|
Become a Fan on Facebook |
|
"We long ago recognized Farrah Fawcett's iconic status. We preserve a copy of her best-selling swimsuit poster."
- Smithsonian Institute (June 25, 2009)
|
|
From the Webmaster: There are great deals on eBay right now for original copies of Farrah's famous pin-up. If you're interested in buying one for yourself or maybe for an adolescent boy, which would still be a great present, this seller has a rating of 100% positive and is selling original copies for $19, shipping included. Make sure when you are buying you confirm that at the bottom left is CL 14 - 507 FARRAH © 1976 PRO ARTS INC.,MEDINA,OHIO,U.S.A. and at the bottom right is Farrah's signature. Originals also do not come with a white border and only come in a 20x28 size. 33 years after its release, I can knowingly say through experience, it still looks amazing in a bed or dorm room. |
|
|
|
FUN FACTS: . Farrah's 1976 pin-up is the highest selling poster of all time with over 12 million sold to date. . Poster is among holdings of the Smithsonian Institute with Fonzie's Jacket and the Bunkers' chairs. . Image has been reproduced over one billion times on shirts, mugs, rugs, screensavers etc. . Poster was named in 2007 by G.Q. Magazine as "the most influential piece of men's art in the last 50 years. . Poster was named in 2008, the #1 pin-up of all time by AOL users beating out Marilyn Monroe's blowing skirt and Betty Grable's WWII pin-up. . Was sent into space by NASA in a 1977 time capsule. . Poster has appeared in That 70's Show, Boogie Nights, Saturday Night Fever, My Name is Earl, Scrubs etc. |
Clip from That 70's Show showing the poster in Eric Foreman's bedroom; shown from 2:15
|
| |
Farrah Fawcett: Photographer Bruce McBroom remembers her iconic poster shoot
Photographer Bruce McBroom — who snapped that unforgettable picture of the bathing-suit-clad Farrah Fawcett — reflects on working with the star, and creating a piece of pop culture history at her house one summer day in 1976. (”She was amazingly beautiful and sweet, and it’s not fair that things like this happen to good people,” says McBroom about Fawcett, who died yesterday from cancer. “I think she will be remembered as this wonderful, wholesome all-American girl that’s on the poster, and also now for her courageous battle against cancer, and the fact that she shared it with a lot of people who may be going through similar situations. I applaud her for that.”)
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: What do you remember about Farrah from the early days?
BRUCE MCBROOM: I had the pleasure of knowing
Farrah when she was the young innocent girl who just arrived in
Hollywood. She was a very smart young lady, but she was this little
girl from Texas with these really wonderful parents and very innocent
in the way of Hollywood, and very honest and open. There was no
artifice about her, no phoniness. She had no idea of how beautiful and
how attractive she was, I’m sure…. Even after becoming a hit on Charlie’s Angels,
she was never one that lurked in her dressing room. I would be working
with her on a set, and she was totally accessible. No attitude…. She
was just like [an] apple-pie, girl-next-door kind of girl, and in all
the years I knew her she never changed.
How did the shoot for the poster come about?
One day I got a call from some guy in the Midwest from a
poster company. He said, “I’m doing this poster of Farrah Fawcett and
Farrah said to hire you to shoot her. I’ve hired two photographers and
they photographed her and she hates the pictures.” He said, “Here’s the
thing, it’s gotta be her great hair, she’s gotta be smiling, she’s
gotta be in a bikini and they’ve gotta be drop-dead, sexy pictures.”
Can you walk us through the shoot?
She and Lee Majors [her then husband] lived in a big house
up on Mulholland Drive [in Los Angeles]. I showed up and it was just
the two of us…. Farrah did her own hair and her own makeup, not that
she needed much makeup. I said, “He wants you in a bikini” and she
said, “I don’t have a bikini.” She was only about 29, and just gorgeous
in anything. We took a lot of pictures. She’d go in, get something out
of the closet and I’d find another background. I knew I didn’t have a
picture that resonated with me even though she looked great. I was
running out of ideas and I was getting desperate. We’d been there all
day. I said, “You know how you look best. Is there anything else that
you’ve got that we haven’t shot? The guy says he wants sexy.” So she
said, “Lemme go look around.” She comes to the door and she’s standing
in the doorway in that red suit. And she said, “What do you think of
this?” It was like it was spray painted on her; I don’t think it was a
swimsuit. I said, “You know what? That’s it!” I said, “Farrah, just get
comfortable and do your thing.” When she did the series of sitting-up
poses, I said, “We’ve got it.” And I heaved a big sigh of relief.
What else resonates about the shoot?
I literally ran out of color film about the same time that
I took that picture. I knew I had it. Somewhere in that last roll of
film is the picture that we’re looking for. She said, “I’m so tired of
looking pretty and having this hair and makeup.” And she grabbed the
garden hose and just held it up and drowned herself with a garden hose.
I grabbed my Nikon, and I was looking for a roll of black-and-white
film, and I said, “Don’t stop, don’t stop!” And what I have always
maintained, the sexiest pictures I took are the pictures I took after
the session. It was a totally innocent Farrah: “I’m so sick of looking
pretty all day.” She just smeared her makeup, and it was the capper of
the whole thing. We had so much fun. We just had a blast doing it.
The poster went on to adorn countless bedroom walls. Did you two have any idea how popular it would be?
Neither
Farrah or myself thought that this was a big deal. This was like, “Come
on up, we’ll take some pictures, and we’ll send them to this guy.” I
give Farrah all the credit for knowing how she looked best. She knew
how she photographed best and she knew what she was selling. She gave a
gift to the publisher, coming up with the red suit, doing her own hair
and makeup, and unerringly finding the one picture out of thousands
that made her look the way she wanted to look…. She had the right to
approve all photos. We shot 40 rolls of film and Farrah sent [the
poster producer] six 35-mm slides. She marked her favorite and second
favorite; they went with her favorite. Farrah picked that image — and
she was right on the money.
--Entertainment Weekly--