The Nouveau Noir Dancing of Tempest

Tempest is a performance artist who describes her dances as “Nouveau Noir” though there is clearly a neo-Victorian influence as well as shades of Old Hollywood. No matter how one would describe her work, we can all agree it is a delightful distraction from the bump and grind jail bait videos that pervade YouTube. Here’s a video of her performance at Gothla in England:

Here’s another live performance from a belly dance festival in Pennsylvania:

She has a website for you to visit complete with gallery so I won’t keep you. Click the pic to visit her home on the web.

tempest-art-nouveau-bell-dance.jpg

Vincent Price Curls Up with a Good Book

This 1985 commercial for Time Life Books features a very in character Vincent Price shilling as only he can. I remember when Time Life used to put out cool occult themed mini-encyclopedia sets, those were good times.

It’s a different world now, but this commercial reminds me of when I was a young man who had two loves, blasphemous knowledge and campy horror icons:

I found this at The Abattoir, which is the official blog of Rue Morgue magazine. They have a coffin full of Price commercials for various products sure to bring a smile to the face of every fan.

Raquel Welch and a Giant Prehistoric Spider

giant spider Muppet from the Raquel Welch episode

Raquel Welch, decked out in a skimpy sequined prehistoric cave-chick getup, shares the stage with a googly-eyed, oversized spider monster in this disco song and dance number from a 1977 episode of The Muppet Show.

The song is Baby It’s Me which was recorded by Diana Ross that same year.

Oh, and here’s some Muppet trivia for you. The spider is one of the full-bodied muppet costumes, meaning there’s a person pulling the proverbial strings from inside the costume, rather than puppeteers animating the character externally. In this sketch with Raquel Welch, the giant arachnid moves so rhythmically and gracefully because the costume conceals Graham Fletcher, a former dancer with the Royal Ballet.

Penn Jillette Lost to Zombies; Teller Survives

The zombie apocalypse has claimed Penn Jillette and most others in Vegas. But Teller, the normally silent half of the magic/comedy team of Penn & Teller, has survived to tell the tale. Here’s Teller’s morose film short, aptly titled & Teller:

via Abattoir – Rue Morgue’s Blog

Impending Doom

Eggs in Peril by Flickr user Ariel Bariel Long
photo credit: Ariel Bariel Long via Dark Roasted Blend

Ah, the delicious schadenfreude of watching anthropomorphic eggs about to meet their demise.

Would it be too perverse to mention the best scrambled eggs on the planet in the same post as that photo?

Tim Burton’s Stainboy vs. The Girl Who Stares

You can never get enough Burton:

Delightfully fiendish I should say.

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