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#BornThisDay: Writer, Fran Lebowitz

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October 27, 1950Fran Lebowitz:

“All God’s children are not beautiful. Most of God’s children are, in fact, barely presentable.”

She is one of my idols. If you don’t know her, you really should, & you can start with the terrific HBO documentary film Public Speaking (2010) directed by Martin Scorsese, a 90-minute talkfest with essayist & humorist Lebowitz explaining almost everything.

The Scorsese flick is a sophisticated affair, a series of interviews, seamlessly cut, with Lebowitz at the clubby Waverly Inn in NYC’s Greenwich Village. The film is the world view of this very witty & very cynical New Yorker. She is not all that happy with most of the changes she’s seen in her adopted city since she arrived 45 years ago.

Conversation provided at Lebowitz’s skill level used to be celebrated in another era. Scorsese provides the proof with vintage clips that show figures like James Baldwin, Gore Vidal, & William F. Buckley on talk shows from the 1960s. Lebowitz talks about how she was thrilled & inspired when she was a  young person by one of Baldwin’s appearances on the David Susskind Show, pointing out how today’s talk show are no comparison, with guests that are pre-interviewed & plug their product for 5 minutes.

“The opposite of talking isn’t listening. The opposite of talking is waiting.”

In Public Speaking, Lebowitz sort of comes out of the closet, to the shock of no one. She seems perplexed that gay people are fighting for Marriage Equality & the repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell. She says that these issues are the antithesis of freedom & that those are not rights she wants for herself, but she’d vote for them because other gays want them so badly.

Lebowitz is famously paralyzed with what she calls “writer’s blockade” but she has few peers as a public pontificator. Her particular gift has made it possible for her to afford to continue to live in NYC & to hang out with her famous friends.

“Polite conversation is rarely either.”

Born in NJ, her parents owned a furniture store while she was growing up. She was expelled from high school for “non-specific surliness”. Her trademark remains her specialized sneer. Lebowitz decided against college & instead moved to Manhattan. She took jobs driving a taxi & cleaning apartments (“with a small specialty in Venetian blinds”).

When she was just 21 years old she began her column I Cover The Waterfront for Andy Warhol’s Interview Magazine, hired by Warhol himself, before moving over to Mademoiselle a few years later.

“Andy Warhol made fame more famous.”

Lebowitz has long promised a novel, Exterior Signs Of Wealth, named for the French conspicuous-consumption tax figured on the basis of displays of wealth. The novel is supposedly about rich people who want to be artists, & artists who want to be rich people. When asked why the long delay for her first major work of fiction, Lebowitz offers the excuse that she only works on it on the side because “full-time I’m watching daytime TV.”

“Very few people possess true artistic ability. It is therefore both unseemly & unproductive to irritate the situation by making an effort. If you have a burning, restless urge to write or paint, simply eat something sweet & the feeling will pass”

Leibowitz disapproves of pretty much everything except sleep, cigarettes, & fine furniture. Her essays about the difficulty of finding an acceptable apartment to the art of freeloading are classics of social observation. I still re-read her first books Social Studies & Metropolitan Life, both published more than 35 years ago.

Cranky, sardonic, witty, & dry; her essays make me think & make me laugh. She was named one most stylish women in Vanity Fair Magazine’s International Best-Dressed List, & is known to wear bespoke suits from Savile Row’s Anderson & Sheppard. On Hillary Rodham Clinton’s sartorial style, Lebowitz states:

“I don’t think she cares. I don’t think she is interested in how her house looks, where her furniture is from, I don’t think she has any visual interests. & there’s nothing wrong in not caring. A man who doesn’t care about what he looks like, he’s applauded. We say, ‘Oh, he’s not superficial!’ I, myself, am deeply superficial.”

Lebowitz had a reoccurring role on the long-running TV series Law & Order (1990-2010) as a judge & a cameo in Scorsese’s The Wolf Of Wall Street (2013). She had the best ever Proust Questionaire on the back page of Vanity Fair.

I am mad jealous of the idea of having a Manhattan career out of a slim pair of volumes of essays & then chatting away for the next 4 decades. Progress, her first new book in more than 20 years, is scheduled to be published before the end of the year. We will see about that. I think her quips are on a par with Dorothy Parker:

“Ask your child what he wants for dinner only if he’s buying.”

 

“If you are a dog & your owner suggests that you wear a sweater suggest that he wear a tail.”

