
‘Filling in these gaps': Paul McCartney's recently rediscovered photographs
'He's so carefree,' says Joshua Chuang, director of photography at the Gagosian art gallery. 'It's almost like you've never seen him like that; he's always kind of joking around or brooding or being sarcastic. He's so happy. It's his best friend at the time capturing that and, when you know about what happened, it's so moving.'
The best friend in this case is Sir Paul McCartney, whose recently rediscovered photographs go on display from Friday at Gagosian in Beverly Hills, California. The exhibition Rearview Mirror charts the rise of Beatlemania between December 1963 and February 1964 and marks the first time that 82-year-old McCartney has made signed editions of his photos available (a portion of proceeds from sales will go to Los Angeles-based fire relief organisations).
A thousand images taken by the musician were found by his archivist during the coronavirus pandemic after being largely forgotten for half a century. An initial museum exhibition, Eyes of the Storm, organised by the National Portrait Gallery in London, contained 250 pictures and has toured various venues including the Brooklyn Museum and de Young Museum in San Francisco.
If that show was a sprawling anthology box set, Rearview Mirror is more of a sleek Revolver or Rubber Soul. It presents 36 works, some previously unseen, some overlapping with the museum show but often in different formats, for example intact contact sheets versus individual frames. It emphasises the formal qualities of the photographs as art objects.
Speaking via Zoom from Beverly Hills, Chuang says: 'The museum show almost had a scrapbook quality to it. We wanted to do something that was much more focused, much more object-driven with works that were beautiful, printed to the highest standards with the latest technology and, if you were to acquire one, you feel like you're owning a piece of history. I think we managed to do it.
'When Paul came into the studio to sign the first batch he was knocked out by them. What he kept saying as he was walking around was, 'I feel like I've never seen this before.' Visitors to our exhibition who have seen the touring museum exhibition at whatever venue will have that same reaction: 'Oh, yeah, I saw that show. But is that the same picture?''
Chuang knew he had to make the show's title distinct from Eyes of the Storm and settled on something that reflects both a literal perspective from car windows and the metaphorical act of looking back at this pivotal period. He jokes: 'Paul is the greatest lyricist of all time – can't you come up with it?! I started looking at the pictures that we chose and one of the motifs was of a mirror.
'There are self-portraits where Paul's trying to frame herself in a mirror. There's Paul caught in the reflection of a rearview mirror of the car; so many pictures were taken from inside cars because that was the only safe space in public. I suggested 'Rearview Mirror' both literally and metaphorically and he loved it.'
The Fab Four remain an unstoppable cultural and commercial juggernaut. Late last year saw the release of Beatles '64, a Disney+ documentary about that heady conquest of America; last month there was Ian Leslie's book, John & Paul: A Love Story in Songs, study of Lennon and McCartney's marriage of true minds; last week it was the turn of One to One: John & Yoko, a Kevin Macdonald film about Lennon and Yoko Ono's time living in Greenwich Village in the early 1970s.
So it is that McCartney's photographic oeuvre receives a second look. The pictures offer an intimate glimpse of the Beatles' adventures in London, Paris and the US through the lens of one of their own – a counterpoint to press images of the time. They preserve candid moments and intense fan reaction, from frenzied crowds in New York to the overwhelming greetings at airports.
Chuang worked with McCartney's archivist, Sarah Brown, to drill down to the specifics of each day in the life. 'Whereas in the museum show it's very general – John and Ringo, Paris, January 1964 – now it will say this is John playing the guitar in the hotel suite at the George V on 16 January, hours before they get the telegram that I Want to Hold Your Hand is number one in America and hours later they're doing the famous pillow fight. It's like filling in these gaps in the visual narrative and from the most unique perspective you could think of, which is Paul.'
Another such example is a colour contact sheet of the Beatles and their entourage at Heathrow airport before flying to America, offering something akin to 'stop motion sequence' of a band on the verge of global fame and cultural immortality. Chuang is impressed that McCartney had the presence of mind to run ahead on the tarmac, turn around and capture the moment.
'There's three pictures of John Lennon on there; it looks like three different people. It's like you're seeing these different facets of them basically hours before they're about to change the world. You can almost get a sense in those pictures they're excited, maybe they're tired – they had been touring non-stop leading up to that - and I'd like to think there's a good kind of nervousness, a sense that something is about to change.'
Something did change. On 9 February 1964 the Beatles made their live TV debut on the The Ed Sullivan Show, watched by 73 million people. Less than 48 hours later they performed their first US concert at the Washington Coliseum (tickets ranged from $2 to $4) with more than 8,000 people in attendance, including future vice-president Al Gore. By April the Beatles had the top five spots on the US Billboard charts.
Perhaps it was no surprise that McCartney wanted to photograph people and things that went before. Cameras run in the family: his brother Mike, first wife Linda and daughter Mary all became professional photographers. McCartney grew up admiring sports photography in the Observer newspaper and won a school art prize.
Time surrounded by professional snappers during the Beatles' ascent further honed his eye. Chuang ventures: 'I would like to think – and Paul doesn't quite remember – that buying a camera was both a way to create your own memento but also a way to play with the photographers who constantly had the lens pointed at you. If you've seen the press conferences at JFK [airport], there's this banter with the reporters. They're giving as good as they're getting and the camera seemed to serve a similar function.'
