Founded in 1936 with original staff photographers Margaret Bourke-White, Alfred Eisenstaedt, Thomas McAvoy, and Peter Stackpole, LIFE magazine is the visual chronicle of the “American century.” Its ...
Lee,” about the incomparable Lee Miller, takes an interesting approach to telling her story. Too vast a landscape to cover, ...
Published in Strand Magazine in 1892 ... American photographer Margaret Bourke-White on top off the Chrysler Building. New York, USA. 1930. Photo by: Oscar Graubner. Bourke-White was the first ...
In the story of Margaret Sanger there is meat for modern ... “My mother died in her forties; my father enjoyed life till he was in his eighties,” is her pungent comment on the size of the ...
David Bromwich’s The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke, published in 2014 as the first ... Amazingly, it has already been thrown, not into the shade, but into a new perspective by Richard Bourke’s ...
On the precipice of turning 30, Margaret Qualley cannot wait to put the craziness of her 20s in the rearview mirror. “I think your early 20s are a mindf— for a girl,” Qualley, 29 ...
Times, WBEZ and Chalkbeat asked every candidate for Chicago’s first elected school board a series of questions about their ...
The Spanish have a saying: Quiza la vida es sueno — “Perhaps life is a dream.” And perhaps, as she rises with the sun and listens to the piping of the birds in the mimosa and dogwood trees outside her ...
“We felt like we knew each other,” Demi Moore tells PEOPLE of Margaret Qualley, her costar in Coralie Fargeat’s horror movie Jack Smart is the Movies Staff Writer at PEOPLE. With 10 years of ...
Greyson and her husband, Tommy, lived next door to Margaret and Ward Nelson, and a light went off in Greyson’s head; she immediately penned the following email: "Dear Friends of the Nelsons ...
Demi Moore and Margaret Qualley's new film The Substance asks this exact ... But before long, Sue begins to usurp Elisabeth's life, taking over her TV show and growing hungrier for a life of her own.
Conrad Ricamora knows a thing or two about queer history. He is, after all, currently playing Abraham Lincoln—our gayest president—in Cole Escola’s gonzo Broadway sensation Oh, Mary!