 

“If you are of the opinion that the contemplation of suicide is sufficient evidence of a poetic nature, do not forget that actions speak louder than words.”

 

“In real life, I assure you, there is no such thing as algebra.”

 

“Romantic love is mental illness. But it’s a pleasurable one. It’s a drug. It distorts reality, & that’s the point of it. It would be impossible to fall in love with someone that you really saw.”

 

The post #BornThisDay: Writer, Fran Lebowitz appeared first on World of Wonder.


G-G-Ghost Appears Lurking in Connecticut Hotel Room! See the TERRIFYING Picture!

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Adam Scott, who goes by the name Mahurma on Imgur, shared the picture below of a BONE-CHILLING phantom that he took inside his Connecticut hotel room. In it, the wraith-like face appears to be watching them from the corner of the room! BOO!

‘Didn’t believe my girlfriend when she said she saw a face on the wall,’ he wrote. ‘Then I took a picture of it.’

Adam and his GF were staying at hotel just outside of New Haven – which he describes as ‘extremely ghost-y with a rich colonial history’ – when the saw the demonic apparition which can be made out against the beige wall.

From the Daily Mail:

The face is partially in line with a ray of light that is shining through a window behind them, though the outline of the face moves well beyond the illuminated sliver peeking through the drapes.

‘I want to show hotel management but I’m worried it will scare staff away!’ Adam commented.

So far over 2 million people have weighed in on the pic of eerie specter, with many commenters noting that the face looks like that of Albert Einstein or George Washington, with a few throwing in some more guesses like Mark Twain or Ben Franklin.

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The post G-G-Ghost Appears Lurking in Connecticut Hotel Room! See the TERRIFYING Picture! appeared first on World of Wonder.

#CookieTime: Top Ten Troop Beverly Hills Fashion Moments That Still Slay Today

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Kim Kardashian West threw a Troop Beverly Hills themed baby shower over the weekend that will literally pitch a tent in your heart strings (and make you want to buy all the cookies) for the classic late eighties film about a woman on a mission in the wilderness.

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Can you even handle North West? (I can’t.)

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332’s Troop Leader Shelley Long AKA Phyllis Neffler’s fashion game was so strong,
did you EVER see any flaws in her fierceness?

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Cool. Just checking.

Without further adieu, let’s take a one-way ticket to Rodeo Drive as we countdown the top ten fashion moments from Troop 332 that still slay today!

10) Troop Beverly Hills - World of Wonder

Phyllis KNEW how to enter a room and even in this uniform…she made a point to stand out. This look left such an impact on the cultural zeitgeist that thousands of fans worldwide have impressively recreated it’s fashion iconography for Halloween (or just for fun).

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Myself included.

9) 

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Neffler AKA real-life Strawberry Shortcake could create shapes out of any silhouette. Carry an assortment of designer shopping bags and you too can shop til you’re drop dead gorgeous.

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8) 

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That’s SO raven. Who’s never met a Raven they didn’t like…

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7)

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Be the girl with the most cake, and let them eat it!

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6)

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Literally the ONLY way to count sheep at night.

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5) 

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This. Is. Everything.

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4)

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What’s more chic than a carton of Lucky’s and a floor length white fur coat? NOTHING.

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3) 

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I live for a monochromatic moment and what better than metallic gold?!

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2)

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Nothing transitions from day to night better than a tuxedo dress. You’ve got business on the top, and party on the pants. This priceless pastel frock makes me go like:

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And will make all the other partygoers go:

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1)

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This floral cupcake (or two hard-shell tacos, depending on how you see it) dress will adorn your lawn FAR better than any pink flamingo.

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There you have it!!!

She’s just SO:

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The post #CookieTime: Top Ten Troop Beverly Hills Fashion Moments That Still Slay Today appeared first on World of Wonder.

Andy Warhol’s Money Hat Can Be Yours for Around $1 Million

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In 1972, Andy Warhol taped a bunch of $10 bills to a straw hat and gave it as a present to friend and confidante Dr. Robert Giller on the occasion of his 30th birthday (see below). It was, according to ArtNet News “a unique objet d’art that personified the devil-may-care attitude of the moment.” Uh, OK.

Unknown by most Warhol scholars and never displayed to the public before this year, the hat, incredibly, has resurfaced. It will hit the auction block at Nye and Company Auctioneers/Appraisers of Bloomfield, New Jersey on November 11, 2015. It is being consigned by Giller’s widow and is estimated between $800,000–$1,200,000.

