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How to take Glamour Studies
by Harrison Marks
Working in the field of theatrical photography, George Harrison Marks had the good fortune to capture on film some of the most beautiful women in show business; through trial and error, he eventually came to specialise in glamour or “pinup” photography. Asked to reveal the formula for his success, he wrote a series of articles for FOTO magazine in the 1950s, and these are collected here for the first time.
You can download a FREE copy of this 67-page book when you subscribe to our mailing list at: www.pamela-green.com
PDF: 67 pages Size: 127 mm x 203 mm
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Amazons of Yesteryear: Wrestling Women of the 1940s and ’50s
by Yahya El-Droubie with illustrations by Colin Gordon
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Satisfy your passions for female combat and nostalgia with this collection of rarely seen photos of bare-breasted female wrestlers of the 1940s and ’50s. Blood, sweat, tears, and plenty of writhing. Punch, bam, body-slam; she hits the mat, as she gets put on her back! Hardback: 34 pages Size: 203 mm x 254 mm £15.99/$18.99 THE
COLLECTION 1
STEPHEN GLASS
by Yahya El-Droubie
by Colin Gordon
agency that specialised in advertising work, and Autophot, a company dedicated exclusively to automobile photography. He was an amateur racer and keen motorsport enthusiast, and he covered Germany’s biggest races at the Nurburgring and the Avus circuit, near Berlin. His most famous photos are of the Mercedes-Benz Silver Arrows team, which dominated Grand Prix racing in the mid-1930s. With the rise of Hitler, however, business became increasingly difficult, and he fled to London. As an enemy alien at the outbreak of World War II, he was not permitted to pursue his profession and faced the threat
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Menagerie
Naked in the
Hardback: 46 pages Size: 203 mm x 254 mm £15.99/$18.99 THE PHOTOGRAPHER STEPHEN GLASS is a bit of an enigma. He was well-known enough during the 1950s for his name to be prominently displayed on the front of magazines to help sell them, but very little actually was written about him or his work. This situation differs somewhat from that of his elder brother, Zoltán Glass, who was also a photographer. Known to his friends as “Zolly” he was featured and interviewed in numerous magazines on both sides of the Atlantic. Zoltán was born in Budapest on April 26, 1903. He began his career as a cartoonist and retoucher for local newspaper, but in 1925 he moved to Berlin, where he found regular employment as the picture editor of Berlin evening paper, before moving on to the BerlinerTagblatt as a photojournalist. He prospered and was soon able to develop thriving freelance business as commercial photographer and journalist. He established Reclaphot, photographic
Sir Thomas
invented
–
naked in the menagerie naked in
menageriE naked in the menageriE THE STEPHEN GLASS COLLECTION 2
with illustrations
Here’s another vintage collection of nude photographs. This time, we take a playful look at Eve, accompanied by her animal friends. It’s a portable exhibition of unusual images that will have you harking back to more innocent times. Photographed in the studio and on location in a nudist camp, and featuring among other creatures, Grandma’s stuffed cat.
of internment, so he voluntarily handed over his camera equipment to the British authorities. After the war, he eked out living taking publicity stills for clients in the film and theatrical worlds. His career took a big step up when the Hungarian Arpad Elfer who was Creative Director of Colman, Prentis & Varley, one of the most prestigious London ad agencies started giving him work. By the mid-Fifties, he was one of the most successful fashion and advertising photographers in London Introduction
More
an imaginary island, which he named Utopia, meaning ‘nowhere’ to explain his idea of what a perfect world should be like. In this too imperfect age, we could all do with occasionnal glimpses of perfect beauty such as the camera has secured in these pages.
Benson Herbert
the
Nudist Camp Follies I
by Yahya El-Droubie
with illustrations
by Colin Gordon
Those who have enjoyed our other titles on this topic will appreciate this further collection of camera studies. In this volume we take an intimate look at the natural and free atmosphere of the Sun Clubs. Many of the pictures were taken just outside London, between Watford and St. Albans, where there are four nudist camps, all of which have proved popular with photographers over the years. The book features well-known models such as Pamela Green and Lee Sothern.
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Hardback: 46 pages Size: 203 mm x 254 mm £15.99/$18.99 Model Pamela Green poses as at Spielplatz nudist camp in 1951. One of his clients was Odhams Press, who published Lilliput a pocket-sized gentleman’s magazine that featured an assortment of titillating articles and risqué humour, together with adventurous photographic essays from such well-known talents as Bill Brandt and Brassai. Zoltán’s brother, Stephen, who also fled Europe during World War II, carved out a name for himself taking pictures for such publications as The Naturist and Health and Efficiency. The well-known model Pamela Green (1929–2010) posed for him several times at the infamous nudist camp Spielplatz in Bricket Wood, Hertfordshire, and at his tiny first-floor studio in Old Church Street, just off the Kings Road in Chelsea. “In those days, when Stephen photographed me, still had dark hair. He liked his props, especially stuffed animals,” she said Pamela’s agent, Pearl Beresford, sent her along to Zoltán, whose studio on the Kings Road was enormous by comparison. Unlike Stephen, Zoltán was brisk and businesslike. Iseult, the daughter of Spielplatz co-founders Charles and Dorothy Macaskie, remembers Stephen. “He would often ask me to pose for him,” she said “I quite After the war, we saw a new type of person becoming interested in nudism. Previously it had always been the well-to-do, educated, rather out-ofthe-ordinary type of person who joined the movement. Now we began to see the average, unprejudiced Englishman and his wife. – Dorothy Macaskie nudist camp follies Right: Audrey Wayne and Anita Smith. nudist camp follies THE STEPHEN GLASS COLLECTION 3
Nudist Camp Follies II
by Yahya El-Droubie
illustrations by Colin Gordon
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Hardback: 46 pages Size: 203 mm x 254 mm £15.99/$18.99 Above left: British Naturism by Michael Rutherford, published by The Naturist Ltd., 1946. Above right: The Pool of Enchantment: Reflections on the Naturist Movement by Anne Seton, published by The Naturist Ltd, 1950. Far left: Cover image of Health and Efficiency January 1951. One of his clients was Odhams Press, who published Lilliput pocket-sized gentleman’s magazine that featured an assortment of titillating articles and risqué humour, together with adventurous photographic essays from such well-known talents as Bill Brandt and Brassai. Zoltán’s brother, Stephen, who also fled Europe during World War II, carved out a name for himself taking pictures for such publications as The Naturist and Health and Efficiency. The well-known model Pamela Green (1929–2010) posed for him several times at the infamous nudist camp Spielplatz in Bricket Wood, Hertfordshire, and at his tiny first-floor studio in Old Church Street, just off the Kings Road in Chelsea. “In those days, when Stephen photographed me, I still had nudist camp follies II 7 Artemis, the Greek goddess of the hunt, at Spielplatz nudist camp in 1951. One of his clients was Odhams Press, who published Lilliput a pocket-sized gentleman’s magazine that featured an assortment of titillating articles and risqué humour, together with adventurous photographic essays from such well-known talents as Bill Brandt and Brassai. Zoltán’s brother, Stephen, who also fled Europe during World War II, carved out a name for himself taking pictures for such publications as The Naturist and Health and Efficiency. The well-known model Pamela Green (1929–2010) posed for him several times at the infamous nudist camp Spielplatz in Bricket Wood, Hertfordshire, and at his tiny first-floor studio in Old Church Street, just off the Kings Road in Chelsea. “In those days, when Stephen photographed me, I still had dark hair. He liked his props, especially stuffed animals,” she said Pamela’s agent, Pearl Beresford, sent her along to Zoltán, whose studio on the Kings Road was enormous by comparison. Unlike Stephen, Zoltán was brisk and businesslike. Iseult, the daughter of Spielplatz co-founders Charles and Dorothy Macaskie, remembers Stephen. “He would often ask me to pose for him,” she said “I quite After the war, we saw a new type of person becoming interested in nudism. Previously it had always been the well-to-do, educated, rather out-ofthe-ordinary type of person who joined the movement. Now we began to see the average, unprejudiced Englishman and his wife. – Dorothy Macaskie nudist camp follies THE STEPHEN GLASS COLLECTION 4
with
Further fun and frolics in volume two of Nudist Camp Follies — a photographic peek at naturism in 1950s Britain. The book features well-known models such as Naturism’s Ambassador, Elizabeth Walker, wife of Edward Craven Walker, the inventor of the lava lamp.
