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Author Topic: In the News (with pictures & videos)  (Read 81516 times)

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Offline Betty

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Re: In the News
« Reply #130 on: September 02, 2016, 09:59:38 AM »
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Offline Betty

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Re: In the News
« Reply #131 on: September 02, 2016, 10:00:54 AM »
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Offline Betty

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Re: In the News
« Reply #132 on: September 02, 2016, 10:02:08 AM »
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Offline Angela M...

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Re: In the News
« Reply #133 on: September 02, 2016, 09:42:46 PM »
I had heard of Casa Susanna before and seem to remember my parents talking about a friend who liked to go to the Catskill resorts for a vacation. My parents never went but I remember a few of the men in our neighbourhood dressing up for a mock wedding at somebody's anniversary party. My father was a bridesmaid and they got the whole thing on 8 mm film and another friend dressed as a pregnant woman stopping the wedding blaming the groom for putting her in the family way. The friend who always went to the Catskills was also dressed up so perhaps he was visiting Casa Susanna. The film was brought out several times over the years at house parties ( and there were many in our neighbourhood) and I believe I still have it among all my dads films.

Offline Betty

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Re: In the News
« Reply #134 on: September 02, 2016, 10:57:25 PM »
Wow. You should save those old films to digital before they turn yellow & brown or get too brittle & break, or nothing exists to play them anymore. Functioning 8 & 16mm projectors are becoming very rare, expensive, & impossible to find parts for.

Even if you have to project them on a light color wall or sheet, & record them on a lousy phone camera, it's better than not having a copy that will play at all anymore.

Then burn the digital copy onto a permanent data DVD-r disc in mp4 format. Out of over a 1,000 DVDs, almost all of them withstood the heat, soot, & steam of the fire, then being under water a day, then being scrubbed in hot soapy water. Almost none of the CDs withstood the fire. The silver backing on CDs can flake off if left in a damp area a while, in high humidity, & can be scratched off. DVDs have a protective coating over the backing. Even if a DVD is badly scratched, the scratches can be buffed out or filled in. Sometimes just polishing them with a little furniture polish or car polish smooths out the scratches enough to get the data off of them. So for long-term preservation, storage, & archiving, a DVD-r seems like the best choice.

However even though mine survived the fire, they were damaged. Some of them took several passes/tries, at a reduced read speed to get all the data off of them. It's not a good idea for you to leave your disks, hard drives, laptops, tablets, & phones in a hot car on a summer day for hours. Even your trunk/boot will be cooler because it has a less greenhouse effect. And because disks are burned with the heat & light of a laser, avoid exposing them to lots of bright, direct sunlight.

Originally disks had their data etched into the silver backing by a laser or pressed into them like records used to be pressed. But modern disks have on organic layer over the silver that changes the reflectivity of the disks to encode them instead. That enabled fast home recording on disks, with small cheap lasers. Exposing them to too much heat & light will have the same effect as a laser on them.

Offline Betty

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Re: In the News
« Reply #135 on: September 03, 2016, 03:24:31 AM »
Back to the news...

Earliest Painting of a Transvestite confirmed.

An 18th-century portrait sold in New York to a British gallery as a "woman in a feathered hat" turns out to actually portray a man dressed as a woman, becoming the earliest known painting of a transvestite.

The transvestite painting, now called the "Chevalier D'Eon," is currently hanging in the Philip Mould Ltd. gallery in London and will possibly become a permanent feature in the British National Portraits Gallery, said art dealer and art historian Philip Mould, director of Philip Mould Ltd.

"We spent 30 years honing our skills at looking at British portraits, and you begin to spot anomalies," Mould said. "Portraiture, despite the diversity of odd-looking people in the world, particularly in the 19th century, before advances in cosmetic science and dentistry and medical advances had taken place, but portraiture is always extremely straight-laced."

The finished portrait was typically a compromise between the artist (who was painting what he or she saw) and the sitter (who wanted to look their best); that means anomalies of facial features can be subtle.

Something about the "muscularity of his face" and a "suggestion of stubble" caught Mould's eye as odd. So Mould and a team of his "lost faces bureau" went to work to figure out the sitter in this painting, and along the way ended up finding the actual artist of the work.

Once the painting had been cleaned and restored, "his masculine traits became far more manifest," Mould said, including the masculine-angled face shape and the facial hair stubble. The other thing they noticed was the signature of the artist, which had been listed as Gilbert Stuart, actually was "T. Stewart." (5 Myths About the Male Body)

Putting the pieces together, including the fact that Charles D'Eon spent a fair amount of time on the stage fencing, the team nailed down the painter as Thomas Stewart, who also spent a lot of time in the theatre, Mould said.

Since the painting's unveiling this week, "we've had an interesting succession of individuals coming to pay homage," Mould said. "It's a combination of mirth and respect for a man who was bold enough, brave enough, but also extrovert enough to state his case."

In fact, D'Eon apparently lived the second half of his life as a transvestite during a time when cross-dressing was essentially unheard of.

Here's how D'Eon's transvestitism came to pass: He joined King Louis XV's secret service in 1755, had his first major military posting in London in 1763, before being appointed Plenipotentiary Minister to London. However, within months, he had a falling-out with the ambassador appointed to replace him in London, accusing the ambassador of trying to murder him. D'Eon also made public secret documents and ended up being sent to prison, which he escaped.

Once escaped, D'Eon concealed his identity, reportedly, by dressing as a woman. Gossip about his gender began in 1770, with rumors that people were even betting on whether he was a man or a woman.

"D'Eon refused all offers to confirm or deny the rumor," Simon Burrows, professor of modern history at the University of Leeds, said in a statement in 2010. "He also demanded the French government pay off his debts and they agreed, terrified he would betray state secrets, including plans to invade England."

And after that, apparently D'Eon was forced to adopt female dress, and others accepted him as a female. So much so, that the truth was only revealed upon a medical examination after his death on May 21, 1810, which revealed his very male anatomy. Reportedly, his housekeeper did not "recover from the shock for many hours," according to the gallery.

The term "eonism," which is used in psychiatry to describe male adoption of female dress and manners, was derived from D'Eon's name.

Chevalier D'Eon was also known as, Lea de Beaumont, or Lady Beaumont.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chevalier_d%27%C3%89on

Offline Betty

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Re: In the News
« Reply #136 on: September 03, 2016, 03:37:03 AM »
I've discovered there's a few books, plays, films, comic books, anime, & manga based on Chevalier D'Eon. However many of these works got it wrong & are historically totally incorrect. Many of them depict him as a girl who dressed like a boy. Although Chevalier D'Eon often insisted he was a girl who was raised as a boy by his parents, at the time of his death in his 80s, an autopsy did reveal he was in fact male... with larger breasts than normal for a male though (insert theories here).

Chevalier D'Eon is popular in the cosplay crowd, probably because of the anime & manga made about him. He's also very popular at Deviantart.

Here's some of the artists, cartoonists, & animators depictions of him. Some are quite cute.

Offline Betty

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Re: In the News
« Reply #137 on: September 03, 2016, 03:39:06 AM »
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Offline Betty

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Re: In the News
« Reply #138 on: September 03, 2016, 03:39:39 AM »
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Offline Betty

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Re: In the News
« Reply #139 on: September 03, 2016, 03:40:17 AM »
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