#nell brinkley

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mothgirlwings:Illustrator Nell Brinkley and a little friend - 1908 In 1907, at the tender age of t

mothgirlwings:

Illustrator Nell Brinkley and a little friend - 1908

In 1907, at the tender age of twenty-two, Nell Brinkley came to New York to draw for the Hearst syndicate. Within a year, she had become a household name. Flo Ziegfeld dressed his dancers as “Brinkley Girls,” in the Ziegfeld Follies. Three popular songs were written about her. Women, aspiring to the masses of curly hair with which Nell adorned her creations, could buy Nell Brinkley Hair Curlers for ten cents a card. Young girls cut out and saved her drawings, copied them, colored them, and pasted them in scrapbooks. The Brinkley Girls took over from the Gibson Girls.


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mothgirlwings: Artist:  Nell Brinkley  (Via “The Brinkley Girls:  The Best Of Nell Brinkley’s Cartoomothgirlwings: Artist:  Nell Brinkley  (Via “The Brinkley Girls:  The Best Of Nell Brinkley’s Cartoo

mothgirlwings:

Artist:  Nell Brinkley  (Via “The Brinkley Girls:  The Best Of Nell Brinkley’s Cartoons 1913 - 1940”)


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Remember all those things I said I was going to do? Yeah, I did something completely different! For one, I finally did something with the YouTube account that comes with having this blog’s Gmail account, so that’s a thing you can check out. So far it’s mostly just playlists of other people’s videos, recs for artists’ vlogs/tutorials, and uploads of other people’s videos that I got permission to put on YouTube (more on all that in another post, probably). The first (slightly) original content I’ve made for it is this compilation of lovely Nell Brinkley art set to the song “The Nell Brinkley Girl”

Nell Brinkley was an illustrator and early comics artist in the early 20th century (though it’s somewhat debatable whether her works count as “comics” as we think of them today, she worked at a time when “comics” were first really being defined, it would be equally anachronistic to exclude her entirely). Her depictions of women became glamour icons unto themselves and inspired a line of hair care products and at least two Broadway songs. “The Nell Brinkley Girl” was part of Florenz Ziegfeld’s Follies of 1908, and the role was originated by Annabelle Whitford (later Annabelle Moore, who also appeared in several early Edison films).

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I could not find a recording of any performance of the song, but the sheet music is available online at the Library of Congress. In order to produce this recording, I transcribed the sheet music into the MuseScore software (and then uploaded into their database), which generated both a MIDI piano recording and “ahhhh-ahhhh” vocals, which I supplemented with on-screen lyrics rather than subject you to my singing. I’ve also started working on the other song, “The Brinkley Bathing Girl” from The Follies of 1909, but I don’t really have a timeline for that one yet. 

Anyway, I hope you like this one, and please please please send me any suggestions you have for the YouTube channel generally (especially topics for playlists I could curate). I don’t plan for it to take over completely, but I’d like it to be a fairly robust sidebar to the blog. And of course, subscribing would help me gauge people’s interest in it!

(x-posted to Patreon)

The New Year, 1914Nell Brinkley

The New Year, 1914

Nell Brinkley


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