Beauty Off-duty: Relaxed, Everyday Moments Caught on Camera
by Yahya El-Droubie with illustrations by Colin Gordon
Glamour girls are mostly photographed in the studio or some exotic location, so one often wonders what they look like relaxing at home. Wolfbait is devoted to showing you just that. And as you will see, these girls, whether on the phone, getting dressed, doing a bit of DIY or just hanging out nude on a hot day by the fireplace, are just as lovely for it. Featuring such well-known models as Lee Sothern, Kim Foster, Mina Felgate and June Wilkinson.
Hardback: 50 pages Size: 203 mm x 254 mm £15.99/$18.99
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THE STEPHEN
COLLECTION 5
GLASS
Nymphs and Naiads: Beauty Unadorned and Outdoors
by Yahya El-Droubie with illustrations by Colin Gordon
Pastoral dreams of beauty unadorned and outdoors by the acclaimed naturist photographer Stephen Glass. A fascinating depiction of a very British arcadia that is unashamed and unabashed in its vision of an island idyll. Venture out into the glorious British countryside to take in the view of beauty unadorned. The book is delightfully illustrated by Colin Gordon and comes with a short introduction exploring the links between the Edwardian cult of Pan, Wicca and the nudist movement.
Hardback: 46 pages Size: 203 mm x 254 mm £15.99/$18.99
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THE STEPHEN GLASS COLLECTION 6
by Yahya El-Droubie with illustrations by Colin Gordon
Pose & Poise is the seventh, and possibly the final (never say never), volume in Wolfbait’s Stephen Glass Collection. Join us as we venture into the studio of one of the greatest photographers of the female nude in the post-war era. The young ladies may look French, but their appeal is universal. The book features several well-known models such as June Russell and Pamela Green.
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Poise and Pose: Studio Nudes
Hardback: 46 pages Size: 203 mm x 254 mm £15.99/$18.99 however, as an enemy alien at the outbreak of World War II in 1938, he was not permitted to pursue his profession and faced the threat of internment. As result, he voluntarily handed over his camera equipment to the British authorities. After the war, Zoltán eked out a living taking publicity stills for clients in the film and theatre worlds. In 1948, after twelve years as an émigré, he became a naturalised British subject. It was around this time that Stephen began to concentrate on naturist photography. Zoltán’s career took a big step up when fellow Hungarian Arpad Elfer, creative director at Colman, Prentis and Varley, one of the most prestigious London advertising agencies, started giving him work. By the mid-1950s, he was one of the most successful fashion and advertising photographers in the capital, with a studio at 183 Kings Road, Chelsea, and later, another at 41 Paradise Walk, SW3. PRÉSENTATION EN GARDE! TOUCHÉ poise & pose THE STEPHEN GLASS COLLECTION 7
Doing Rude Things: The History of the British Sex Film
by David McGillivray with a foreword by Pamela Green
Doing Rude Things: The History of the British Sex Film was orginally published in 1992. It was the first serious study of a genre which, if not forgotten, was universally denounced and denigrated. Yet the book was highly influential; it led to numerous film seasons and festivals, and in 1995 the BBC turned it into a documentary. The 25th-anniversary edition is vastly expanded and updated, with new chapters and photographs, and brings the story of British prudishness and censorship bang up-to-date.
