tumblr dudes: shaved their nuts so they can run the mile faster
tumblr chix: has a 20 gig file on their computer dedicated to B-list female celebrities holding hands with random dictators/terrorists

tumblr dudes: shaved their nuts so they can run the mile faster
tumblr chix: has a 20 gig file on their computer dedicated to B-list female celebrities holding hands with random dictators/terrorists
Susie, do you know anything about… witches? - Suspiria (1977), dir. Dario Argento.
what if i stole your sonata and framed you and threw you in jail. would you be mad
omg wait. ive never drawn phoenix
my beloved
Well I think the art side of this is finished anyway.
“I’ve just come to tell you how fabulous I am!”
Jessica Harper as Janet Majors - Shock Treatment (1981)
Jessica Harper in the NBC Children’s Theatre episode “Super Plastic Elastic Goggles.” The episode is currently considered lost media.
According to the lost media wiki, the episode “humorously explains the various aspects of color in a child’s world. Includes appearances by Judy Carne, James Earl Jones, Tom Poston, James Coco, Tammy Grimes, and the Goggles Quartet.”
Pictured above are the outside and inside covers of the vinyl record soundtrack for the episode. The sleeve for the record was designed to look like a pair of goggles when opened!
Jessica Harper as Phoenix - Phantom of the Paradise (1974)
We’re all born to die alone, you know
and that’s the hell of it.
Jessica Harper as Ruth Watkins in The Evictors (1979)
Fun fact! This is the song Jessica Harper sung to audition for Phantom of the Paradise! (Okay, technically this is a cover of Delaney & Bonnie’s Groupie (Superstar), but the Carpenters version is credited for making the song more popular, and it reminds me more of Old Souls anyways LOL)
Jessica Harper as Miss Cathy Cake - Inserts (1975)
Goblin - Suspiria from Suspiria (1977)
To work it out, I let them in. All the good guys and the bad guys that I’ve been. All the devils that disturb me, and the angels that defeated them somehow. Come together in me now.
Phantom of the Paradise (1974) dir. Brian de Palma