Summer suits are ...
Summer suits are gin & tonic, Our Man in Havana, panama hats, Churchill in Africa, Brideshead Revisited, fun.
Summer suits are 1890-1925 too. They are Thomas Mann, the novel Buddenbrooks (it was published, when he was 25!), the island Rügen, the beaches of Travemünde.
Summer suit from 1920:
Travemünde 2006:
Summer suits are 1890-1925 too. They are Thomas Mann, the novel Buddenbrooks (it was published, when he was 25!), the island Rügen, the beaches of Travemünde.
Summer suit from 1920:
Travemünde 2006:
Gruto wrote:Summer suits are...Churchill in Africa
I quite like Mme. Chiang's summer dress. I wonder if I should show the photograph to a friend . . . .
Anthony Eden was always exquisitely dressed. Shame he was such a disasterous PM!
Doubly sad when one considers how long Eden had had to wait...and Gruto, may we add 'Our Man in Marrakech' too please? On WSC - his great friend F E Smith said of him: "Winston can always make do with the best of everything."
NJS
NJS
-
- Posts: 452
- Joined: Tue Mar 27, 2007 9:42 pm
- Contact:
Probably two stupid questions from an ignorant frog:Gruto wrote:pvpatty wrote:From Cairo and around:Gruto wrote:Summer suits are...Churchill in Africa
In the group picture above, is the sixth man from the left (back row), with a moustache, a smile, and his hair parted on (his) left side, Harold MacMillan?
Who is the second man from the right (same row)? He looks familiar (probably an American) but I cannot place him, or rather, put a name on the face.
Thank you.
Frog in Suit
Yes, Frog, the man 6th from the right is 'Our People Have Never Had It So Good.' - Super-Mac - not sure about the id of the other chap! But isn't that RAB Butler next to him?
NJS
NJS
That second photo is actually one of the few I have seen of Churchill with a straight necktie.
Also, is it me or are the tops of Monty's lapels in the second photo massive?
-
- Posts: 452
- Joined: Tue Mar 27, 2007 9:42 pm
- Contact:
Re: RAB Butler, I think you are right. I looked him up in Getty images and this looks like him. Also, the second man from the right is Averell Harriman (quick internet search).storeynicholas wrote:Yes, Frog, the man 6th from the right is 'Our People Have Never Had It So Good.' - Super-Mac - not sure about the id of the other chap! But isn't that RAB Butler next to him?
NJS
It looks as if WSC is holding a white or cream homburg, presumably straw. I do not remember ever seeing one before. Perfect headgear for the tropics.
Frog in Suit
Harriman ran off with WSC's son's wife - later Pamela Harriman-Churchill - odd that she kept the name - she became US Ambassador to Paris and died of a stroke in the Ritz pool on her morning swim. I believe that WSC's hat is a Panama in a Homburg style. They can be found at Brent Black Panamas - on a Google search - but not a very usual style.
NJS
NJS
-
- Posts: 452
- Joined: Tue Mar 27, 2007 9:42 pm
- Contact:
I had the pleasure of hearing and seeing the late Mrs Harriman in Paris, at a reception given for Parisian alumni of US universities. She spoke beautiful French, had an imposing presence despite being in her eighties, I think, and had her own pictures -- not the State Department's --on the walls of the ambassador's residence (I sem to remember Van Gogh and others of that caliber). She was a big hit with the French because of her linguistic abilities and also, I would suggest, because she had been born and bred in the aristocracy, or at least the gentry, had known familiarly many important figures (WSC as a father-in-law!) and could conduct herself with ease and poise in any situation. A hard act to follow.storeynicholas wrote:Harriman ran off with WSC's son's wife - later Pamela Harriman-Churchill - odd that she kept the name - she became US Ambassador to Paris and died of a stroke in the Ritz pool on her morning swim. I believe that WSC's hat is a Panama in a Homburg style. They can be found at Brent Black Panamas - on a Google search - but not a very usual style.
NJS
Frog in Suit
Re the straw Homburg, I seem to recall Christie gives Poirot one in one of those Egyptian mysteries. I remember because it struck me at the time as unusual; obviously, none us here would follow Poirot's dress sense in every particular, but it does have precedent.
-
- Information
-
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 14 guests