2014-09-04

Exhibition dates: 7th February – 7th September 2014

Bruce Davidson
Untitled from the Brooklyn Gang series

1959

Danny Lyon
Crossing the Ohio River, Louisville, 1966

1966

Silver gelatin print

Each cool figure was considered with the following historical rubric in mind and possesses at least three elements of this singular American self-concept:

an original artistic vision carried off with a signature style

cultural rebellion or transgression for a given generation

iconic power, or instant visual recognition

a recognized cultural legacy

Every individual here created an original persona without precedent in American culture. These photographs capture the complex relationship between the real-life person, the image embraced by fans and the media, and the person’s artistic work.

What does it mean when a generation claims a certain figure as cool? What qualities does this person embody at that historical moment? American Cool explores these questions through photography, history, and popular culture. In this exhibition, cool is rendered visible, as shot by some of the finest art photographers of the past century.

When less – less famous, less obvious – is more

I don’t know about you, but the photographs chosen to represent American “cool” in this exhibition – 39 of which are shown in the posting out of a total of 108, but the rest are mainly of the same ilk – seem to me to be a singularly strange bunch of images to choose for such a concept. Personally, I find very few of them are “cool”, that is a mixture of a social charge of rebellious self-expression, charisma, edge and mystery with a certain self-made sense of style.

The only images that I find definitely “cool” among this bunch are, firstly Bob Dylan, closely followed by Jackson Pollock (notice the skull lurking behind him) and Susan Sontag. There is no proposition of cool in these three photographs, the people in them just are. The rest of the photographs, and there really are some atrociously plain and boring portraits among this lot (including a poor portrait of James Dean), really don’t speak to me of cool, don’t speak to me of anything much at all. How you could ever think that the portrait of Willie Nelson, 1989 (printed 2009, below) is cool is beyond me… and what is it with the reprints of the photographs, not originals but modern prints made years later? Perhaps the National Portrait Gallery needed to look beyond their own collection for a more rounded representation of American cool.

The two photographs I have included above are my top picks of American cool, and neither are in the exhibition. These iconic American images don’t feature famous people, they are not “posed” for the camera, and yet there is that ineffable something that makes the people in them absolutely, totally cool. THIS IS AMERICAN COOL: their own style, their own rebelliousness and mystery without possibly realising it = a naturalness that comes from doing their own thing, making their own way. Perhaps that is the point that this exhibition misses: you don’t have to be famous to be “cool”. A portrait is not just a mug shot. And an original persona does not have to come with fame attached.

This exhibition just doesn’t cut the mustard. The whole shebang needed a bloody good rethink, from the concept (does a generation have to “claim” someone is cool? is it necessary or desirable to portray American Cool through media images? do they have to be famous or instantly recognisable people to be “cool”) to the choice of images which could better illustrate the theme. Surely the qualities that person embodies changes from moment to moment, from photographer to photographer, from context to context (just look at the portraits of a haggard James Dean). To attempt illustrate three elements in a single photograph – good luck with that one!

Marcus

PS I have added the videos to add a bit of spice to the proceedings… in them you can, occasionally, feel the charisma of the person.

.

Many thankx to the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

Bob Willoughby
Billie Holiday

1951 (printed 1991)

Gelatin silver print

Image: 25.2 x 35.3 cm. (19 15/16 x 13 15/16″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Rare live footage of one of the first anti rascism songs ever.

Roger Marshutz
Elvis Presley

1956

Gelatin silver print

Sheet: 40.6 x 50.8cm (16 x20″)

© Estee Stanley

Herman Leonard
Frank Sinatra

c. 1956

Gelatin silver print

Image: 16.5 x 24.1cm (6 1/2 x 9 1/2″)

Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers University

Marcia Resnick
David Byrne

1981

Gelatin silver print

Image: 21.8 x 32.5 cm (8 9/16 x 12 13/16″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Julian Wasser
Joan Didion

1970

Gelatin silver print

Image: 24.3 x 34 cm (9 9/16 x 13 3/8″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Joan Didion (born December 5, 1934) is an American author best known for her novels and her literary journalism. Her novels and essays explore the disintegration of American morals and cultural chaos, where the overriding theme is individual and social fragmentation.

