Showing posts with label PINUP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PINUP. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

"ONE LOOK IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS"


Back in 1921, ad man Fred Barnard is said to have coined the phrase, "One look is worth a thousand words". There are a number of versions of the phrase from different eras, but I think Mr. Barnard's fits the bill here.

Longtime WoM correspondent from Horrorwood, Karloffornia was kind enough to provide this photo of the lovely Susan Denberg from CINE WORLD magazine from ca. 1966.

I'd go on, but I've used as many words as I've needed to.


See more about Susan Denberg HERE.

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

TOPLESS TOPSTONE


The story goes that the young Judy Crowder had dreams of being a painter, but when a photographer saw her work and then met the artist in person, he had other ideas for her career. With a little coaxing, he talked her into a photo session, the results which appeared in SCENE, December 1960. She was 18-years-old. As a result, Miss Crowder became one more in the long line of glamour models posing for pinups and magazine pictorials in the 60s. The feature also mentions that "she wants to follow her sister, actress Louise Stewart, to Hollywood" (another article names her as Ann Stewart).





During her relatively brief modeling career, Crowder was featured in numerous men's magazines such as FIGURE QUARTERLY Vol. 32 (1961), NUGGETKNIGHTHI-LIFE and PICTURE SCOPE.





There is scant biographical information about her and it's mostly found within the pages of said magazines. It was a common practice that the text accompanying the photographs would be largely made up to further titillate the reader. If any of the information is accurate several magazines boasted of her 37-24-36 figure and that she hailed from Taylorville, Illinois. Another magazine went on about how she loved clam chowder (!) and claimed she had 20 different recipes. This is likely made up, all so the writer could use the tagline of her name rhyming with New England's favorite soup (see below) .





Her sister's acting career appeared to have fizzled, and Judy's didn't fare much better. She did guest on an episode of Boris Karloff's THRILLER, so that qualifies her as a THH, a tangential horror hottie! Other than that, her acting career was over. I'm guessing that she went back to painting.

You're probably wondering about now where I'm going with all this. Well, what got Judy Crowder as the topic of this post today is a photo identifying her as wearing one of Keith Ward's Topstone masks sometime in the 1960s. If there's any doubt about the claim, while I was preparing this post, I unearthed a second photo of her with the mask pulled up over her head. No doubt, it's Judy Crowder under it.



From a Topstone mask collection.

Most of her photos are in considerably better taste than many models who posed unabashed in their birthday suits. In this gallery, you can see that she was nevertheless talked into showing a little more.








Friday, December 5, 2025

THE SAVAGE GIRL (1932)


Born March 6, 1916 in Oklahoma City, Rochelle Hudson was an American actress who had a long and successful movie career that began when she was just 13 years old. In her younger years she lived near Ventura Blvd. and the neighborhood of Tarzana, named after Edgar Rice Burroughs' most famous fictional character. She became close friends with the Burroughs family and even took vacations with them.


During World War II, her husband (who later would work as a story editor for Disney) was stationed in Hawaii and she suspended her acting career and went to work for Naval Intelligence in Mexico and Central and South America.

During her film career, she played in roles along such famous actors as James Dean, W.C. Fields, Cary Grant, Mae West, Natalie Wood, Joan Crawford and many others.


In 1932, she starred in the film, THE SAVAGE GIRL and played the typical "white jungle goddess" that was protected by a gorilla (played by Charlie Gemora in one of his many ape-man get-ups). It was fairly well-hyped and she was seen in a variety of photoshoots and articles at the time. It is a rather rough-looking production, but the theme of jungle beauties, savage animals and topless native women were popular during this period.










Ironic side-by-side images, since Rochelle Hudson
was good friends with the Burroughs family.


Rochelle Hudson's last film was in 1967. She passed away on January 17, 1972 at the age of 55 in Palm Desert, California from a heart attack brought on by a liver ailment (another source reports her dying of pneumonia).

EXTRA! Women half-clad in leopard skin outfits were all the rage for a time on the silver screen. The attire has never gone out of style and is still popular today for a touch of the wild and exotic.

This pictorial from EYE (March 1954) features Maria Stinger, a pinup model popular for--among her other attributes-- being able to be made up to look very much like Marilyn Monroe, only who posed for more provocative shots. She was a favorite of famous glamour photographer Bunny Yeager and by the fetish photographer Irving Klaw, who some may recognize as the man who made Bettie Page the most famous pinup girl of the 1950's.

Photographs by Bunny Yeager.








Maria Stinger Gallery

(WARNING! NSFW!)












Photographs attributed to Bunny Yeager: