Translate

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Jeri Ryan

Acting Appreciation

I'm a Trekker. I grew up watching TOS, TNG, and Deep Space Nine. But it was Voyager that had the hottest character, Seven of Nine, a former Borg drone played by Jeri Ryan, a role she reprised years later in Picard.

Born on February 22, 1968, Jeri grew up in Army posts. In 1986, she graduated as a National Merit Scholar attending Northwestern University, Illinois. She graduated with a bachelor's degree in Theatre in 1990.

In 1989, she was chosen as Miss Illinois and then competed in Miss America a year later. 

In 1991, Jeri made her acting debut playing a swim instructor on Who's the Boss? She then appeared in several TV sitcoms, series, before landing a role in the sci-fi series Dark Skies in 1997. Unfortunately, Dark Skies was canceled after 8 episodes. 

In 1997, Ryan was chosen for a role on Star Trek Voyager as Seven of Nine, a Borg liberated by the crew of the USS Voyager. No surprise, but ratings increased 60% after she joined the cast.

After Voyager, she appeared in several romantic comedy films, and TV drama series. In 2020, she reprised her role of Seven of Nine in the CBS All Access Star Trek Picard.







Sources:

Wikipedia.org
Theviraler.com



Saturday, February 19, 2022

Edward S. Curtis

Photography Appreciation

American photographer and ethnologist Edward Sheriff Curtis was born on February 19, 1868. He is best known for his photography of the American West and Native American people.

Originally from Whitewater, Wisconsin, Curtis grew up in St. Paul, Minnesota. At 17, he moved to Seattle, Washington where he purchased a camera and became a partner with Rasmus Rothi. He then later formed a studio with Thomas Guptill. 

In 1895, Curtis photographed Princess Angeline, daughter of Chief Sealth of Seattle. A few years later, two images he took of Princess Angeline were chosen for an exhibition sponsored by the National Photographic Society. 

While photographing Mount Rainier, he came upon a group of scientists. One of them Wass George Bird Grinnell, an expert on Native Americans. Soon after, Curtis was appointed as the official photographer of the Harriman Alaska Expedition of 1899 then joined Grinnell on an expedition to photograph people of the Blackfoot Confederacy in Montana.

In 1907, Curtis' The North American Indian was published, a book not only included photographs but also extensive written recorded history. 

A few years later, his first feature film depicting Native American life called In the Land of the Head Hunters premiered in North York and Seattle on December 7, 1914. 

In the mid-twenties, Curtis moved to Los Angeles, opened a photo studio, and worked as an assistant cameraman for film director Cecil B. DeMille. 

White Man Runs Him (c. 1908)

Zuni Girl with jar (c. 1903)

Hopi mother (1922)



Sources: Wikipedia.org


Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Mary Adshead

Art Appreciation

Born on February 15, 1904, Mary Adshead was best known for her work as a muralist.

At a young age, she was taught watercolor painting by her architect father Stanley Davenport Adshead. When she was 16, she enrolled at the Slade School of Art in 1921. 

In the 1930s, she held her first solo exhibition at the Goupil Gallery in France, illustrated children's books with her husband and was elected a member of the New English Art Club, an alternative venue to the Royal Academy.

In the 1940s and 1950s, she designed stamps for the English General Post Office, murals, film sets of Cleopatra, and organized the Society of Mural Painters. 


The Puncture (1928)


A Tropical Fantasy: Charles Reilly's Dining Room Mural (1926)


The Cruise (1934)


Source: Wikipedia, artuk.org