Roy Schatt
James Dean

1954

Gelatin silver print

Image: 34.7 x 42.2cm (13 11/16 x 16 5/8″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

William Claxton
Steve McQueen

1962

Gelatin silver print

Image: 40 x 58.7cm (15 3/4 x 23 1/8″)

Fahey Klein Gallery

Martin Schoeller
Tony Hawk

1999 (printed 2010)

Archival pigment print

Image: 58.5 x 58.6 cm (23 1/16 x 23 1/16″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

What do we mean when we say someone is cool? Cool carries a social charge of rebellious self-expression, charisma, edge and mystery.

Cool is an original American sensibility and remains a global obsession. In the early 1940s, legendary jazz saxophonist Lester Young brought this central African American concept into the modern vernacular. Cool became a password in bohemian life connoting a balanced state of mind, a dynamic mode of performance, and a certain stylish stoicism. A cool person has a situation under control, and with a signature style. Cool has been embodied in jazz musicians such as Miles Davis and Billie Holiday, in actors such as Robert Mitchum, Faye Dunaway, and Johnny Depp, and in singers such as Elvis Presley, Patti Smith, and Jay-Z. American Cool is a photography and cultural studies exhibition featuring portraits of such iconic figures, each of whom has contributed an original artistic vision to American culture symbolic of a particular historical moment. They emerged from a variety of fields: art, music, film, sports, comedy, literature, and political activism. American Cool is the zeitgeist taking embodied form.

American Cool is captured by a roll call of fine-art photographers from Henri Cartier-Bresson to Annie Leibovitz, from Richard Avedon to Herman Leonard to Diane Arbus. This exhibition is accompanied by an illustrated catalogue with essays by Joel Dinerstein, the James H. Clark Endowed Chair in American Civilization and Director of the New Orleans Center for the Gulf South at Tulane University, and Frank H. Goodyear III, co-director of the Bowdoin College Museum of Art and former curator of photographs at the National Portrait Gallery.

Unidentified Artist
Jack Nicholson in “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”

1975

Gelatin silver print

Image: 17.3 x 25.1cm (6 13/16 x 9 7/8″)

The Kobal Collection

John Cohen
Jack Kerouac

1959

Gelatin silver print

Image: 15.9 x 24.1cm (6 1/4 x 9 1/2″)

Sheet: 20.2 x 25.4cm (7 15/16 x 10″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Leo Fuchs
Paul Newman

1959 (printed 2013)

Modern archival print

Sheet: 27.9 x 35.6cm (11 x 14″)

© Alexandre Fuchs

William Paul Gottlieb
Thelonious Monk at Minton’s Playhouse, New York City

1947

Gelatin silver print

Sheet: 25.4 x 20.3cm (10 x 8″)

Estate of William Gottlieb

Thelonious Monk Quartet – Round Midnight

Thelonious Monk(p) Charlie Rouse(ts) Larry Gales(b) Ben Riley(ds)

Recorded in Norway 1966 dvd “LIVE in ’66”

Peter Hujar
Susan Sontag

1975

Gelatin silver print

Image: 37.1 x 37.6cm (14 5/8 x 14 13/16″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Michael O’Brien
Willie Nelson

1989 (printed 2009)

Chromogenic print

Image: 38.1 x 38.1cm (15 x 15″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Introduction

What do we mean when we say someone is cool? To be cool means to exude the aura of something new and uncontainable. Cool is the opposite of innocence or virtue. Someone cool has a charismatic edge and a dark side. Cool is an earned form of individuality. Each generation has certain individuals who bring innovation and style to a field of endeavor while projecting a certain charismatic self-possession. They are the figures selected for this exhibition: the successful rebels of American culture.

