May. 1st, 2012

Burt !

May. 1st, 2012 09:34 am
london1952: (Default)
Thanks to the BBC for this article......

Burt Reynolds nude: 10 facts about the Cosmo centrefold



Burt Reynolds



It's 40 years since a nude Cosmopolitan centrefold of actor Burt Reynolds broke a taboo and launched a new era of women's magazine publishing.

"At last a male nude centrefold - the naked truth about guess who!!" screamed a banner on the front page. Cosmopolitan editor Helen Gurley Brown saw it as a victory for women whose "visual appetites" had been ignored by male magazine editors and proprietors.

It also boosted Cosmopolitan's circulation and turned Burt Reynolds into a 1970s sex icon. So what was the story behind the photograph?

1. It began on a TV show. Burt Reynolds was standing in for Johnny Carson as presenter of the Tonight show on NBC, and Helen Gurley Brown was his guest. "He was handsome, humorous, wonderful body, frisky," she told James Landers, author of a book on the first 100 years of Cosmopolitan. "During our conversation I asked him if he would pose for us." He agreed.

2. It could have been Paul Newman. Gurley Brown had approached him, before putting the question to Burt Reynolds, but he had refused.

3. It made Burt Reynolds into a celeb. The day after the magazine hit news-stands, he was mobbed by women asking him to sign their copy. Reynolds also noticed a change in the behaviour of theatre audiences from "polite to boisterous". "Standing ovations turned into burlesque show hoots and catcalls. They cared more about my pubes than they did about the play," he wrote in his 1994 autobiography, My Life. Gurley Brown said: "He had been a movie star, now he was a celebrity."

4. It made Cosmopolitan notorious. "At the time, you know, men liked to look at women naked. Well, nobody talked about it, but women liked to look at men naked. I did," Gurley Brown told Landers, who noted that the photograph pushed Cosmopolitan across a threshold, in the public mind, from a mainstream magazine "to a sex magazine".

5. It spawned Playgirl magazine. Douglas Lambert, owner of the Playgirl Club, decided to launch the magazine after seeing what a "winner" the Burt Reynolds centrefold was. "It came to me, that's what women want. If a woman says she wants to see a man's smile, his eyes, I say 'Don't lie to me,'" he was quoted as saying.

6. Reynolds chose the picture. A number of shots were taken. The choice of which would be published was left to the model.

7. The bearskin was a humorous touch. "I think that's probably a joke," says New York-based fashion portrait photographer Max Vadukul. "This is a very macho statement, a real bloke, full on, and totally confident," he says. He reckons Reynolds would have been happy going further, and removing the artfully placed arm from his lap.

8. You won't see this in 2012. It would be a tough photograph to take in 2012, Vadukul says, because of the "commodity factor" - the actor's publicists would be concerned about damage to his brand, among some members of the public. "It's a very modern picture, it would still be a very talkative picture. Who would be the equivalent of this guy - George Clooney? It's very far ahead of its time, from that period when anything goes, people swinging partners non-stop..."

9. The photographer was the celebrated Francesco Scavullo. Scavullo shot most Cosmopolitan covers over a 30-year period, and was involved in controversy again when he took photographs of a young Brooke Shields that some considered too sexual. He died in 2004, on the day he was due to photograph CNN anchor Anderson Cooper.

10. Arnold Schwarzenegger was the next but one centrefold. Cosmopolitan did not do these very often. It took two years for the next to appear, and Schwarzenegger made his appearance in 1977. Another man to grace the centre pages was Scott Brown, now a Massachusetts senator, but in June 1982 a law student who had entered and won the magazine's America's Sexiest Man contest. He posed for the camerasdays before his final exams.


london1952: (Default)
So, a return of some sun this afternoon has reminded me of our wonderful holiday in Croatia. There is something rather lovely about visiting mainland Europe "out-of-season", everywhere is much quieter, places easier to see, and everyone is more relaxed. Off-the-beaten-track areas may present fewer possibilities of finding somewhere to eat, but if we survived Calabria pre-Easter last year, I'm sure we can manage most places !