McCartney was using a 35mm SLR Pentax camera, a technology that enabled spontaneity and the 'snapshot aesthetic' of the 1960s. He told CBS News in 2023: 'We were moving fast. So, you just learned to take pictures quickly.'
Chuang comments: 'He's a natural. The pictures have a sense of amateur zeal. The two self-portraits, if you will, which were both taken in a mirror, have this wonderful sense of amateurism but it doesn't detract from the power of the picture. You can see his skill level improve from December to February, in part because the light's different in America, especially in Miami, where it was super bright. Those tend to be super sharp.'
One photo is taken in the attic of McCartney's then girlfriend Jane Asher. 'This is the room in which he woke up with a tune in his head. He starts jotting down the tune on the piano, didn't have words and came up with dummy words – scrambled eggs, oh, baby, how I love your legs. It took him about a year to come up with the actual lyrics, which became Yesterday. The fact he's in Jane Asher's house, he's got a camera – there's a kind of self-awareness of wanting to memorialise that moment. That doesn't exist anywhere else.'
Rearview Mirror: Photographs, December 1963–February 1964 by Paul McCartney is at Gagosian in Beverly Hills from 25 April to 21 June.
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World's oldest nepo babies! Jane Fonda, 87, Michael Douglas, 80, and Jamie Lee Curtis, 66, lead Hollywood's original golden age elite
The furor around ' nepo babies ' may only have exploded in the past five years, but the showbiz talent pool has always had an incestuous tinge. Right at the dawn of Hollywood, the Barrymore acting dynasty transitioned seamlessly from a powerhouse of the 19th century stage into pioneers of the new medium of movies that would come to dominate the 20th. Since then a fleet of stars' children have entered the business, but only a few have had enough skill in their own right to achieve genuine staying power. Some thundered into the spotlight at an early age, like Jane Fonda, 87, or Jamie Lee Curtis, 66, while others like Anjelica Huston, 74, or Isabella Rossellini, 73, had an initially more ambiguous relationship to the big screen. And some, in spite of their own formidable abilities, could not help but remind the public constantly of their famous parents - like Liza Minnelli, 79, who not only had a singing voice redolent of her mother Judy Garland, but whose dramatic battle with addiction brought up fears of history repeating itself. Now salutes some of the oldest 'nepo babies' in the business... Jane Fonda, 87 Jane Fonda was a creature of Hollywood from the cradle as the daughter of Henry Fonda, one of the most acclaimed star actors of his generation. The pair had a fraught personal relationship thanks to his emotional remoteness, but Jane has always expressed admiration for Henry's work in movies like 12 Angry Men and The Grapes of Wrath. She made her stage debut as a teenager alongside her father in a play called The Male Animal, and then in 1960 at the age of 23 she acted in her first movie Tall Story, igniting a dazzling film career that is still going strong. Her work has ranged from comic romps like Barbarella, 9 to 5 and Fun with Dick and Jane to Oscar-winning dramatic performances in Klute and Coming Home. Jane leveraged her acting success to become one of the early movie star producers, not only on Coming Home and 9 to 5 but also on the hit thriller The China Syndrome. She was equally well-known as a fiery and polarizing political activist, earning lifelong notoriety as 'Hanoi Jane' after she was photographed on a North Vietnamese antiaircraft gun that was used against the Americans. Jane went on Radio Hanoi and intimated that US serviceman should disobey their orders, and when she returned home she declared that the torture of American prisoners of war was 'understandable,' naming her only son after a Viet Cong militant who had attempted to assassinate a US Secretary of Defense. Decades on, she confessed that at the height of her antiwar political activity she was guzzling the stimulant Dexedrine while seesawing between anorexia and bulimia. In the 1980s she reinvented herself as the queen of the workout video, with her original exercise tape becoming the bestselling VHS of all time. In the 1990s she acquired yet another new image as the facelifted trophy wife of billionaire media mogul Ted Turner - and then in the 2000s she left him and resumed her movie career with a blockbuster turn opposite Jennifer Lopez in Monster-in-Law, launching a comeback that has lasted to this day. Nevertheless she freely admits 'it's a given' that having a movie star father was helpful to her when she was starting out in Hollywood. 'People notice you and say: "Let's take a look at what Henry Fonda's daughter can do,"' she observed. Cognizant of the way she was being perceived, she 'worked twice as hard' at acting in order to demonstrate that she had her own capabilities. 'You do wonder if people hire you just because of who your mother or father is, or resent you because of it,' she told 9Honey earlier this year. 'I wanted to show that I wasn't just another "nepo baby."' Jane joined Henry onscreen in the 1981 movie On Golden Pond, in which they played a father and daughter alongside Katharine Hepburn as the mother. The shoot helped Jane and Henry mend their relationship, mirroring the dynamic between the characters they portrayed in the picture. Jane often cites a moment in the filming that she found especially touching, one that took place as they shot the scene where she tells her father: 'I want to be your friend.' 'And I saved one thing for the last,' she said. 'He wasn't used to ever doing anything that hadn't been rehearsed. He didn't like surprises. And so at the very last, when I said: "I want to be your friend," I reached out and I touched his arm.' Henry was thrown by the unannounced gesture, and Jane 'could see him seize up,' she told the American Film Institute. 'I could see tears begin in his eyes, and then he ducked his head and turned away, but I saw. I saw.' He won an Oscar for On Golden Pond but was too ill to attend the ceremony, so Jane accepted the prize on his behalf. Five months later, he was dead at the age of 77. 'Before he died I was able to tell him that I loved him and that I forgave him for whatever didn't happen and I hoped that he would forgive me for not being a better daughter. I got to say that to him,' Jane told Chris Wallace on CNN. 