LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,732
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
That's a Dartmouth College tie. Our felons always go to the right schools.
I can't speak to the bobbed hair, but I know what happened to the Van Buren sisters when they became the first women to cross the U.S. on motorcycles. They were arrested on numerous occasions for wearing trousers! Incidentally, this is the 100th anniversary of their historic ride. There are a few events planned here, to commemorate their ride up Pikes Peak.I wonder if the first women who got their hair bobbed or wore trousers felt the same way about the masses who later followed the style. It depends on whether they adopted those styles for comfort and convenience or as a political manifesto.
Both the hair and the makeup in Dr. Zhivago were straight out of the sixties. Same on the TV show The Untouchables.
To say nothing of "Star Trek," where velour miniskirts and go-go boots will be all the rage in the 23rd Century.
"Hmph, FARBraham Lincoln!"
No, it's named for old Martin! That's why there's a Jackson and Harrison street on either side of him. Oddly, it appears that the street naming ended with Buchanan, no Lincoln, not sure why?There's a Van Buren Street in Colorado Springs. I wonder if it was named in their honor.
The thing with visualizations of historical characters is that for people who pre-date motion pictures, all we have are either paintings or frozen, serious photographs. And since that's the image we have of them, that's the image that gets presented to us in dramatic visualizations -- Washington is always grave and serious and dignified, Lincoln always has that mournful "posing for a five dollar bill" expression. "The Founding Fathers," with the exception maybe of Benjamin Franklin, all come across as a bunch of joyless bewigged mummies who exist only in posed tableaux. The real Benjamin Franklin, as anyone who ever read his autobiography can well attest, was not a man for taking himself too seriously, unlike the moldy old pursed-lipped fathead who gazes out disapprovingly from the hundred dollar bill.
And yet Washington, real history tells us, loved to dance and loved to swear, sometimes at the same time. And Lincoln was renowned as a knee-slapping country joke-teller who'd probably fit right in on "Hee Haw." Those are the historical characters I'd like to see, not the "respectful" animated waxworks we usually get.