I don’t know, I don’t know, this feels slightly… over-valued? Like maaaaaaybe Warhol mania is getting a bit out of hand?

Anyway.

Other unusual Warhol items to hit the auction block of late include the artist’s signed lease for his first studio, and a Coco Chanel portrait of suspect authenticity that brought in $247,000 at Mississippi auction house Stevens in September.

The hat will be available for bidding both online and in person beginning at 1:11 pm on November 11, 2015.

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The post Andy Warhol’s Money Hat Can Be Yours for Around $1 Million appeared first on World of Wonder.

The Terrifying REAL-LIFE Stories Behind Some of the Scariest Horror Movies Ever Made

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Screen Rant host Rob Flis explains ten real and creepy stories behind some of the most terrifying horror films – including The Strangers, The Hills Have Eyes, The Silence of the LambsPsycho, and the Exorcism of Emily Rose.

Moviegoers have always been captivated by what they don’t understand, and one of the biggest mysteries of human nature is a dark one: why do we kill? While there is a plethora of social science research into the issue of murder, it still fascinates writers and directors to this day, taking audiences along for the ride. It’s no secret that bad guys appear in film, but finding out that a psychotic on-screen events were based on a true case drives home the point that monsters are very, very real. As you watch let us know your picks of Real Creepy Stories that Inspired movies in the comments section.

(via Laughing Squid)

The post The Terrifying REAL-LIFE Stories Behind Some of the Scariest Horror Movies Ever Made appeared first on World of Wonder.

Get Exclusive Early Access to Tickets and VIP Packages for RuPaul’s DragCon 2016!

Your Ultimate Halloween Transformations Playlist!

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Are you spinning your wheels, unable to come up with a decent Halloween outfit? Does the idea of being Cecil the Lion or Kim Davis leave you flat? FEAR NOT! I’ve compiled a MASSIVE playlist of Halloween-themed or Halloween-adjacent Transformation episodes that’s sure to jumpstart your creative juices! Twenty-seven episodes in all! Including (but not limited to) Mathu Andersen! Detox! Sharon Needles! Manila Luzon! AND MORE! Hours (and hours… and hours…) of pure Transformational BLISS at your fingertips. Start watching NOW!

The post Your Ultimate Halloween Transformations Playlist! appeared first on World of Wonder.

October 28: It’s YOUR Birthday, Bitch!


#BornThisDay: Actor, Elsa Lanchester

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October 28, 1902Elsa Lanchester was born into an eccentric English family. Her parents were true Bohemians, refusing to legalize their union in a conventional way just to satisfy the era’s conservative society.

When she was just 11 years old, Lanchester enrolled at Isadora Duncan‘s School Of Dance in Paris, but the start of WW1 prevented her from graduating & she was sent back home to England.

Even as a young teenager, the war in Europe meant that she was obliged to find work & so she became a dance instructor. When she was just 18 years old, Lanchester was one of the founders of The Children’s Theater Of London where she became a drama teacher. She also helped start an artist collective, Cave Of Harmony Productions, where she & her friends performed songs & sketches at cabarets.

Lanchester made her film debut in One Of The Best (1927) working with another young actor, Charles Laughton. They married in 1929. In 1931, the couple came to the USA so that Laughton could to take a role in a Broadway play. The pair traveled frequently between England & the USA, eventually becoming American citizens in 1950.

In Hollywood, Lanchester had a long career in films & TV, playing eccentric characters with humorous quirks. She and Laughton enjoyed working together & did 12 films including The Private Life Of Henry VIII (1933), Rembrandt (1936), & Witness For The Prosecution (1957), which brought her an Academy Award nomination. They did a picture together titled The Big Clock (1948), which despite the rumors, is not about me.

Lanchester would have her defining iconic role as the Bride Of Frankenstein (1935), directed by the amazingly talented, openly gay, James Whale. In that classic film she also plays Mary Shelley, the young woman who wrote the original Frankenstein novel in 1818. This movie’s bride remains, without a doubt, the most famous female monster in film history. One of my favorite films, gay director/screenwriter Bill Condon’s Gods & Monsters (1998), based on the terrific novel by my friend Christopher Bram, pays homage to the creators of that 1935 production, with Rosalind Ayres smartly portraying Lanchester.

Except for specializing in the idiosyncratic, Lanchester was fortunate to not be stuck in a stereotype & she found work in films in a wide variety of roles & genres: dramas, noir, comedies, but René Clair’s charming The Ghost Goes West (1935) is a favorite, along with: Ladies In Retirement (1941), Tales Of Manhattan (1942), Lassie Come Home (1943), the only good version of gay writer W. Somerset Maugham’s The Razor’s Edge (1946), plus the thriller The Spiral Staircase (1945).

