Chaos is what killed the dinosaurs, darling.

Amna, 19, in love with Val.

I am obsessed with 80's movies, also I occasionally make gifs. other blogs I run cinyma, FYD, Joan Crawford Blog. I really like subtitles

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237 theacademy:

Elizabeth Taylor with her daughter, Liza Todd, on the set of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” (1966) from our Classic Hollywood Moms photo gallery.
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Elizabeth Taylor & Montgomery Clift on the set of ‘Raintree County’, photographed by Bob Willoughby, 1958.

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Elizabeth Taylor poses wearing a blonde wig, 1963.

1540 oldhollywood:

Elizabeth Taylor on the set of Suddenly, Last Summer (1959, dir. Joseph L. Mankiewicz) Photographer: Burt Glinn (via)
1188 stardustmelody:

Elizabeth Taylor on the set of Giant photographed by Frank Worth, 1955
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886 life:

On the one-year anniversary of Liz Taylor’s death, LIFE presents previously unpublished photographs of Taylor and her co-star (and soul mate) Montgomery Clift, from the set of the 1951 classic, A Place in the Sun. 
Contact sheet from LIFE photographer Peter Stackpole’s shoot on a Paramount lot with Elizabeth Taylor and Montgomery Clift in 1950.
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593 vintagegal:

Elizabeth Taylor c. 1949
503 missavagardner:

Elizabeth Taylor on the set of ‘Raintree County’, photographed by Bob Willoughby, 1957.
22371 missavagardner:

I don’t entirely approve of some of the things I have done, or am, or have been. But I’m me. God knows, I’m me.
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missavagardner:

Dame Elizabeth Rosemond Taylor aka Elizabeth Taylor | February 27, 1932 – March 23, 2011 

I have often have wondered what kind of a person I would be today if I did not have these enormous guilts — if everything had gone easily and I had not made such horrific mistakes. I think I would have been the most awful, pontifical goody two shoes. I was really so smug, so sweet, so good, so spoiled — so intolerant of anybody else’s downfall. But tragedy, mistakes, and shame for your mistakes cannot leave you untouched. All the superficial things that one gave so much value to before — money, luxury, indulging in whims — calamity makes them seem so incidental. I swear to God I’d be just as happy living with Richard and the kids in a shack. And I treat the happiness I have now with great respect, great appreciation, because I know how fragile and precarious it is — how easily it can go.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ELIZABETH!