'He didn't say anything, but he wept and I had never seen that before. I'd never seen my father break down and weep, and it was powerful.' Anjelica Huston, 74 Anjelica Huston always wanted to act but was less keen to make her screen debut working for her father, the legendary filmmaker John Huston. When she was 16, though, he forced the issue - she was angling for the female lead in Franco Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet but John got in the way, telling the Italian director she was unavailable and then snapping her up himself for his 1969 picture A Walk with Love and Death, a lugubrious romance set in 14th century France. Making the movie was 'not a happy journey,' according to Anjelica, who regarded the plot as 'incredibly corny' and chafed at her father's refusal to let her wear makeup, while he grew progressively exasperated at her teenage inability to focus on set. When the film was released she was 'really badly reviewed' and so she drifted away from the movies, 'sensitive' to her first drubbing, she told the Guardian. In the 1970s she worked mainly as a model, posing for fashion photographers as vaunted as David Bailey and Richard Avedon. But her true fame in those years stemmed from being half of the era's reigning 'it' couple, as the magnetic Amazonian girlfriend of Jack Nicholson. Now, she was hauling not only the 'nepotism' baggage but the potential perception that she would be handed work because of whom she was dating. 'And I was clueless enough at the time not to realize that of course everything comes from people you know, everything is a handout, really,' she reflected later. 'Especially in this kind of work, it's all about who you are, who you know, what you can do and how you can prove yourself. It took me a while to understand that.' By the 1980s, she had rigorously applied herself at acting class and regained her self-assurance in her ability to perform onscreen. In 1985 she united the men in her life for the crime comedy Prizzi's Honor, in which she played opposite Jack Nicholson and was directed by her father. The last John Huston movie to be released while he was alive, Prizzi's Honor was a critical and commercial triumph that earned Anjelica an Oscar for her performance as a conniving gun moll besotted with Jack's mafia hitman. Finally respected as an actress in her own right, Anjelica embarked on a wide-ranging career that included critical fare like Woody Allen's Crimes and Misdemeanors and Stephen Frears' The Grifters, as well as camp classics like The Witches and a brace of Addams Family movies. She is still working busily at 74, having recently featured in the new John Wick film Ballerina as well as a six-part miniseries of Agatha Christie's Below Zero. Although she revealed this year that she soldiered through a secret cancer battle four years ago, she dismissed the idea of retirement out of hand. 'I can't imagine such a thing,' she said in a recent interview with People. Jamie Lee Curtis, 66 Jamie Lee Curtis is a 'nepo baby' twice over, as the daughter of not one but two film stars - Some Like It Hot heartthrob Tony Curtis and Hitchcock blonde Janet Leigh. When Jamie Lee was three, her parents divorced and Tony promptly dropped out of his daughter's life, precipitating a long estrangement that they were eventually able to patch up years before his death in 2010 at the age of 85. 'Children, as we all know, are complicated and messy,' Jamie Lee said on The Talk after he died. 'He was not a father and he was not interested in being a father.' By the time Jamie Lee made her screen debut at 19 on the medical show Quincy M.E., both her parents' careers had faded into the haze of Hollywood history - but her mother's legacy was still able to help Jamie Lee get the part that made her a star. Janet Leigh was best known as Norman Bates' shrieking victim in the famous shower scene from Alfred Hitchcock's 1960 picture Psycho. Eighteen years later, her daughter found herself testing for her own 'scream queen' role in the shape of Laurie Strode, the teenage heroine of the original Halloween. 'I'm sure the fact that I was Janet Leigh and Tony Curtis's daughter, and that my mother had been in Psycho - if you're going to choose between this one and this one, choose the one whose mother was in Psycho, because it will get some press for you,' Jamie Lee acknowledged decades later. She would never 'pretend' that her casting was unrelated to her famous parentage, she said, adding: 'Clearly, I had a leg up,' via the New Yorker. Halloween emerged as a stupendous sleeper hit in 1978, and Jamie Lee was able to use its success as a launchpad to a long-lived career. She proved her mettle in comedies like A Fish Called Wanda and Freaky Friday and romances like True Lies, before finally winning an Oscar for the 2022 sci-fi feature Everything Everywhere All At Once. Meanwhile, the chatter around 'nepo babies' reached a fever pitch in December 2022 after New York magazine ran a viral cover story on the phenomenon. Jamie Lee responded to the online discourse with an Instagram post in which she called herself the 'OG Nepo Baby' and defended her fellow showbiz legacies. She insisted that 'there's not a day in my professional life that goes by without my being reminded that I am the daughter of movie stars. The current conversation about nepo babies is just designed to try to diminish and denigrate and hurt.' Jamie Lee added: 'For the record I have navigated 44 years with the advantages my associated and reflected fame brought me, I don't pretend there aren't any, that try to tell me that I have no value on my own.' She argued: 'It's curious how we immediately make assumptions and snide remarks that someone related to someone else who is famous in their field for their art, would somehow have no talent whatsoever. I have come to learn that is simply not true. 