In 1950, she was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for the Loretta Young nun flick Come Back To The Stable. She is especially delightful as a witch in the thinly disguised gay allegory Bell, Book & Candle (1958), based on gay playwright John van Druten’s popular play.

Her husband was gay. Lanchester wrote that she learned Laughton was a homo in 1931, 2 years after their wedding, when they came home one night to find a policeman at their door with a young ruffian who had tried to get money from Laughton after the actor had cruised him earlier that day in Hyde Park. Lanchester didn’t care. The couple had a 30+ year, happy, very modern marriage with each of them taking casual lovers, Lanchester with members of both sexes, while being honest & upfront about their needs & feelings with each other.

In 1960, Laughton & Lanchester bought the house on the beach in Santa Monica next door to pioneering gay couple, writer Christopher Isherwood & artists Don  Bachardy. The 2 pairs became best friends. During that period, Lanchester still was being cast in supporting roles, performing in her own distinctive batty style. She found a home at Disney Studios with films: Mary Poppins (1964), That Darn Cat! (1965) & Blackbeard’s Ghost (1968). She even made an Elvis flick, Easy Come Easy Go (1968).

In the 1970’s, she returned to horror films with Willard (1971), about a rat that was not named Romney & a box-office hit at the time.  She was also in Terror In The Wax Museum (1973), reuniting with other Hollywood stars from the Golden Era: Ray Milland, Maurice Evans, & John Carradine. She played a role spoofing Agatha Christie‘s Miss Marples in Neil Simon’s brazenly funny Murder By Death (1976). Lanchester’s final role was in the comedy Die Laughing (1980), a fitting title. She had worked as an actor for more than 6 decades.

Lanchester wrote a book about her relationship with her famous actor husband, Charles Laughton And I (1938), where she was discreet, of course. But she did publish a memoir Elsa Lanchester Herself (1983) where she writes about Laughton’s gayness. She reported that they never had children because Laughton was homosexual.  Laughton’s pal & occasional costar Maureen O’Hara (God rest her soul), a friend & co-star of Laughton, refuted this. She claimed Laughton had related to her that  the reason the couple never had children was because of a botched abortion Lanchester had early in her career. Lanchester didn’t deny the accusation, but she did say of O’Hara: “She looks as though butter wouldn’t melt in her mouth, or anywhere else.”

Lanchester left for this world in 1986. She was 84 years old when she took her final curtain call. Her ashes were scattered over the Pacific Ocean by Bachardy (Isherwood had died earlier that year).

With her role in Bride Of Frankenstein, Lanchester will forever be a Gay Icon. Parodied perfectly by Mel Brooks in Young Frankenstein (1974), but never ridiculed, her bride is simply one of the most unique, strangest, powerful & troubling portrayals in film history.

The post #BornThisDay: Actor, Elsa Lanchester appeared first on World of Wonder.

#AfterShow: Get Caught Up on AHS Hotel Before Tonight’s New Episode

Transcendent: Meet Nya

Fashion Photo RuView: Raja & Raven Toot & Boot the ALL of the Queens from Season 4 on Reunited!

October 29: It’s YOUR Birthday, Bitch!

#BornThisDay: Writer, Dominick Dunne

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October 29, 1925Dominick Dunne. I remember the day of his passing in the summer of 2009. It was ironic that he died on the very day as his sworn enemy Edward Kennedy. I was such a big fan of his column in Vanity Fair. I would just eat it up each month. He knew everybody & told all.

As I am thinking about him on this, the day of his birth, I am reflecting on the similarities between Dunne & Truman Capote, another of my favorite writers. Both men wrote about the low acts in high society & they both craved celebrity.

Capote labeled his later work “Nonfiction Novels”. Dunne just called his books “Novels”. Openly gay Capote spent his last years doing anything but writing, addicted to drugs & alcohol, appearing incoherent in public & on talk shows. Dunne was following in Capote’s footsteps, but later in life he managed to get sober & productive, but he stayed in the closet.

Dunne desired the attention that Capote received for his literary career, yet he outsold Capote & everyone in his famous writer family, his brother John Gregory Dunne & sister-in-law Joan Didion. He never was able to be part of the pantheon of “serious literature” over “bestsellers”, but he never seemed bitter. He was famous, but he always remained an outsider.