Hardback: 172 pages Size: 203 mm x 254 mm £17.99/$26.99
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a Russian invention which involved the audience standing inside 360° screen. A novelty during the London tourist season, it later flopped in Blackpool and Glasgow and was abandoned before the project had recovered its costs. But for Long it posed several enjoyable challenges, one of which is that cameras shooting complete 360° angle will inevitably photograph the crew. (They eventually hid by crouching under the duralumin plate on which the eleven cameras were mounted.) (1962) the Italian shockumentary which dwelled gloatingly on various aspects of man’s savagery, spawned dozens of imitations during the Sixties, two of which – London in the Raw (1964) and Primitive London (1965) coined today by pundits speaking disparagingly of the naturist ethos. Was it intended to be tongue-in-cheek in 1962? Long: “Yeah, it was.” Really? “All right, no, it wasn’t. I’ll tell you what it was. It was just a contrived title to excite the type of patron these films were aimed at. mean, taking off your clothes is a bit naughty, and then... live... mean, that suggests Take Off Your Clothes and I suppose that was the thinking behind it: that it might imply sexual activity.” In 1964 Long and Miller were asked to make the first (and, as it turned out, the last) British travelogue in Circlorama, Above: The title references a now defunct Sunday newspaper. Doing Rude Things Above: Britain’s last nudie. Made in 1963 but unreleased for three years, played as a second feature. Spoiler alert: Sandy (Annette Briand) sheds her inhibitions and becomes a nudist. Above top: The only shock in the hair transplant operation. Above bottom: The still from were next out of the Long-Miller stable. In both these cases the reward for enduring the unpleasantries, which included a hair transplant operation and the killing of a battery chicken, was sex: striptease, woman giving birth, and the reconstruction of wife-swapping party (a subject to which Long was later to return.) The inclusion of such hitherto forbidden material was the result of Sixties permissiveness breaking down the bounds of censorship. In 2017 essayist Andrew Martin also theorised that guilt was declining exponentially with the decline of religion. The graphic depiction of sexuality was still some years off, but the degree of liberation achieved in the mid-Sixties was apparent in the names of the films themselves. In 1960 foreign sexploitation films were still being given English titles which reflected the British audience’s guilty conscience: Forgive Us Our Trespasses (1957) Girl of Shame (1959) Sins of and Let’s Be Daring, Madame (both 1960) But in 1964 the BBFC allowed an Italian film, L’amore difficile to be given the shamelessly open title Sex Can Be Difficult, and henceforward it was sex, and not vice, corruption and nudity, that sold the exploitation film. It was in this enlightened atmosphere that Long and Miller produced their first unadulterated sex film, Secrets of a Windmill Girl (1965). Originally intended as a straightforward record of the last nude revue presented at the Windmill Theatre, its cramped dance routines and comic fillers were later woven into fictitious story concerning detective’s investigations into the death of former Windmill girl. Important as documentary evidence of the kind of tat that inflamed the senses of million voyeurs during the three decades the Windmill operated non-stop revue, the film is also of interest in that it features early – clothed appearances by singer-actress Dana Gillespie and Oscar nominee Pauline Collins, as well as William Graham, Windmill dancer who had begun his screen career as child in the 1940s as Richmal Crompton’s Just William. Shortly after the film’s release Stanley Long and Arnold Louis Miller went their separate ways. For Long the split was especially beneficial, leading as it did to a range of work far 50 CHAPTER 2 CHAPTER 2 | 51 him this was at Ealing Studios, where he learned about lighting from Czech cinematographer Otto Heller and helped the ancient cinema pioneer Cecil Hepworth, who “used to bugger about on Moviola”. Pamela Green’s memory, however, was that Marks told her he lugged film cans around at Pathé News. She was reasonably sure he did not meet Otto Heller until 1959, when Marks visited the set of Green’s first film, Peeping Tom, which Heller lit. Whatever the case, Marks seems to have observed enough camera technique to enable him to switch from performing to photography. He began by snapping his fellow comedians, one of whom, young unknown stooging for the magician David Nixon, was Norman Wisdom. In 1952 Wisdom was chosen to appear at the Prince of Wales Theatre in Paris to Piccadilly, the London Folies Bergtion to gain further commissions photographing the of Wales showgirls. One of these was Pamela Green.The most famous British nude of the Fifties, Britain’s