The Big Sleep, 1946.
“He was too old for me, he’d had three wives, he drank, he was an actor and he was goyim,” Bacall wrote in her autobiography of her prime passion. All that meant nothing to the slinky 19-year-old model who met the 44-year-old star while filming To Have and Have Not. They wed in 1945 (Bogie coolly muttered “hello, baby” at the end of the ceremony), and the two embarked on several delirious years running late with the Hollywood Rat Pack, saving time for two children. “Bogie and I were ridiculous, holding hands like teenagers….we mooned and swooned, we really loved,” Bacall has said. The honeymoon ended in January 1957 when Bogart died of cancer. Wrote Bacall: “No one has written a romance better than we lived it.” —People magazine
(Source: mattybing1025, via tayshathefilmgeek)
(Source: smallnartless, via humphreysbogart)
03/100; LAUREN BACALL
(via missavagardner)
(via frdirector)
Lauren Bacall in promotion shot for How To Marry A Millionaire.
(via humphreysbogart)
(Source: humphreysbogart, via georgelassosthemoon)
250 Favorite Classic Films in no particular order
⇨ The Big Sleep (1946)
Vivian: You go too far, Marlowe.
Marlowe: Those are harsh words to throw at a man, especially when he’s walking out of your bedroom.
(via humphreysbogart)
Frank Sinatra and Lauren Bacall, 1957
10/100 favorite photos of Nicole Kidman
(Source: becketts, via humphreysbogart)
Lauren Bacall, yearbook picture.
(via humphreysbogart)