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Post by riraho on Mar 21, 2021 19:15:45 GMT -6
I can't be the only one to think, while she was beautiful throughout, that Joan looked better the older she got?
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Post by riraho on Mar 22, 2021 19:07:09 GMT -6
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Post by Admin on Mar 22, 2021 21:11:26 GMT -6
I can't be the only one to think, while she was beautiful throughout, that Joan looked better the older she got? In general, I don't agree. For instance, in the '50s, I don't think she looked very good. (Those Mamie Eisenhower bangs! Those thick brows that looked cute on Audrey Hepburn and Liz Taylor, but not on Joan. But that said, it's probably more to do with the style of the times that Joan was unsuccessfully trying to follow rather than Joan herself. And I do think she looked sexy in "Johnny Guitar"!) My favorite years of Joan's, looks-wise: 1932/1933, 1946, and then she looked very striking with her silver hair in '63... (I personally don't find her attractive at all in her mid-'20s films/photos.)
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Post by davidmorrocco on Mar 23, 2021 8:46:46 GMT -6
Everyone has their opinion so that’s why I like this website so much. We can discuss topics like this. I thought the Art Deco period, around the 1930’s and early 1940’s were her best. I loved her Adrian style looks that made her radiate the big screen. The fashion and jewelry and hair the F me pumps. The 1920’s was not my favorite. Later in the 1950’s she was the Queen Bee that still made people look twice when she wore her mink coats and high fashion. In the 1960’s, I’ve watched her on TV shows and game shows and she was known by then as Thee Superstar Joan Crawford so we still admired her and she always dressed up for us. Admin Stephanie posted Happy Birthday video clips and I thought Joan looked fabulous in all of them. The 1970’s we’re not her best and she knew it. September 23rd, 1974, is a very important date. Joan and Rosalind Russell were photographed coming out of the NYC Rainbow Room and Joan saw what she looked like and retired herself from public. She knew it was time. No matter what age I will always look at Joan with much love and no judgments.
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