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classicladiesofcolor: Esther Rolle on the cover of Jet magazine (Dec. 26, 1974)

classicladiesofcolor:

Esther Rolle on the cover of Jetmagazine (Dec. 26, 1974)


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twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1975twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1975twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1975twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1975twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1975twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1975twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1975twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1975twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1975twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1975

twixnmix:

Jet magazine covers from 1975


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twixnmix: Chaka Khan and Ike Turner (1979) 

twixnmix:

Chaka Khan and Ike Turner (1979) 


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twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1976twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1976twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1976twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1976twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1976twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1976twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1976twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1976twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1976twixnmix:Jet magazine covers from 1976

twixnmix:

Jet magazine covers from 1976


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Dorothy Dandridge (right), with her sister Vivian, and film producer Otto Preminger, at a Hollywood press party. The three were supposedly toasting the CinemaScope film “Carmen Jones,” in which Dandridge was set to star.

Featured in Jet Magazine on June 17th, 1954.

MODA celebrates 50 years of the Ebony Fashion Fair Inspiring Beauty: 50 Years of Ebony Fashion displ

MODA celebrates 50 years of the Ebony Fashion Fair

Inspiring Beauty: 50 Years of Ebony Fashion displays 40 ensembles from the annual event

By 

The Ebony Fashion Fair first came to Atlanta in the early 1960s, sponsored in part by the local chapter of Delta Sigma Theta sorority. It was a Sunday-best kind of event, the biggest to-do of the year for some.

Eunice Johnson and her husband, John, founders of Johnson Publishing Company and Ebony and Jet magazines, launched the annual fair in 1958. On runways across the country, they showcased…

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You can kill a revolutionary but you can’t kill a revolution | Fred Hampton .

You can kill a revolutionary but you can’t kill a revolution | Fred Hampton .


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#black hair    #blackout    #eye brows    #braids    #browneyes    #bronze    #meleahchevelle    #meleah moon    #melanin art    #melanin    #darkskinblackbeauty    #darklipstick    #darkness    #turtle    #jetblack    #jet magazine    #beyonce    #fred hampton    #instagram    #black panther    #panther    #solange    #red velvet    #relaxing    
twixnmix:Sallie Blair (1934–1992) was an African-American jazz singer from Baltimore. She began hetwixnmix:Sallie Blair (1934–1992) was an African-American jazz singer from Baltimore. She began hetwixnmix:Sallie Blair (1934–1992) was an African-American jazz singer from Baltimore. She began hetwixnmix:Sallie Blair (1934–1992) was an African-American jazz singer from Baltimore. She began hetwixnmix:Sallie Blair (1934–1992) was an African-American jazz singer from Baltimore. She began hetwixnmix:Sallie Blair (1934–1992) was an African-American jazz singer from Baltimore. She began hetwixnmix:Sallie Blair (1934–1992) was an African-American jazz singer from Baltimore. She began hetwixnmix:Sallie Blair (1934–1992) was an African-American jazz singer from Baltimore. She began hetwixnmix:Sallie Blair (1934–1992) was an African-American jazz singer from Baltimore. She began hetwixnmix:Sallie Blair (1934–1992) was an African-American jazz singer from Baltimore. She began he

twixnmix:

Sallie Blair (1934–1992) was an African-American jazz singer from Baltimore. She began her career singing with Johnny Otis and Duke Ellington in the early 1950s before she won the talent competition Chance of a Lifetime on ABC-TV. Soon after she joined Cab Calloway’s Cotton Club Revue and then became a popular nightclub act. Sallie was a reoccurring performer on Ed Sullivan’s shows and was rumored to have had an affair with him. She performed for the royal family at the London Palladium and broke protocall by kicking off her shoes and doing a sexy barefoot dance. Although Sallie released two albums as a solo artist, Squeeze Me (1957) and Hello, Tiger! (1958), she was more known for her beauty and sex appeal. Sallie often changed her hair color, but early in her career she was known for being a blonde. The press referred to her as the  "blonde bombshell” and Miles Davis called her the “brown Marilyn Monroe.” She married pianist and arranger Rene DeKnight in 1963 and still appeared on TV throughout the the 1960s as her popularity waned. In 1978, Sallie was linked to Warren Beatty then she disappeared from the public. She died at the age of 57 in 1992.


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