A REAL NIGGAH BURDAY TAHDAY 🥳🎈
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A REAL NIGGAH BURDAY TAHDAY 🥳🎈
A glamorous table at the Stork Club on December 6, 1946: Ernest Hemingway, Ingrid Bergman (with bangs!), and Charles Boyer. Bergman starred in the film version of Hemingway's novel For Whom the Bell Tolls.
Photo: Associated Press
The first snowfall of winter, December 6, 1957, in Central Park.
Photo: Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
The city's newest theater, the Apollo (not the one in Harlem, this was in midtown) has a smoking room exclusively for its patrons. A maid gives Frances White, star of "Jimmy," a light, December 6, 1920.
Photo: Bettmann Archive/Getty Images/Fine Art America
Hobos think about politics, too. Here they’re picketing the Russian consulate at Park Avenue and 68th Street on December 6, 1951. Prominent in the picket line is ‘Boxcar Betty,” beauty editor of the Bowery News, and (behind her) Bozo, noted knight of the road.
Photo: John Rooney for the AP
New Yorkers lost no time in stocking up on legal liquor the day after Prohibition was repealed, December 6, 1933.
Photo: Associated Press
Vivien Leigh and her husband Laurence Olivier see the New York skyline from the deck of their ocean liner upon their arrival from England, December 6, 1951.
Photo: John Peodincuk for the NY Daily News
In Variety, December 6, 1932: an ad for Take a Chance, starring Ethel Merman, Jack Haley, and Jack Whiting.
from Tom Samuels on Broadway Remembered, Facebook