off the line …
start of the 1929 Monaco Grand Prix, the very first Grand Prix to be held in Monaco
the very last car we see is the Mercedes-Benz SSK of Rudolf Caracciola he started from 15th position & finished 3rd after 100 laps, 2 minutes down on race winner William Grover-Williams in the Bugatti T35B
Schlagwort: 1920s
Henry Segrave, Gentleman Driver
Count Louis Zborowski, Gentleman Driver
Woolf ‚Babe‘ Barnato, Gentleman Driver
SMOKING WAS OBLIGATORY
in the 20s and 30s.
Fats Waller was kidnapped in Chicago leaving a performance in 1926. Four men bundled him into a car and took him to the Hawthorne Inn, owned by Al Capone. Waller was ordered inside the building, and found a party in full swing. Gun to his back, he was pushed towards a piano, and told to play. A terrified Waller realized he was the “surprise guest” at Capone’s birthday party, and took comfort that the gangsters did not intend to kill him. According to rumor, Waller played for three days. When he left the Hawthorne Inn, he was very drunk, extremely tired, and had earned thousands of dollars in cash from Capone and other party-goers as tips.
What a story…
March 10, 1927
Dancing in the streets…
Elegant and rich in tradition: figure skating was one of the few winter sport disciplines that have long been very well organized before the Olympics in national associations. First World and European championships already existed in the 19th century.
Since the introduction of a Winter Olympics was controversial within the IOC, the popular discipline had become olympic before Chamonix, through competitions during the regular Olympics in the summer – as happened in London in 1908 and 1920 in Antwerp. Comments on pics:
- Dancing on Ice: On January 24, 1924 the day of the opening ceremony of the first Winter Olympic Games, this figure skater trained to music from the gramophone – sporty, but with cigarette in her mouth.
- Audience Favorite: The Norwegian Sonja Henie, here at their free skating, though being the darling of the public at the age of eleven years as the youngest participant of the Winter Games and her unconcern, she finished only on the eighth (and last) place. In the following three Winter Games, she always won a gold medal.
- Triumph in the home: the French Andrée Joly and Pierre Brunet won the bronze medal in Chamonix pair skating behind the couples from Finland and Austria. An unusually cold weather had created good ice conditions at the last moment.
- Again Joly and Brunet.
Winter Olympics 1924: On January 30, 1924, the three medal winners in figure skating present together on the ice in Chamonix. Women were only allowed at the Olympic Winter Games figure skating; a total of 13 athletes participated. From left to right pose little disorganized: The winner Herma Planck Szabo (Austria) in addition to the third place Ethel Muckelt from the UK; rightmost runner-up Beatrix Loughran (USA).