The legendary jazz saxophonist Lester Young created the modern usage of “cool” in the 1940s. At first it meant being relaxed in one’s environment against oppressive social forces, but within a generation it became a password for stylish self-control. This exhibition does not reflect our opinion of who’s cool. Each cool figure was considered with the following historical rubric in mind and possesses at least three elements of this singular American self-concept:

an original artistic vision carried off with a signature style

cultural rebellion or transgression for a given generation

iconic power, or instant visual recognition

a recognized cultural legacy

Every individual here created an original persona without precedent in American culture. These photographs capture the complex relationship between the real-life person, the image embraced by fans and the media, and the person’s artistic work.

What does it mean when a generation claims a certain figure as cool? What qualities does this person embody at that historical moment? American Cool explores these questions through photography, history, and popular culture. In this exhibition, cool is rendered visible, as shot by some of the finest art photographers of the past century.

The Roots of Cool: Before 1940

The stage was set for the emergence of cool as a cultural phenomenon in the early 1940s by a series of sweeping transformations in the first decades of the twentieth century. The figures in this first section were not called cool in their day but were leading exemplars of new energies that were changing the social contours of American life. A fresh rebelliousness was revealed in the new film capital of Hollywood, in modernist literature and art, in emerging youth entertainments, and in a new music called jazz. The advent of technologies such as radio, film, and the automobile and the increasing diversity in America’s booming cities accelerated the pace of change. Though Prohibition in the 1920s sought to regulate American morality by ending the consumption of alcohol, this period saw the expression of a new independence among young people and others historically on the margins of public life. In particular, both African Americans and women sought and began to attain freedoms long denied. Cool has long denoted a person’s sense of calm and composure. Charismatic individuals such as those featured here contributed greatly to the changing mores in American society before World War II. Cool would ultimately serve as the term that would describe this new rebel.

The Birth of Cool: 1940-59

Being cool was a response to the rapid changes of modernity: it was about maintaining a state of equipoise within swirling, dynamic social forces. The legendary jazz saxophonist Lester Young disseminated the word and concept of cool into jazz culture in the early 1940s, and it quickly crossed over as a rebel masculine sensibility. When Young said, “I’m cool,” he meant, first, that he was relaxed in the environment and, second, that he was keeping it together under social and economic pressure as well as the absurdity of life in a racist society. This mask of cool emerged as a form of American stoicism and was manifested in jazz, film noir, Beat literature, and abstract expressionism. In jazz, a generation of younger musicians rejected big-band swing entertainment to create bebop, a fast, angular, virtuosic style that moved jazz out of dance halls and into nightclubs. In Hollywood, film noir represented postwar anxiety inthrough crime dramas shot through with working-class existentialism and the fear of women’s sexual and economic power. Among Beat writers and abstract painters, cool referred to a combination of wildness and intensity in men unconcerned with social conformity. Starting from jazz, cool was a rebel sensibility suggesting that an individual’s importance could be registered only through self-expression and the creation of a signature style. By 1960 cool was the protean password of a surging underground aesthetic.

Cool and the Counterculture: 1960-79

In the 1960s and 1970s, to be cool was to be antiauthoritarian and open to new ideas from young cultural leaders in rock and roll, journalism, film, and African American culture. Cool was a badge of opposition to “the System,” by turns a reference to the police, the government, the military-industrial complex, or traditional morality. Using drugs such as marijuana or even LSD was an indicator of risk taking and expanding one’s consciousness; not experimenting with drugs suggested a fear of opening one’s mind or perspective, of being “uptight” or “square.” The same was true of sexual exploration, social protest, and ethnic politics. The aesthetic of stylized understatement still held power, yet cool itself morphed under the era’s social upheavals. The counterculture valued being authentic and emotionally naked: being cool meant a person was “out-front” with others and comfortable in his or her own skin. For African Americans, what had once been suppressed under the mask of cool transformed into defiant civic engagement in music, sports, and politics. “Cool” meant to communicate a set of emotions without losing control, and rock and roll was the art form (and forum) best suited for this shift, especially for women. Patti Smith, Bonnie Raitt, Deborah Harry, and Chrissie Hynde all carved out new iconic stances, styles, and voices for independent women who were sexy on their own terms. Cool became the supreme compliment for creative public figures who broke new cultural ground and maintained their personal integrity over time.