answer to America’s Bettie Page, Green also wielded an influence over Marks, and thereby the development of British nude photography, hitherto acknowledged only by those in the trade. “Some photographers of renown,” said Peter Sykes, editor of Men Only magazine, in 1974, “maintain that it was she who made Harrison Marks and that he would never have amounted to very much without her.” Surprisingly Marks already had acknowledged Green’s importance. In the 1967 biography The Naked Truth About Harrison Marks, he said, “Pam set me up, she started it all; in many ways owe much to her.” A former art student who turned to nude modelling to pay her way through college, Green not only participated in every Above left: The original version of The Naked World of Harrison Marks may be lost. Only an edited black and white Above right: Trade advert for The Nine Ages of Nakedness, released by nudie pioneer Nat Miller. Above: Wrestler Bruno Elrington captures June Palmer in the Stone Age segment of The Nine Ages of Nakedness 56 CHAPTER 2 CHAPTER | 57
History of Nudist Film by Mark
Nearly Naked was one of a pair of Rogers’ forays into filmdom. Beer is Here a comedy short about prohibition-era beer production, and his dalliance with nudist themes in Nearly Naked, comprise his filmography, each from 1933. The nudist-themed film follows the Ballyhoo of 1932 plotline closely, with the character here named Eddie requesting his girlfriend’s hand (again played by Vera Marshe) from her mother at a nudist club. Much to his mortification, Eddie has to undress to enter the club, but shrubs and fences hide the parts of his and other actors’ deemed legally obscene in the early 1930s. Newspaper movie reviews are few or nonexistent, as the film died a death soon after release. No copyright was even registered.
Many films in the early 1930s blatantly toyed with the limitations set down by the Production Code. By 1934, however, there was enough pressure from potential censorship forces to goad Hollywood executives into abiding by the Code in both word and deed. In particular were a series of theater boycotts organized by a group created in April 1934 called the Catholic Legion of Decency, and a threat by the twenty-two-million-member Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America to campaign aggressively for federal censorship laws. On 1 July 1934, Hollywood executives responded by creating the Production Code Administration (PCA), this time with Joseph Breen—a lay Catholic activist and publisher of the Motion Picture Herald—as its director. Together with Hays and Quigley, Breen set out to control every aspect of content and theme that went up on a Hollywood screen. The PCA was given the authority to review and clear with a “PCA Seal of Approval” every movie that Hollywood wished to distribute to its theaters. Since the same producers making the films controlled virtually all major theaters, it was easy in principle not to allow any theater to show a film not approved by the newly empowered Hays Office.39 A $25,000 fine for failure to abide by the Production Code gave additional teeth to the PCA. Hollywood had avoided federal governmental
35 34
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regulation, but the Production Code finally had the biting power needed to be a controlling force. The movies Hollywood produced thereafter took on a decidedly moral tone. Gone were the likes of Jean Harlow’s bathing scene in Red Dust (1932), or Mae West’s sexy dialogue in Night After Night (1932) and She Done Him Wrong (1933). For the next three decades the police would be honest; crime would not pay; any youth worth admiring would respect authority; drug abuse would not exist; people would kiss only briefly and with both feet firmly on the floor; and nobody would even think about being nude in front of others. The policy of filming married couples sleeping in separate beds was not, as many believe, a demand of the Production Code. It was rather an unwritten tradition established by the The classic U.S. poster for Nearly Naked (1933). 49 48 U.K. poster for the The Nudist Story (1960). Directed by Ramsey Herrington. Image courtesy of the Pamela Green Archive. The nudist film usually is set in a nudist camp or in some way proclaims the nudist ‘philosophy,’ however unrelated that may be to the plot, if indeed there is a ‘plot.’ The nudity presented is ostensibly nonerotic, and, to all appearances, is meant to present the physical and spiritual advantages of a way of life. With such ‘advocacy’ clearly aimed at claiming free speech protection, nudism has become the most extensively expounded idea in the entire history of motion pictures. Randall’s discussion merits detailed attention and provides a basis for the defining criteria of classic nudist cinema. Nudist exploitation films will have the following five character traits. First, they must be exploitation films in the sense outlined in the previous chapter.