Capote’s society women turned their backs on him after he published the roman e clef La Côte Basque (1965) in Esquire. Dunne continued to move in that world despite the occasional snub. He did have enemies though: the Kennedys, the Safras, & most famously, douche Congressman Gary Condit. Just like Capote, Dunne could get sketchy with those pesky facts, but his fans knew he was telling a larger truth: when you reach to the apex of high society, there isn’t all that much there. This was something Capote could not seem to understand.

I recently watched the documentary, After The Party (2008) on The Sundance Channel, about Dunne’s life. Watching him, my gaydar was on high alert. Early in his career, he was a TV & film producer. He was the executive producer of the film version of Mart Crowley’s gay themed play The Boys In The Band (1970). Maybe the bitter queens in that screenplay drove him deeper into the closet. The documentary & his nonfiction writings make it clear that he cared deeply about his children & his ex-wife. Like many gay people in Hollywood in the 1950s & 1960s, he probably got married to hide his gayness. Dunne used his final novel, Too Much Money (2009) to come out of the closet by proxy when his main character reveals that he is gay.

In interviews, his talented son, actor/director Griffin Dunne describes his father as bisexual. Near the end of his life, Dunne admitted: “I am a celibate closeted bisexual.”

It seems tragic that someone as talented as Dunne had to spend energy trying to deceive people & experience shame about his sexuality for most of his life. Yet Capote, who was out of the closet, was full of self-loathing & in his last years, lived a pathetic existence. Dunne, who spoke about his father mistreating him as a child for being a sissy, stayed in the closet his entire adult life. After achieving real success, Dunne became addicted to drugs & alcohol, but then found sobriety living alone in rural Oregon of all places. He was attracted to other men & yet rejected the notion of being openly gay. For both writers, the shame of their sexuality drove their drive for celebrity & acceptance.

In an eerie coincidence, Dunne’s most famous novel The Two Mrs. Grenvilles (1985) was based on the notorious Woodward murder scandal that Capote had referred to in his own novel Answered Prayers, published posthumously that same year.

Capote was dropped by his adored society friends after exposing their deepest secrets in his book. He never finished the novel. The Two Mrs. Grenvilles picks up where Capote left off. Dunne wrote with panache about high society intrigue, sexual obsession, greed & murder. It was made into a rather good TV movie in 1987 starring Claudette Colbert & Ann Margret. Dunne paid homage by having a narrator named Basil Plant who, more than just a little bit, resembled Capote.

Dunne craved the spotlight just as much as Capote, & surrounded himself with just as many socialites & celebrities. Dunne even threw his own Black & White Ball in Hollywood that rivaled Capote’s famous event at the Plaza Hotel in NYC. Dunne always claimed he had the idea first. He even published a charming coffee table book of photographs from his party, The Way We Lived Then: Recollections Of A Well-Known Name Dropper (1999).

Even at the end of his life, Dunne never lost his sense of humor or his gratitude for his life well-lived. He wrote movingly about his cancer in Vanity Fair. Capote was eventually taken down by his demons. He never owned them the way that Dunne was able to do. Both men treated life as an endless party, but Dunne never overstayed his welcome. One writer’s life was trashy & the other wrote trashy books.

His beautiful daughter Dominique Dunne had just made her first major feature film, Poltergeist, when she was murdered by her ex-boyfriend in the driveway of her home in the Hollywood Hills in October 1982. She was just 22 years old. Dunne never recovered from losing his daughter. He dedicated the rest of his life to being a strong advocate for crime victims & their grieving families.

The post #BornThisDay: Writer, Dominick Dunne appeared first on World of Wonder.

#TBT: “The Paul Lynde Halloween Special” Ft. Kiss, Betty White, Witchiepoo & the Witch From the “The Wizard of Oz”

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OMG, this is SO good. Here’s the full-length The Paul Lynde Halloween Special. It’s a TV special starring the hilarious queen, Paul Lynde and it was broadcast 39 years ago today on October 29, 1976 on ABC. It featured guest stars Margaret Hamilton in her first reprisal of her role as The Wicked Witch of the West from The Wizard of Oz. And the guest stars are Billie Hayes as Witchiepoo from H.R. Pufnstuf kid’s show, Tim Conway, Florence Henderson, KISS, Billy Barty (from The Wizard of Oz too) Betty White and, in an uncredited surprise appearance, Donny and Marie Osmond. This is 70s variety TV at it’s best –and worst. Cheesey, corny and GAYmazing. Kiss performs three times so, you’ll have to fast forward through a lot of bad jokes. If you aren’t going out Saturday night, you might want to save it. Watch.