'I have suited up and shown up for all different kinds of work with thousands of thousands of people and every day I've tried to bring integrity and professionalism and love and community and art to my work. I am not alone. There are many of us. Dedicated to our craft. Proud of our lineage. Strong in our belief in our right to exist.' Michael Douglas, 80 Michael Douglas is a scion of Old Hollywood royalty, as the son of Spartacus star Kirk Douglas and his actress wife Diana Dill. Early in his own movie career, Michael was a successful producer, helping bring The China Syndrome and One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest to the screen in the 1970s. His family ties were a boon to him at that stage - he scored the rights for the novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest from his father, who had bought them years earlier in order to play the lead role of rebellious mental patient McMurphy on Broadway. Kirk wanted to reprise the role on film, but Michael had to jettison him from the project and McMurphy was ultimately immortalized onscreen by Jack Nicholson. Although Michael's acting career had begun in 1969 with the film Hail Mary! and continued through the 1970s in theater and television, the peak of his celebrity came in the 1980s and 1990s when he starred in two of the iconic erotic thrillers of the era. First came the 1987 picture Fatal Attraction, led by him and Glenn Close, and then in 1992 came Basic Instinct, which cast him opposite Sharon Stone. The 1980s was also when Michael delivered his best-remembered performance: his Oscar-winning turn as the ruthless Gordon Gekko in Oliver Stone's Wall Street. His longtime fans also remember him in such movies as the adventure picture Romancing the Stone and the jet-black divorce comedy The War of the Roses, both starring him alongside Kathleen Turner and Danny DeVito. The 1980s was when Michael delivered his best-remembered performance - his Oscar-winning turn as the ruthless Gordon Gekko in Oliver Stone's Wall Street In his later years, his marriage to Catherine Zeta-Jones has repeatedly drawn attention for their yawning 25-year age gap. The couple have two children - Carys, 22, who acted in short films, and Dylan, 20, who as a child had a voice role on an episode of Disney Channel's Phineas and Ferb. Michael responded witheringly to the 'nepo baby' tag late last year, while speaking at the Red Sea International Film Festival in Saudi Arabia. 'I don't know a father in whatever business, be it a plumber or a contractor or a carpenter, who doesn't try to help his son join him,' he said onstage, according to the Independent. 'I'm a nepo baby too, you know? So that's the way it goes.' He announced his retirement this year at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in the Czech Republic, explaining: 'I had been working pretty hard for almost 60 years, and I did not want to be one of those people who dropped dead on the set.' Since Kirk died in 2020 at the grand old age of 103, Michael has been an affectionate steward of his legacy, for example by plugging his charity the Douglas Foundation. In recent years, Kirk Douglas' reputation fell under scrutiny over allegations that he had raped Natalie Wood when she was a teenager. The claim was leveled by Natalie's own sister Lana Wood in her book Little Sister: My Investigation into the Mysterious Death of Natalie Wood. With publicity swirling around the accusation in late 2021, Michael put out a statement through a publicist saying simply: 'May they both rest in peace.' June Lockhart, 100 June Lockhart celebrated her 100th birthday last month, after a glittering decades-long career going back to the stage of the Metropolitan Opera in the 1930s; pictured in 2015 June Lockhart celebrated her 100th birthday last month, after a glittering decades-long career that spans classic 1940s movies, 1960s TV hits and even - by the 2010s - playing a character in a video game. She is so beloved as a standalone figure, especially by fans of throwback TV shows like Lassie and Lost in Space, that the fact of her 'nepo baby' status is often forgotten. In fact June was born in 1925 to two actors, the Broadway star Gene Lockhart and the acclaimed Anglo-American thespian Kathleen Lockhart. As a little girl, young June gave her first live performance in New York at the age of eight in a Metropolitan Opera production of Peter Ibbetson. Although her parents encouraged her to join their profession, they 'were perfectly happy with whatever I wanted to do,' June maintained to Senior News & Living. 'But they knew music, dance, and art would be a good background and I made my debut dancing at the age of eight. I also had piano lessons which I hated and told my father to save his money, telling him: "Daddy, it's just not me!"' When the family moved from New York to Los Angeles, June was immersed in the world of Hollywood and by the age of 13 had made her movie debut alongside her parents in a 1938 MGM adaptation of A Christmas Carol. As she progressed through her adolescence, her education at a high school in Beverly Hills ran alongside a burgeoning film career that saw her feature in such 1940s pictures as Meet Me in St. Louis, The Yearling and All This and Heaven Too. It was by returning to Broadway, however, that she finally came out from under her parents' shadow and earned the respect of her peers for her own craft. The turning point arrived with her performance in the 1947 play For Love or Money, which earned her a Tony Award when she was 22 years old. Then in the 1950s and 1960s, she achieved her lasting fame playing two beloved TV mothers, first Ruth on Lassie and then Maureen on Lost in Space. 'I applied my own maternal instinct in both of these shows. I am that lady who talks it through if there is a problem and comforts if someone is upset,' she said. Her personal favorite was Lost in Space because it was 'so campy,' she shared, recalling one episode when she had to act with a man dressed as a giant carrot and 'was invited to go home because I just lost it laughing,' via Closer. She continued acting until 2021, when she made a guest appearance on the Netflix reboot of Lost in Space, and is now happily retired. Married and divorced twice, June has welcomed two children including a 'nepo baby' of her own - Battlestar Gallactica actress Anne Lockhart. Isabella Rossellini, 73 Isabella Rossellini is another star whose showbiz pedigree comes from both sides of her family: her mother was Casablanca star Ingrid Bergman while her father was the pioneering Italian neorealist director Roberto Rossellini. Ingrid was at the height of her fame when her Hollywood career was torpedoed by her affair with Roberto, which started while they were making his 1950 film Stromboli - and while she was married to her first husband, dentist Peter Lindstrom. Pouring fuel on the controversy, she gave birth to her lover's son while she was still