nudism
nudism—although
colonies”
long enough
sensationalist cachet.
be morally outraged
more obvious objects of ire. The growth of soft pornography and the publicly acknowledged fads of free love and swinging made easier targets than the cloistered nudists in their remote campgrounds. Since nudism now appeared tame in comparison and ceased to provide a sensational topic, the nudist movies produced after the 1960s are not accurately deemed exploitation films. The second character trait of nudist exploitation films is that they will have as their setting a nudist camp or beach, or the film director will present the characters as nudists. Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, films featuring burlesque dancers, naked Polynesians, and nude models were extraordinarily popular at independent theaters. The narrators often provided voice-overs extolling the purity and naturalness of nudity, but nudism per se was not addressed. A nudist might agree with everything the narrator said regarding the appropriateness and benefits of being nude, but since social nudity itself was not part of the focus of these films, they belong in a different category of movies exploiting the audience’s thirst for on-screen nudity. Third, nudist exploitation films will explicitly or tacitly proclaim some important element of “nudist philosophy.” This may include discussion of the physical, psychological, social, or spiritual benefits of practicing non-sexual social nudity. This may be accomplished by filming a scene where a clothed Tim Sutton (Paul Kendrick) and Carol Sutton (Joy Hinton) discuss club matters in The Nudist Story (1960), often described as the Citizen Kane of nudist films. Photo courtesy of the Pamela Green Archive.
The
and
introduces
cinematic portrayals
Paperback: 346 pages Size: 152 mm x 223 mm £16.99/$21.99
Obviously, if they are not exploitation films, they cannot be nudist exploitation films. In particular they must focus on a “forbidden topic.” From the 1930s to the 1960s,
clearly fell into this category. After the 1960s,
certainly not accepted by the public—was a topic available for polite conversation. Nudists and “nudist
had been in the public eye
to remove their earlier
By the late 1960s, those who would have the tendency to
by any form of social nudity had
Cinema au Naturel: A
Storey
quirky world of nudist films is revealed. Cinema au Naturel brings to life many long-forgotten films such as Elysia: Valley of the Nude, The Monster of Camp Sunshine,
Take Off Your Clothes and Live! In his account of the history of nudist film, Mark Storey
readers to the best and the worst of these
of clothes-free life.
Miniten: Rules of the Game
by Yahya El-Droubie with
illustrations
by Colin Gordon
Invented in the 1930s, Miniten is a tennis-like game played by naturists. Challenging and fun, it can be enjoyed by all. If you’re new to Miniten and want to learn how to play it, this is the book for you. The book features illustrations by Colin Gordon, famed house artist for Chaz Royal’s London Burlesque Festival. His other work includes theatre and gig posters, pinup art, sculpture and animation.
Paperback: 30 pages Size: 127 mm x 203 mm £6.99/$9.99
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Naked as Nature Intended:
The Epic tale of a Nudist Picture
by Pamela Green with photographs by Douglas Webb
Released in 1961, Naked as Nature Intended created a sensation. Queues formed around the block and police were called in to manage the crowds. It stayed on the big screen for over 17 months. The film was directed by the notorious George Harrison Marks and starred Pamela Green, Britain’s answer to Bettie Page. Pamela Green was best-known for her short but striking role in Michael Powell’s Peeping Tom. Made for little money, the film earned its production costs back many times over. It ushered in a new era of cinematic “exploitation”, driven by simple economics.
Features behind-the-scenes exclusives and never-before-seen photographs by Douglas Webb, who, during World War II, was the front gunner on the last plane back from the legendary Dambusters Raid.