The post #TBT: “The Paul Lynde Halloween Special” Ft. Kiss, Betty White, Witchiepoo & the Witch From the “The Wizard of Oz” appeared first on World of Wonder.


#TBT: Photographer Jill Lynne Shot the First Greenwich Village Halloween Parade Over 40 Years Ago

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Photographer Jill Lynne has shot New York City’s Greenwich Village Halloween Parade since year one. It has grown exponentially with over 2,000 participants by the second year, and 250,000 by the fifth, she wrote a first person account of the history of the parade for Vanity Fair and shared a few choice images.

I had heard buzz about the first Halloween Parade before those old-style mimeographed fliers enlisting neighborhood participation appeared.

It was a crisp, chilly autumn evening. As everyone gathered expectantly in the Westbeth courtyard there was a sensory excitement. A sense of creative freedom prevailed, and an unexpected enormous turnout from the community and their friends arrived. There were artists, families, drag queens, and proud members of the L.G.B.T. community.

There was a feeling of medieval pageantry, with some carrying tall weeds and others glowing candles. As if paying homage, the parade would stop at live vignettes staged along the way. Beneath the eerily silhouetted windows of the Jefferson Market Library, witches beckoned the group forth.

The grand finale of the Halloween Parade happened at the colorfully illuminated Washington Square Arch, which was “inhabited” by spooks and spirits.

Time felt like it stood still during that very first Halloween Parade. The night felt episodic, and it was exhilarating. Wondrous, magical, and surreal, I was hooked.

I photographed what would become the annual Halloween Parade until 1988. By that time, the original sense of community was gone. Instead, enthusiastic hordes descended from all over, producing a crush of people.

In a quasi-continuation of the original community sensibility, on Halloween eve, an organic grassroots, informal “Children’s Parade” has developed in the heart of the beautiful West Village streets.

In small-town style, petites and parents trick-or-treat, visiting town houses, stoops, brownstones, and boutiques ornately decorated with ghosts, rattling skeletons, spiderwebs, horrific monsters, and smiling jack-o’-lanterns. Generously they offer up candy, apples, and giggles, happily filling overflowing goody bags.

We wish you all a wicked good Halloween!

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(Photographs, Jill Lynne; via Vanity Fair)

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#TBT: Oakley the Owl Dances To “Monster Mash”

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This isn’t new but it’s making the rounds again this Halloween. In a video posted in 2012 by Ken Lockwood, the program director from the Eagle Valley Raptor Center in Cheney, Kansas, Oakley, a baby great horned owl, shows off his moves by singing along with his favorite toy. It’s your cuteness overload for the day. It’s short. Watch.

The post #TBT: Oakley the Owl Dances To “Monster Mash” appeared first on World of Wonder.

Team Big Freedia Has A Kiki With the Legendary Patti LaBelle!

World of Wonder’s Halloween Spooktacular Extravaganza

Japanese All-Boys School Holds Annual “Prettiest Girl” Pageant

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Once a year the boys at Komaba High School, in Tokyo’s Setagaya Ward, hold a drag contest to find who among them is the prettiest girl. Students style their hair, don wigs and makeup, and slip into skirts for the contest, in which they’re judged on how well they can pull off the ‘kawaii girl’ look and attitude. The pageant has its own Twitter page where photographs of this year’s contestants are shared and votes are solicited.

From Oddity Central:

As it turns out, Komaba High is one of the most reputed prep schools in Tokyo. Founded in 1950, the school was recently designated by the Ministry of Education as a ‘super science high school’. A large number of its students are accepted into the prestigious Tokyo University each year. Students participate in a wide variety of interesting extracurricular activities, but at the end of the day, they’re all a bunch of teenage boys with raging hormones and no real contact with girls on a daily basis. So they use the annual Culture Festival as an excuse to doll up and showcase their own feminine side.

It seems that cross dressing beauty pageants are actually quite popular among Japan’s youth, with Tokyo Institute of Technology recently crowning their very own Mister Bishoujo (Mister Beautiful Girl). And why shouldn’t they, given how cute some of these boys look!

Not sure how shocking any of this is in 2015 – in fact I’m surprised more schools around the world don’t do this – but it’s really just an excuse to post pics of cute boys in drag. Check them out below.

 

 

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