legally Peter's wife, as he had refused her request for a divorce, forcing her to travel to Mexico so she could have their union legally dissolved and marry Roberto. The scandal became so intense that Ingrid left Hollywood and returned to her native Europe, where she acted in films for her new Italian husband. Isabella and her twin sister Isotta were born in Rome in 1953 during Ingrid's sojourn in Italy; Isabella is pictured with her mother in 1980 Isabella became an icon for the arthouse crowd with the 1986 David Lynch movie Blue Velvet (pictured), which landed her an Independent Spirit Award Isabella and her twin sister Isotta were born in Rome in 1953, a few years before Ingrid made her Hollywood comeback with the 1956 feature Anastasia. Like Anjelica Huston around the same time, Isabella initially established herself in the 1970s as a model rather than an actress, sliding into a career in which her successes could not be so easily chalked up merely to her parents' celebrity. However she was inexorably drawn towards cinema, even selecting Martin Scorsese for her first husband, and in the 1980s she achieved her own big screen stardom. Isabella became an icon for the arthouse crowd with the 1986 David Lynch movie Blue Velvet, which landed her an Independent Spirit Award. Hailed for her beauty and talent, and as the perfect blend of her parents' attributes, Isabella forged an off-kilter career with films in America and Europe like Death Becomes Her, Joy and the Soviet-Italian co-production Dark Eyes. Her TV career included roles on shows as Alias and Friends, as well as her own cult classic series Green Porno about the mating habits of animals. She is pictured in her Oscar-nominated role as the hardboiled Vatican fixer Sister Agnes in last year's Conclave with (from left) John Lithgow, Ralph Fiennes and Stanley Tucci She addressed her 'nepo baby' status while promoting the film last year, saying: 'Of course it opens the door, because people are curious to see you,' via the Guardian; pictured last year This year she was nominated for a best supporting actress Oscar for her role as the hard-bitten Vatican fixer Sister Agnes in the drama Conclave. She addressed her 'nepo baby' status while promoting the film last year, saying: 'Of course it opens the door, because people are curious to see you,' via the Guardian. 'But I don't know that it was an advantage. The judgment is much more severe, and you don't have time to grow,' Isabella mused. Her relationship to her secondhand fame has evolved over the years, she explained late last year during a wide-ranging interview with Variety. 'I used to be introduced as: "Ingrid Bergman and Roberto Rossellini's daughter," and it bothered me, because I would think: "I am my own person,"' she said. 'But now, the younger generation doesn't know them, and it breaks my heart. Their reputations outlived them, but fame is very brief.' Liza Minnelli, 79 Liza Minnelli was born in 1946 to movie star Judy Garland and director Vincente Minnelli; she is pictured with her mother in 1965 in New York Liza, 79, pictured last October, is currently working on a memoir she says was partly provoked by her annoyance at the inaccurate portrayals of her mother Liza Minnelli was born in 1946 to movie star Judy Garland and director Vincente Minnelli, who became a couple while working on the classic film Meet Me in St. Louis. Vincente was the second of Judy's five husbands, in a rocky personal life buffeted by decades of addiction that led to her death of an accidental overdose at the age of 47. Liza often remarks that she received her 'dreams' from her father and her 'drive' from her mother during her upbringing in showbiz. She accompanied her father to the sets of his films and joined her mother on concert tours, changing schools constantly and living in hotels. Looking back on that period, Liza has joked that she would have starved if she had not learned how to order room service on her own as a child. As she grew older, she became a protector of sorts for Judy, helping shield her from the public scrutiny aimed at her personal demons. Her mother also shepherded Liza's entrée into the limelight, featuring her young daughter on her CBS variety show and her concert act at the London Palladium. In her late teens, Liza struck out to New York alone - clear across the country from her parents' stomping grounds of Hollywood - and pursued a career on Broadway, never accepting money from her family again. Liza is pictured at her Beverly Hills christening in 1946 with her parents, Judy and Vincente (right), as well as Reverend Herbert J. Smith (left) As a young woman, Liza initially steered clear of alcohol and drugs, having witnessed her mother's fatal descent into addiction; Liza and Judy pictured in 1965 Thus began Liza's own decades of stardom, in which she won Oscar for the film Cabaret (pictured) and an Emmy for the concert special Liza with a Z, plus a clutch of Tonys She got her big break in the 1965 musical Flora, the Red Menace, with songs by Fred Ebb and John Kander, a duo who became Liza's lifelong friends and collaborators. Although the show flopped commercially, Liza won a Tony Award for best leading actress - becoming, at age 19, the youngest woman ever to do so. Thus began Liza's own decades of stardom, in which she won Oscar for the film Cabaret and an Emmy for the concert special Liza with a Z, plus a clutch of Tonys. Liza won her Academy Award with her father by her side, and when her name was called, he shrieked with joy so loudly that he gave her tinnitus. Although she proved her talents in Hollywood and on Broadway, and in sold-out concerts all over the world, public perception always placed Liza in Judy's shadow. Part of the phenomenon stemmed from Liza's singing voice, which was widely noted for its distinct similarity to Judy's, a comparison Liza reacted to by saying: 'I am my mother's daughter. Who should I sound like, Peggy Lee?' Liza often remarks that she received her 'dreams' from her father and her 'drive' from her mother during her upbringing in showbiz; Vincente, Liza and Judy pictured in 1947 Although she proved her talents in Hollywood, on Broadway, and in concert, public perception always placed Liza in Judy's shadow; Judy and Liza are pictured in 1947 Liza won her Academy Award with her father by her side - and when her name was called, he shrieked with joy so loudly that he gave her tinnitus; Liza and Vincente