The Legacies of Cool: 1980-Present

In 1980s America, the selling of rebellion as style became ingrained in cool. From highbrow fashion to mass-culture video games, product designers, advertisers, and consumers embraced the cool aesthetic. For many during this era, selling out was no longer a curse, as youth culture increasingly embraced the pursuit of wealth. And though some might proclaim that cool was dead, the concept stayed alive and grew in many quarters. From hip-hop to Seattle grunge, from skateboarding to the Internet, from street graffiti to MTV, cool became central to many of these new cultural forms. While its popularization tended to whiten this phenomenon, African American culture remained central to its growth. By the 1980s cool also had an easily recognizable history, and many figures from its past – like heroes from a bygone era – continued to resonate widely. Indeed, new icons of cool often built careers that owed much to these earlier exemplars. Throughout the twentieth century, cool was America’s chief cultural export. With the rapid growth of global communication and markets, it plays an even larger role both in the world’s understanding of America and in Americans’ own sense of national identity. The figures in this final section are representative of the legacies of cool as a distinct form of American expression.

Press release from the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery website

Martin Munkacsi
Fred Astaire

1936

Gelatin silver print

Image (Image, Accurate): 24.1 x 19cm (9 1/2 x 7 1/2″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Philippe Halsman
Audrey Hepburn

1955

Gelatin silver print

Image/Sheet: 34.9 x 27cm (13 3/4 x 10 5/8″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Dmitri Kasterine
Jean-Michel Basquait
1986

Gelatin silver print

Image: 38.3 x 37.7cm (15 1/16 x 14 13/16″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Cass Bird
Benicio Del Toro

2008 (printed 2012)

Inkjet print

Image: 45.3 x 35.3 cm (17 13/16 x 13 7/8″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Carl Van Vechten
Bessie Smith

1936

Gelatin silver print

Image/Sheet: 25.2 x 18.6 cm (9 15/16 x 7 5/16″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

This is not only a landmark because it contains Bessie Smith’s only known film appearance but also for being one of the very first talkies ever made. This is the complete film co-starring Jimmy Mordecai as her gigolo boyfriend.

Robert Mapplethorpe
Deborah Harry

1978

Gelatin silver print

Image: 34.9 x 34.9cm (13 3/4 x 13 3/4″)

Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation

Philippe Halsman
Humphrey Bogart

1944

Gelatin silver print

Image: 11.3 x 8.6cm (4 7/16 x 3 3/8″)

Mat: 45.7 x 35.6cm (18 x 14″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Samuel Hollyer
Leaves of Grass, 1st Edition

Copy after: Gabriel Harrison

1855

Book (closed): 28.9 x 20.6 x 1cm (11 3/8 x 8 1/8 x 3/8″)

Private Collection

Unidentified Artist
Frederick Douglas

1856

Quarter-plate ambrotype

Image: 10.6 x 8.6cm (4 3/16 x 3 3/8″)

Case (open): 11.9 x 19.1 x 1.3cm (4 11/16 x 7 1/2 x 1/2″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Linda McCartney
Jimi Hendrix

1967 (printed later)

Platinum print

Image: 51.3 x 35.3 cm (20 3/16 x 13 7/8″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

An incredible live performance of Voodoo Child (Slight Return) by Jimmy and his band in Stockholm, 1969.

William Paul Gottlieb
Duke Ellington

c. 1946 (printed 1991)

Gelatin silver print

Image: 34.1 x 26.7 cm (13 7/16 x 10 1/2″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Fantastic performance footage of one of Jazz’s greatest stars – Duke Ellington. With performances of song of his most famous songs including “Mood Indigo”, “Caravan” & “Sophisticated Lady”

Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington was an American composer, pianist, and big-band leader. Ellington wrote over 1,000 compositions. A major figure in the history of jazz, Ellington’s music stretched into various other genres. His career spanned more than 50 years and included leading his orchestra, composing an inexhaustible songbook, scoring for movies, composing stage musicals, and world tours. Several of his instrumental works were adapted into songs that became standards. Due to his inventive use of the orchestra, or big band, and thanks to his eloquence and extraordinary charisma, he is generally considered to have elevated the perception of jazz to an art form on a par with other traditional genres of music. His reputation increased after his death and the Pulitzer Prize Board bestowed on him a special posthumous honor in 1999. Ellington called his music “American Music” rather than jazz, and liked to describe those who impressed him as “beyond category.”