Another "plus" can be with accomodation, finding some rather nice hotels at low-season/reduced tariffs, and without throngs of other guests.

On our recent trip, we flew to Dubrovnik where we picked up our hire car and drove a few miles north, visiting a wonderful Arboretum before checking into our hotel for the night.  A very modern, and quite new, large "resort" hotel on the coast, it was almost deserted, as was the purpose-built village of apartments and water-front promenade where there were (in season) a number of restaraunts... luckily for us there was one open.

Everything about the interior of the Radisson Blu resort hotel was light, airy and calming...the modern decor was in natural shades of beige with turquoise highlights, though the exterior was a little "modern" for my taste it was quite stunning in parts.

A view from one (!) of the pools.......


Our room was lovely and very comfortable......


...........and of quite an unusual design, as the internal bathroom had a glass wall on the bedroom side letting in lots of light as well as views of anyone in the shower...there were blinds to protect one's modesty if required !

   


A "room with a view" and terrace on which to admire the morning before breakfasting (which was top-notch !) ....



Part of the hotel's reception area......... COOL !



After driving up the coast, including a fairly short distance through Bosnia, we arrived late afternoon in Split.  Our accommodation here was at a 4* "Bed & Breakfast" establishment right in the centre of the old town built in the confines of the old Roman Emperor's palace, it took a bit of finding but was well worth it and it was perfectly placed for enjoying the atmosphere of the ancient city.

A palace within a palace - that'll do nicely for me !!

   

The main entrance to the rooms is through a small courtyard, complete with well, and up a flight of stone stairs edge with pots of sweet-smelling hyacinths.......


The bedroom was smaller than the previous night, but very cosy, and beautifully furnished very recently, there is a large very well appointed bathroom too.

  
london1952: (Default)
After three nights in Split, we left, via car ferry, for the island of Korcula and the town of the same name...alledgedly (according to some) the birth-place of Marco Polo.  We had rather a mix up finding our next hotel as the company we'd booked through had attached the wrong address to the hotel name....but we eventually found the right place...though to start with they didn't have our booking (made 4 months previously) but said we could stay anyway. On stepping into the foyer I was immediately transported back to my teens, and holidays with my parents ! ..and when we got to the room it was definitely a case of 1970's Yugoslavian Retro !!! O.M.G !! ....I'll let the photos do the talking.........




   

I'm not sure I've ever seen a yellow and brown bathroom.......... or maybe I have LOL and obliterated it from my memory !!

   

I could imagine a very old secret-service agent hiding, poised with a tape recorder, above this false ceiling made of piping !! And Franco is looking like he's ready to escape at a minute's notice !


There was something quite lovely about the wooden coffered ceilings, and they could really be brought up-to-date, particularly the ones in the hotel reception, bar and restaurant..........   We were the only ones for breakfast (I think) and the staff couldn't have been nicer, bringing a selection of things and mking us a couple of delicious omelets !

Apart from being gob-smacked with the interior decorations, we were also incredulous that the room rate was virtually the same as the other places we stayed that were 4* and 5* !!! But it certainly was an experience !!!

Our last hotel for two nights was back in Dubrovnik, just outside the walled town, and was the 5* Excelsior Hotel, where apparently the Queen has stayed (not sure when, or in which incarnation the hotel was in - before the '90's war or after) and countless other well-known personages....photo's of all are displayed in a special glass viewing room !!    A good portion of the hotel is modern, and mostly "padded" beiges and browns... and the busiest establishment visited on the trip, many of them middle-aged and middle-England !!!



Rather disconcertingly the large bathroom window faced the road, but was apparently tinted glass from outside, but I couldn't quite bring myself to sit on the loo without pulling the blind down !!


And on spotting this terrace from the hotel reception I knew where I wanted to partake of a late afternoon restorative aperitivo !!

  

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