are pictured in 1970 Another issue was that by the late 1970s, Liza's private life had become increasingly tempestuous, rocked by a burgeoning drug problem that left fans and friends worrying that she would follow in her mother's tragic footsteps. Ultimately, Liza was able to wrench herself out of her spiral, undergoing rehab at the Betty Ford Clinic and entering Alcoholics Anonymous. But she also echoed her mother's private life in her four divorces - the same amount as Judy, who died while married to her own fifth husband Mickey Deans. In a farcical twist, Liza's second husband Jack Haley Jr. happened to be the son of the man who had played the Tin Man alongside Judy in The Wizard of Oz, and Liza leaned into the baroque connection by wearing ruby slippers to the wedding. Through her career, Liza has attempted to strike a balance between establishing her own public persona and preserving her parents' legacies. She performed a one-woman Broadway show called Minnelli on Minnelli, dedicated to her father's movies, and is currently working on a memoir she says was partly provoked by her annoyance at the inaccurate portrayals of her mother. To this day, Liza and her parents hold what could be regarded as the 'nepo baby' triple crown - they are the only family in which every member has won an Oscar. Vanessa Redgrave, 88 Vanessa Redgrave (second from left) is pictured aged 25 in 1962 with her sisters Corin and Lynn Redgrave and their famous parents Michael Redgrave (right) and Rachel Kempson (left) Vanessa, now 88, is pictured last year with her own 'nepo baby' Joely Richardson, an actress best known for her role on the hit drama Nip/Tuck Vanessa Redgrave hails from as vaunted an acting family in Britain as the Barrymores were in America, with careers stretching from stage to screen. Although her grandparents acted in the 19th century theater, it was Vanessa's parents Michael Regrave and Rachel Kempson who have come to be regarded as the matriarch and patriarch of the now sprawling showbiz dynasty. Her own stage career took off in the 1960s after she starred in As You Like It for the Royal Shakespeare Company, which both her parents had acted for in years past. Vanessa's exalted heritage also came in handy in her early film career, inasmuch as her big screen debut, the 1958 hospital drama Behind the Mask, had her father in the lead role and introduced her to cinema audiences in a supporting part. Her siblings Lynn Redgrave and Corin Redgrave became actors as well, but it was Vanessa whose prodigious talent made the biggest splash. Not only did she enjoy a glittering stage career on both sides of the Atlantic, landing a Tony and an Olivier, but she also planted a firm foothold in the movies. Her films ranged from historical dramas like A Man for All Seasons and Mary, Queen of Scots, to European counterculture fare like Michelangelo Antonioni's Blow-up, to her beguiling turn as Sean Connery's love interest in the 1974 adaptation of Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express. Vanessa's searing acting ability enabled her to weather the scandals brought on by her leftist political activism, such as when she was booed onstage at the Oscars for denouncing 'Zionist hoodlums.' Her stage career flourished in the 1960s after she starred in a play for the Royal Shakespeare Company, which both her parents had acted for; Vanessa and Michael pictured 1958 Her her big screen debut, the 1958 hospital drama Behind the Mask, had her father in the lead role (left) and introduced her to cinema audiences in a supporting part (center) She won her Oscar for the 1977 movie Julia, in which she played an antifascist murdered by the Nazis alongside Jane Fonda as author Lillian Hellman (right) She won that Academy Award for the 1977 movie Julia, in which she played an antifascist murdered by the Nazis alongside Jane Fonda as author Lillian Hellman. The film was deluged with controversy over Vanessa's vigorous support of Yasser Arafat's Palestinian Liberation Organization, which prompted her to be burned in effigy by the Jewish Defense League, who picketed the Oscars over her nomination. Shrugging off the brickbats she received, Vanessa enjoyed a top-flight career into her old age, with parts in projects as varied as Tom Cruise's first Mission: Impossible movie and the Keira Knightley and James McAvoy starrer Atonement. Her failed marriage to filmmaker Tony Richardson gave her two daughters who followed Vanessa's footsteps into the acting profession. Joely Richardson is best known for Nip/Tuck, while Natasha Richardson featured in The Parent Trap as the mother of the twins played by Lindsay Lohan. Vanessa is pictured in 2000 with her actress daughters Joely (right) and Natasha Richardson (left), the latter of whom died tragically of a head injury sustained while skiing in 2009 Vanessa's long romance with Italian actor Franco Nero also produced a son, Carlo Gabriel Nero, who has gone onto become a filmmaker. Her fanatical devotion to her political activities meant Vanessa had scant time for her children while they were growing up, and although she tried to impress upon them that she was hoping to create a better future for them, little Natasha fired back: 'But I need you now. I won't need you so much then.' After her progeny grew up, Vanessa admitted to Charlie Rose that 'a difficult price to pay was not spending really any time with my children. That was difficult.' In her later years, Vanessa withstood a shattering tragedy when Natasha fell on a ski slope without a helmet and died of a head injury at the age of just 45 in 2009. Natasha once spoke candidly about the pressures of coming from a famous family, explaining that the 'names Richardson or Redgrave didn't help' at the start. 'But the last thing you want is to ride any coattails, because you don't want people to be accusing you of nepotism. You want to be able to learn and practice, and not to be thrown into a spotlight before you're ready for it.' Natasha's own legacy continues with the sons she welcomed with her husband Liam Neeson - Daniel Neeson, 28, who has launched an eco-friendly clothing line and a sustainable liquor brand, and Micheál Richardson, 30, an actor, who assumed his mother's surname to memorialize her.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Taylor Swift films 'secret' music video so confidential even CREW couldn't hear the song