Mark Seliger
Kurt Cobain

1993 (printed 2013)

Platinum Palladium print

Image: 46.7 × 35.5 cm (18 3/8 × 14″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Philippe Halsman
Marlon Brando

1950 (printed later)

Gelatin silver print

Image: 34.4 x 26.8cm (13 9/16 x 10 9/16″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Charles H. Stewart
Muddy Waters

c. 1960

Gelatin silver print

Image: 25.4 x 18.4cm (10 x 7 1/4″)

Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers University

Alfred Eisenstaedt
Lauren Bacall

1949 (printed 2013)

Pigmented ink jet print

Image: 40.3 x 27.9cm (15 7/8 x 11″)

Kate Simon
Madonna

1983 (printed 2013)

Gelatin silver print

Image: 33.7 × 22.9cm (13 1/4 × 9″)

© Kate Simon

Aram Avakian
Miles Davis

1955 (printed 2012)

Modern print made from original negative

Image: 34.6 × 24.1cm (13 5/8 × 9 1/2″)

Unidentified Artist
Bix Beiderbecke

c. 1920

Gelatin silver print

Image: 19.1 x 11.4cm (7 1/2 x 4 1/2″)

Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers University

Leon Bismark “Bix” Beiderbecke (March 10, 1903 – August 6, 1931) was an American jazz cornetist, jazz pianist, and composer.

With Louis Armstrong and Muggsy Spanier, Beiderbecke was one of the most influential jazz soloists of the 1920s. His turns on “Singin’ the Blues” and “I’m Coming, Virginia” (both 1927), in particular, demonstrated an unusual purity of tone and a gift for improvisation. With these two recordings, especially, he helped to invent the jazz ballad style and hinted at what, in the 1950s, would become cool jazz. “In a Mist” (1927), one of a handful of his piano compositions and one of only two he recorded, mixed classical (Impressionist) influences with jazz syncopation.

Gerard Malanga
Lou Reed

1966

Gelatin silver print

Image: 48.3 x 36.2cm (19 x 14 1/4″)

© Martin Irvine

Arnold A. Newman
Jackson Pollock

1949

Gelatin silver print

Image: 46 x 36.7cm (18 1/8 x 14 7/16″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Lynn Goldsmith
Patti Smith

1976 (printed 2012)

Digital inkjet print

Image: 46.9 x 30 cm (18 7/16 x 11 13/16″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Philippe Halsman
Clint Eastwood

1971

Gelatin silver print

Image: 34.3 x 27.3cm (13 1/2 x 10 3/4″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Richard Avedon
Bob Dylan, Singer, New York City, February 10, 1965

1965

Gelatin silver print

Image: 25.4 × 20.3cm (10 × 8″)

© Richard Avedon Foundation

Eli Reed
Tupac Shakur

1992 (printed 2013)

Digitally exposed chromogenic print

Image: 34.6 x 27.3 cm (13 5/8 x 10 3/4″)

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

William Paul Gottlieb
Gene Krupa at 400 Restaurant, New York City

June 1946

Gelatin silver print

Sheet: 35.6 x 27.9cm (14 x 11″)

Estate of William Gottlieb

Eugene Bertram “Gene” Krupa (January 15, 1909 – October 16, 1973) was an American jazz and big band drummer, actor and composer, known for his highly energetic and flamboyant style. In the 1930s, Krupa became the first endorser of Slingerland drums. At Krupa’s urging, Slingerland developed tom-toms with tuneable top and bottom heads, which immediately became important elements of virtually every drummer’s setup. Krupa developed and popularized many of the cymbal techniques that became standards. His collaboration with Armand Zildjian of the Avedis Zildjian Company developed the modern hi-hat cymbals and standardized the names and uses of the ride cymbal, the crash cymbal, the splash cymbal, the pang cymbal and the swish cymbal. One of his bass drums, a Slingerland inscribed with Benny Goodman’s and Krupa’s initials, is preserved at the Smithsonian museum in Washington, D.C. In 1978, Krupa became the first drummer inducted into the Modern Drummer Hall of Fame.

Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery

8th and F Sts NW

Washington, DC 20001

Opening hours:

11.30 am – 7.00 pm daily

Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery website

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Filed under: American, american photographers, beauty, black and white photography, colour photography, digital photography, documentary photography, exhibition, existence, film, gallery website, light, memory, New York, photographic series, photography, portrait, psychological, reality, space, time, video, works on paper Tagged: Abstract Expressionism, American Cool, American culture, American stoicism, Aram Avakian, Aram Avakian Miles Davis, Arnold A. Newman, Arnold A. Newman Jackson Pollock, Audrey Hepburn, Beat literature, Beat writers, bebop, Being cool, Benicio Del Toro, Bessie Smith, Billie Holiday, Billie Holiday Strange Fruit, Bix Beiderbecke, Bob Dylan, Bob Dylan Singer New York City, Bob Willoughby, Bob Willoughby Billie Holiday, Bonnie Raitt, Carl Van Vechten, Carl Van Vechten Bessie Smith, Cass Bird, Cass Bird Benicio Del Toro, Charles H. Stewart, Charles H. Stewart Muddy Waters, Chrissie Hynde, Clint Eastwood, Cool and the Counterculture, Cool and the Counterculture 1960-79, cool jazz, David Byrne, Deborah Harry, Duke Ellington, Eli Reed, Eli Reed Tupac Shakur, Elvis Presley, Elvis Presley Jailhouse Rock, film noir, Frank Sinatra, Frederick Douglas, Gene Krupa, Gene Krupa at 400 Restaurant, Gerard Malanga, Gerard Malanga Lou Reed, Herman Leonard, Herman Leonard Frank Sinatra, Humphrey Bogart, Jack Kerouac, Jack Nicholson, Jack Nicholson in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, jackson pollock, James Dean, jazz, jazz ballad style, Jimi Hendrix, Joan Didion, John Cohen, John Cohen Jack Kerouac, Julian Wasser, Julian Wasser Joan Didion, Kurt Cobain, Leaves of Grass, Leo Fuchs, Leo Fuchs Paul Newman, Linda McCartney, Linda McCartney Jimi Hendrix, Lou Reed, Lynn Goldsmith, Lynn Goldsmith Patti Smith, Marcia Resnick, Marcia Resnick David Byrne, Mark Seliger, Mark Seliger Kurt Cobain, Marlon Brando, martin schoeller, Martin Schoeller Tony Hawk, Michael O'Brien, Michael O'Brien Willie Nelson, Miles Davis, Minton's Playhouse, Muddy Waters, New York City, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Patti Smith, paul newman, Peter Hujar, Peter Hujar Susan Sontag, Philippe Halsman, Philippe Halsman Clint Eastwood, Philippe Halsman Humphrey Bogart, Philippe Halsman Marlon Brando, Prohibition, Richard Avedon, Richard Avedon Bob Dylan, Robert Mapplethorpe, Robert Mapplethorpe Deborah Harry, Roger Marshutz, Roger Marshutz Elvis Presley, Roy Schatt, Roy Schatt James Dean, Samuel Hollyer, Samuel Hollyer Leaves of Grass, steve McQueen, Susan Sontag, The Birth of Cool, The Birth of Cool 1940-59, The Roots of Cool, The Roots of Cool: Before 1940, Thelonious Monk, Thelonious Monk at Minton's Playhouse, Tony Hawk, Tupac Shakur, William Claxton, William Claxton Steve McQueen, William Paul Gottlieb, William Paul Gottlieb Duke Ellignton, William Paul Gottlieb Gene Krupa at 400 Restaurant, Willie Nelson

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