson
Carl Wilson
Steve Winwood
Robin Zander
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I was tagged by @perfectlullabies to post some songs that I’ve been listening to as of late!! 𓆩♡𓆪
♡ Ringfinger- Nine Inch Nails
♡ Burning Memories- Ray Price
♡ There’s a Honky Tonk Angel (Who Will Take Me Back In) - Elvis Presley
♡ Sun Bleached Flies- Ethel Cain
♡ The Cardinal Sin- Dead Can Dance
♡ I Can Feel- Strawberry Switchblade
♡ Don’t Make Me Over- Dionne Warwick
♡ Appalachia- Chelsea Wolfe
♡ White Elephant- Nick Cave & Warren Ellis
I tag @isuhhbelll @carnalove @peppermint-candy
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The lament for icarus
The Lament for Icarus may have been conceived as a tribute to Leighton who had died in 1896, but as Simon Toll has recently suggested ( Herbert James Draper: A Life Study, by Simon Toll, 2001), it may also be a more private statement of loss, following the death of Draper’s father in 1898. Indeed, so worthy was the work considered when exhibited at the Academy in 1898 that it was purchased by the Chantrey Bequest on behalf of the nation. Although Draper abided by the persistent studio convention of posing male and female models separately, by the late nineteenth century audiences had come to accept the frankly erotic interaction of those models on the canvas, so much so that it was now possible to place the male nude under the desiring female gaze. In developing the composition Draper adopted Leighton’s method of making separate figure studies for which he employed four youthful models-Ethel Gurden, Ethel Warwick, Florence Bird and Luigi di Luca-all of whom were Academy professionals. The theme of transience is reiterated by the symbols of the lyre and wreath, and through the passage of sunlight which casts an iridescent glow on distant cliffs. The body of Icarus is shown draped almost languidly on his wings and attended by three sea nymphs who, overawed at this image of physical perfection, are shown lamenting his death. The painting is an imaginative adaptation of the Icarus legend which had become a popular pretext for the representation of ephebic beauty following the exhibition of Leighton’s Daedalus and Icarus in 1869. The Lament for Icarus, with its liquid light effects and mastery of form, provides testimony to Draper’s Continental allegiances. Trained at the Royal Academy and at the Académie Julian in Paris where he worked under Boulanger and Lefèbvre, he was awarded a Gold Medal and traveling scholarship by the Royal Academy in 1889 which enabled him to continue his studies in Europe before completing his education in Rome. Primarily a painter of mythological marine subjects, Draper is often regarded as a successor to Frederic Leighton more by virtue of his consummate technique than his subject-matter.
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John William Godward (1861 - 1922)
Study of a Head in Drapery, Miss Ethel Warwick, 1898
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Ethel Warwick Actress and Artist's Model
Painted by John William Godward
Study of a Head in Drapery, Miss Ethel Warwick, 1899, John William Godward
Ethel Warwick by Unknown Photographer
Ethel Warwick, 1900, Edward Linley Sambourne
A Beauty, John William Godward
Study of a Girls Head, 1899, John William Godward
Ethel Warwick, c.1906, published by Rotary Photographic Co Ltd
Ethel Warwick by Unknown Photographer
The Letter (A Classical Maiden), 1899, John William Godward
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[1] Study of Florence (Florrie) Bird as Sea Nymph.
[2] Study of Luigi di Luca (?) as Icarus.
[3] & [4] Study of Ethel Gurden and Ethel Warwick (?) as Sea Nymphs.
The lament for Icarus.
Herbert James Draper (1863-1920)
Ca.(?) Black and white chalks on grey paper.
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Ethel Warwick - Born 1882
(So sorry for late posts! I’m still job hunting and have to change priorities for that. I will still try to post when I can. :) )
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Ethel Warwick
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British actress, Ethel Warwick c.1900
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