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Find out more about your rights as a buyer and exceptions. We may receive commission if your application for credit is successful. Back to home page Return to top. He achieved commercial success and some prosperity.

His home became a centre for the blues community, providing rehearsal space, bookings, and lodgings for musicians who arrived in Chicago from the Mississippi Delta as the commercial potential of blues music grew and agricultural employment in the South diminished.

By the s, Red was playing an electric guitar. He was "rediscovered" in the blues revival of the late s, like many other surviving early-recorded blues artists, such as Son House and Skip James. He made his last recordings in His wife's death in was a blow from which Tampa Red never recovered. He had always been a heavy drinker, and his alcoholism became acute.

Like many of his contemporaries, he was "rediscovered" by a new audience in the late s. He went back into the studio in , but his final recordings were undistinguished. They were doing one of those three-dimensional picture features you know, the things you look at through red and green glasses and the subject was 'My Fondest Dream'.

I said I could imagine myself as a Cavalier rescuing a maiden from the Roundheads. They gave me Sabrina as my heroine - just for the day, of course. After we had shot these pieces of Tom- or Terry-foolery, Freddie Mullally, the Editor, took us both to lunch at a very charming little Italian restaurant off the Gloucester Road.

We were discussing cooking during the meal and Sabrina boasted that she didn't know anything about the subject at all.

Freddie said, 'Do you want to marry a rich man? You'd be surprised what a help being able to cook can be. I know it wasn't me - because I am a romantic and, much as I love food. Although I know Sabrina quite well, I wonder how she started.

Probably in a beauty competition. She comes from Blackpool and, when I used to play there, I seemed to spend half my time in that district - Morecambe, Fleetwood, St Anne's - judging beauty competitions. I always feel a bit of a Charlie at these affairs because I have never really been able to appreciate why, for reasons other than hunger, a girl can bring herself to enter one of these competitions.

I once judged a competition in Shepherd Market with Lady Lewisham, and I noticed she fell, hook, line and sinker, for one of the entrants. I didn't think much of her - the entrant, I mean - but Lady Lewisham has a way with her and she got it. Afterwards, I asked her why she was so keen on this particular girl. She replied, 'She's the only one who's clean. Does anyone have any idea what these 3 pix are? The only colour ones, it's very unlikely that they are from some unknown film. Was it a sketch or some publicity for the unknown actor with the sword?

Published by Macmillan, Sabrina drove men to distraction in the fifties with her version of the fuller figure. Aged just seventeen and the daughter of a Blackpool landlady, she was the original dumb blonde.

Indeed, part of her gimmick was that she never said a word on screen. In she tired of her image and went to the States with the intention of becoming a serious actress. Instead she married a successful young Beverly Hills surgeon, Dr Harold Melsheimer, who had never heard of her. This, she said, was part of the attraction.

However, they were subsequently divorced. Now fifty [in ] , Sabrina still lives in California and only rarely visits England. This page was last modified: Monday And from The Age , 17 September Read the ad's text. Found Found 1 Jan , online. From "Starstruck" by Cosmo Landesman Chapter 5 - Fifties Britain and The Dawn Of Celebrity Any thinking person over the age of forty is bound to look at contemporary Britain, with its expanding collection of celebrities, famous nobodies, exhibitionists, attention-seekers and celebrity- drenched media magazines, and wonder: when did this whole crazy thing begin?

Added 21 Feb , thanks to Ian Payne.



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