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Hardback: 54 pages Size: 203 mm x 254 mm £16.99/$25.00 Although armed with towel and instructions to keep his “bits” covered, he had a tendency to forget and let the towel drop. In the publicity shots there he was, offending “bits” in full view. They were standing behind an open wire fence which came up to their waists, a rose was climbing up one side of the wire, so extended the rose and incorporated the offending parts into the leaves. The final shots were a 15 minute sequences of camp activities. We quickly exhausted the table tennis, the swimming and the quoits. Doug did series of stills of me on a swing. We were filmed talking to the residents and admiring their gardens. After that we all left, getting into the Buick and driving off, waving, supposedly silhouetted against the sunset. George seemed to be very fond of sunsets, it was his misfortune that there were never any. Below and right: The girls outside the rather austere clubhouse at Spielplatz enjoying a drink and chat. All in place, Roy lit us. This is where we were to discuss naturism. We all looked blank. By now, it was pm, the unit broke for lunch, and all went to the pub in Macclesfield Street. “Not you lot”. Brason called us back. “You can spend your lunch hour learning your dialogue”. “John”, I said, “There is no dialogue, there has never been any dialogue. Furthermore, he who should have written it is at this moment stuffing himself with smoked salmon sandwiches and enjoying large drink. suggest that instead of nagging us, you go and find him”. Grimly Brason left the studio, hauled George away from his lunch and bid him to write. That afternoon we received our few lines, each on separate pieces of paper. The four girls learnt the lines they had to say, but not when or in what order. After endless, “Oh, is it me now ?” and “I’ve forgotten. What do say ?”, patience was exhausted. Slowly and laboriously, we toiled on. The lure of the sea, sun and sand proved overwhelming, as we longed to move free, as nature intended. Converted to naturism, we threw away our bikini tops. Petrina and dropped ours somewhat Angela Jones. Right: Angela Jones, Pamela Green and Petrina Foryth basking in the studio lights Far Right: Bridget Leonard. The film’s publicity material states that “born in Donegal, Ireland, Bridget spent her early years in small village until she was fifteen and spoke no other tongue than her native Gaelic. Three years ago however, a talent scout working with Swedish film company in Ireland spotted her and them and worked in several films. Bridget first came to England just year ago to drama schools. Introduced to Harrison Marks who was very much impressed by her sparkling beauty, she was signed-up to participate in Naked as Nature Intended Vital statistics 38"-24"-36".
The Naked Truth About Harrison Marks
by Franklyn Wood
When this book first appeared in 1967, public interest in glamour photographer and magazine publisher George Harrison Marks was perhaps at an all-time high. Just who was this man with the beatnik beard, the thick frame glasses and the apparent dream job of photographing beautiful women in a state of undress?
The author Franklyn Wood, formerly an Art Editor at The Times, was the first editor in Fleet Street to run a diary (in The Daily Sketch) under his own name. He wrote numerous features in The Sunday Times, News of the World and other popular Sunday newspapers on a variety of subjects, ranging from shock, horror and scandal exposés to business news.
Paperback: 180 pages Size: 127 mm x 203 mm £9.99/$12.99
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Past Masters of the Nude: An Illustrated Bibliography of Nude Photography Books
Published in England from 1896 to 1960.
by Jay W. King
This book documents every hardback book of nude photographs published in England during the first half of the 20th century from such photographers as Walter Bird, John Everard and George Harrison Marks. Full bibliographical details are given for each title, together with a description of its imagery and contents — a must-have resource for bibliophiles and collectors. In a scholarly introduction and postscript, together with the bibliographical entries themselves, author Jay W. King provides a fascinating account of the profound changes in cultural and legal attitudes towards nudity and sexuality which occurred in England in the first 60 years of the 20th century.
Hardback: 78 pages Size: 203 mm x 254 mm £20/$25.99
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Studio Nudes by Harrison Marks
by Yahya El-Droubie
with
a foreword by Jean Spaul
Venture down mammary lane as we take a luscious look at the nude photographic slides of Harrison Marks. A nostalgic trip full of tease and prurient mystery, in which you will get to savour the vintage charms of Lorraine Burnett, Pamela Green and others. Includes listings of slides sets for collectors.
Hardback: 46 pages Size: 203 mm x 203 mm £16.99/$20.99
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