Taylor Swift has allegedly filmed a 'secret' music video in Los Angeles this week - with the project being so confidential that not even the crew were able to hear the full song. Swifties have eagerly been awaiting for the Grammy winner to drop new music, with her last album The Tortured Poets Department being released over a year ago. Earlier this month, some fans were sent into a frenzy as rumors sparked up that the songstress could possibly be dropping music once again - but with a surprising twist popping up. While Taylor, 35, has been spending the summer season with her NFL player boyfriend Travis Kelce - a source has now claimed to The U.S. Sun that she whisked herself to the West Coast to shoot a project. 'Taylor was in Los Angeles on Thursday filming a new music video,' the insider alleged. 'It was so top secret that those working on set were not even allowed to hear the song, only the beat.' has reached out to Taylor's rep for comment but did not hear back. The source further added, 'Even though she's been taking time off from touring and working a lot to spend time with Travis, there are still projects she's working on, which will no doubt please fans.' Social media users flocked over to X to share their thoughts over the 'secret' music video claims, with one penning, 'OMGGG WE ARE GETTING THAT ALBUM BY AUGUST???????' Another typed, 'NFL themed music video coming next year,' and a fan added, 'taylor swift cooking up a new mv? swifties eating GOOD this era.' One wrote, 'Excited for this! The secrecy around the beat-only shoot in LA has me hyped-Taylor's genius at building anticipation never fails!' while one X user predicted, 'She is announcing her new album soon.' 'QUEEN OF POP IS BACK,' a Swiftie said, and one wrote, 'Her comeback is going to break records.' It comes only weeks after rumors once again sparked up that the star could be releasing new music. HITS Daily Double initially alleged in a report last week that the Bad Blood singer could possibly be working on her 12th studio album under Republic Records. 'What's more, seismic rumblings of a new Taylor set keep the Republic team as aggressive as ever,' the outlet had published. Social media users flocked over to X to share their thoughts over the 'secret' music video claims, with one penning, 'OMGGG WE ARE GETTING THAT ALBUM BY AUGUST???????' Another typed, 'NFL themed music video coming next year,' and a fan added, 'taylor swift cooking up a new mv? swifties eating GOOD this era' However, an edit has since been made and altered to the simple line: 'And there's always Taylor,' while on the topic of other artists in the industry. But when the report was later changed, fans still grasped onto hope. 'So that must mean it's REALLY coming then and Tree told them to get rid of that! Omg Swifties GET UP!' one said, referencing to Taylor's publicist Tree Paine. 'They're definitely hiding something ... Taylor's next move incoming,' a social media user commented, as another added, 'Looks like Taylor's team is keeping us guessing new album vibes are definitely in the air.' Fans have been anticipating new music from Taylor amid her romance with Travis and after she dropped The Tortured Poets Department in April 2024. The LP was nominated for two Grammys - including Album of the Year and Best Pop Vocal Album. Last year in October, fans also went wild as they speculated the popstar would drop a surprise album at the time. The rumors began due to Joe Jonas and Shawn Mendes both postponing the release of their own music. A few months earlier in May, Taylor announced that she had bought back the rights to all of her music - and penned a heartfelt letter to her fans in celebration of the big milestone. Fans were quick to point out what they alleged to be Easter eggs in the lengthy message. Towards the top, the songstress had written: 'I'm trying to gather my thoughts into something coherent, but right now my mind is a slideshow. 'A flashback sequence of all the times I daydreamed about, wished for, and pined away for the chance to get to tell you this news. All the times I was thiiiiiiiiiiiis close, reaching out for it, only for it to fall through.' Some Swifties said that when she wrote 'this,' she included a total of 12 i's - which they believed could possibly be a tease of her 12th studio album. Taylor gave a surprise performance at Brooklyn Bowl in Nashville last month in June and some fans were convinced that she could maybe jump back to her country roots with new music. She belted out lyrics to her hit track Shake It Off - and listeners pointed out that she had gone back to her signature country twang. While Taylor has yet to confirm or announce new music herself, the music artist has been keeping busy. She recently appeared on her boyfriend's Instagram post this week as the Kansas City Chiefs tight end hard-launched their romance on the social media platform. Fans spotted a multitude of hidden details in the carousel of snaps - with some convinced that the singer is engaged to the NFL star. In one snap, the couple - who went public with their romance in September 2023 - posed while sitting at a table inside a restaurant. Some pointed out the lock screen on the professional football player's phone which showed him sweetly posing with Taylor during her Eras Tour. And others speculated that she was showing off an engagement ring on her hand. However, according to TMZ, the singer was wearing Travis' Super Bowl rings in the image instead. Taylor appeared in other photos shared by Travis, including one where they flashed big smiles towards the camera while standing outside in the snow. They were later joined by more pals and the couple also tested out their ice skating skills at a hockey rink. Some pointed out the lock screen on the professional football player's phone which showed him sweetly posing with Taylor during her Eras Tour. And others speculated that she was showing off an engagement ring on her hand In one image, Taylor and Travis could be seen cozying up together as they sported matching hats. Another picture was taken as the lovebirds gathered together with a group of close pals, and the performer sweetly draped her arm to caress his neck. On Tuesday, Travis was seen at training camp in Kansas City ahead of his 13th season with the NFL. But the stars have been able to spend quality time with each other before the official NFL season begins in September, such as enjoying time at an exclusive resort in Montana for Fourth of July.


Edinburgh Reporter
2 hours ago
- Edinburgh Reporter
Discussion on dementia stories to follow UK premiere of Lost Lear at Traverse on Sunday evening
A special discussion around telling stories of dementia will follow the first UK performance of Lost Lear at The Traverse on Sunday 27 July. The new show by award-winning Irish theatre maker Dan Colley is a moving look at living with dementia, told through the familiar lens of Shakespeare's characters Following the preview performance on the 27 July, Dan will be joined by Alex Howard and Gus Harrower from Capital Theatres dementia-friendly programme and Magdalena Schamberger, who specialises in creating theatre for those with dementia Lost Lear will run on the main stage at the Traverse from 2 to 24 August Following its first-ever UK performance at Traverse Festival on 27 July, the hit Irish theatre show Lost Lear will host a special public discussion around telling the complex stories of dementia in theatre. The discussion will feature Lost Lear's award-winning creator Dan Colley, who will be joined by Alex Howard and Gus Harrower from Capital Theatres Edinburgh's dementia-friendly programme and Scotland-based theatre-maker and consultant Magdalene Schamberger, who has over 20 years experience working with people living with dementia. The discussion will look at the initial creation of Lost Lear and its collaborations between Dementia Carers Campaign Network and the Alzheimer's Society of Ireland. The play itself, a loose adaptation of Shakespeare's King Lear, examines how we know ourselves and who we are to each other, amidst the complexities of dementia. The discussion will also be a chance for audiences to talk about how the show has resonated with their own experiences of living with and caring for those with dementia, with an invite being sent out to people from local dementia communities. 'Dan collaborated with the Dementia Carers Campaign Network (DCCN), an advocacy group supported by The Alzheimer Society of Ireland, in the early days of writing this play.' says Judy Williams, Advocacy, Engagement and Participation Officer for The Alzheimer Society of Ireland. 'Through focus groups, carers shared their experiences, shaping Dan's approach to the play. For the DCCN, the project was compelling, inclusive, and in some ways, healing. It also provided new opportunities for carers to share their stories, while raising awareness about the challenges they face. We were very grateful for the opportunity to have this engagement with Dan and Matt, and we wish them all the best at the Edinburgh Fringe 2025. We hope as many people as possible have the opportunity to see this sophisticated and thought-provoking play.' 'Lost Lear is a captivating journey, from an energetic and rambunctious beginning to the poignant and gentle end, it portrays the bewilderment of someone who wants to care, trying to have the shared experience with the person living with dementia, struggling and sometimes failing.' says Susan Crampton of the Dementia Carers Campaign Network. 'I am delighted to hear that Lost Lear is going to Edinburgh and many more people will have the opportunity to see it for the first time – or again.' Lost Lear is a moving and darkly comic remix of Shakespeare's play told from the point of view of Joy, a person with dementia, who is living in an old memory of rehearsing King Lear. Joy's delicately maintained reality is upended by the arrival of her estranged son who, being cast as Cordelia, must find a way to speak his piece from within the limited role he's given. Using puppetry, projection and live video effects, the audience are landed in Joy's world as layers of her past and present, fiction and reality, overlap and distort. Lost Lear is a thought provoking meditation on theatre, artifice and the possibility of communicating across the chasms between us. Following rave reviews for its Irish premiere, where it picked up nominations for Best New Play, Audience Choice, Best AV Design and Best Supporting Actor at the Irish Times Theatre Awards, Lost Lear will have its UK premiere at the Traverse Festival in Edinburgh this August. Following its Fringe run, Lost Lear will tour to North America in Autumn 2025. Co-produced by Mermaid Arts Centre and Riverbank Arts Centre. Funded by the Arts Council of Ireland and supported by Fishamble's New Play Clinic. Part of the 2025 Culture Ireland Edinburgh Showcase. Traverse 1 Preview 27 July 7.30pm and 2 August 9.30pm Then 3 – 24 August (not Mondays) Times vary. Run time: 1 hr 15 min Tickets: £5 – £25 Like this: Like Related