
Alexander Milne :: Dancer Margaret Severn posing for The Greenwich Follies. March 1st, 1935. Published in Vanity Fair. / src Condé Nast online store
images that haunt us

Alexander Milne :: Dancer Margaret Severn posing for The Greenwich Follies. March 1st, 1935. Published in Vanity Fair. / src Condé Nast online store

Edward Steichen :: Russian actress Alla Nazimova with eyes closed in rapture. Vanity Fair, 1931 / src: Getty Images
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Maurice Beck & Helen Macgregor :: Choreographer and dancer Léonide Massine in costume for the Ballets Russes’ ballet Le Carnaval, playing a small mandolin, seated in a reclined position with one foot resting on the opposite knee, wearing a costume designed by Leon Bakst consisting of beret, blouson pants, and an embroidered robe. Published in Vanity Fair, November 1st, 1923 | src: Condé Nast via Getty

Horst P. Horst ::
Dancers Jack Holland and June Hart dancing, Vanity Fair, 1935. In the 1930s, dance team Jack Holland and June Hart appeared in clubs around Manhattan as well as in the films Dance Band (1935), Vincent Lopez and His Orchestra (1936) and Rubinoff and His Violin (1939). / src:
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Edward Steichen :: Olympic diver Katherine Rawls getting ready to vive, 1931. Gelatin silver photograph. Published in Vanity Fair. / src: Condé Nast
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Lusha Nelson :: Actress Jean Arthur for Vanity Fair, published August 1935
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Edward Steichen :: Paul Robeson (as Brutus Jones in The Emperor Jones, for Vanity Fair), 1933
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Edward Steichen ::
Actress Gloria Swanson, for Vanity Fair, in character as a French-Algerian heroine,
wearing a long, sleeveless dress, with a long headwrap, sitting, in
profile, next to a wall with a frightened expression, 1924 (Condé Nast via Getty Images)
l src: Getty Images
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Hoctor (Sept. 25, 1905 – June 9, 1977) started touring with vaudeville companies at age 16 on the same bill as the Duncan Sisters. She was asked to join their act and became a key player in their Topsy and Eva show on Broadway. She was discovered by Florenz Ziegfeld, who cast her in his production of The Three Musketeers (1928) and several other shows followed throughout the next decade.
By the time these photos were taken she was back in the States after a season at the London Hippodrome (in a production called Bow Bells). She appeared in the Vanities revue of Earl Carroll in 1932, and later in the decade in the Ziegfeld Follies, notably in a ballet arranged by Hoctor with the aid of George Balanchine titled Night Flight.


