Ok, so George Washington may not have actually worn a wig , but can you think of a better way to spend an afternoon off than watching two girls perform a Sapphic 69 scene wearing nothing but powdered wigs while a room full of horny aristocrats watches? Us either. See this sexy scene SKIN motion with Poor Cecily (1974), right here at MrSkin.com!
After sixty years of keeping Tinseltown’s deepest sexual secrets, 88-year-old Scotty Bowers is ready to spill the beans. Bowers, whose new memoir is called Full Service: My Adventures in Hollywood and the Secret Sex Lives of the Stars , claims he worked for decades arranging same-sex encounters for the Hollywood elite, and there are some awfully big names on his client list. Most of Bowers’ memoir concerns his male clientele, but skinterestingly he also claims that Gone with the Wind’ s Vivien Leigh preferred Tara to Rhett off set, and says he personally procured over 150 women for legendary actress Katharine Hepburn (left)’s tuna-tickling pleasure. We knew Kate was a cunning linguist, but that’s skin credible! So why out these stars now? As Bower tells The New York Times : “ I finally said yes because I’m not getting any younger and all of my famous tricks are dead by now. The truth can’t hurt them anymore. ” Check out more skintage sexy from legendary lady-lovers Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich right here at MrSkin.com! Picture courtesy of Life Magazine
We’ve got a nude player in the mix this week, now that Spartacus: Vengeance is back to harden your partacus with a (you got it) vengeance. The first episode of the new series (which picks up where the first season, Spartacus: Blood and Sand , left off) brought back all our favorite randy Romans: wicked patricians Lucy Lawless and Viva Bianca both bared boobs and a hint of pubes, with some suckable sacks from escaped slave Katrina Law as the icing on the honeycake. Over on Showtime, Shameless introduced us to nudecomer Emma Greenwell , who is taking over neighborhood bicycle duties for the newly-engaged (on the show, of course) Laura Wiggins . That gorgeous pair really inflates our inner tube! Finally,we don’t know how House of Lies does it, but it’s quickly become the most underwhelming nude show on TV. It’s not that it doesn’t showcase skin- it does- there’s just something about it that doesn’t excite us like, say , a new season of Game of Thrones . Anyway, this week we got a quick tit flash from Dawn Olivieri and a lingerie scene from the stubbornly skingy Kristen Bell , which unfortunately is the best we’re gonna get from her this season. But seriously, have you seen that new Game of Thrones teaser trailer ? More after the jump!
After sixty years of keeping Tinseltown’s deepest sexual secrets, 88-year-old Scotty Bowers is ready to spill the beans. Bowers, whose new memoir is called Full Service: My Adventures in Hollywood and the Secret Sex Lives of the Stars , claims he worked for decades arranging same-sex encounters for the Hollywood elite, and there are some awfully big names on his client list. Most of Bowers’ memoir concerns his male clientele, but skinterestingly he also claims that Gone with the Wind’ s Vivien Leigh preferred Tara to Rhett off set, and says he personally procured over 150 women for legendary actress Katharine Hepburn (left)’s tuna-tickling pleasure. We knew Kate was a cunning linguist, but that’s skin credible! So why out these stars now? As Bower tells The New York Times : “ I finally said yes because I’m not getting any younger and all of my famous tricks are dead by now. The truth can’t hurt them anymore. ” Check out more skintage sexy from legendary lady-lovers Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich right here at MrSkin.com! Picture courtesy of Life Magazine
I honestly believe that Heather Graham is getting better with age, she’s like a fine wine with breasts, every time I see her she’s wearing some sort of tight dress or sexy outfit and looking gorgeous. Here she is dropping some decent cleavage, decent Heather Graham cleavage that is, on the red carpet for something. If she’s like a fine wine, I’d like to enjoy her with a delicious steak. Tasty.
We always knew she was a bit more Two Poon Junction than Two Moon Junction , but now Little Darlings star Kristy McNichol has officially announced that she is gay. But why now, after two decades of living quietly with her dogs and long-term ladyfriend far from the bright lights of Hollywood? As her publicist Jeff Ballard tells People , it’s for the children: “[Kristy] is very sad about kids being bullied. She hopes that coming out can help kids who need support. She would like to help others who feel different.” We’re pretty sure that just knowing who Kristy McNichol is is enough to make a high-school kid different these days, but hey….it’s the thought that counts, right? Kristy, we (one-handedly) salute you! Mr. Skin members can see the breast of former child star Kristy McNichol right here at MrSkin.com!
On the bus home from a night out at a lesbian club, Fort Greene teenager Alike (Adepero Oduye) swaps her tomboyish outfit for earrings and a pink t-shirt, something clearly not of her own choosing, something selected to appease her mother. Alike is 17 and closeted, at least at home. Her mom Audrey (Kim Wayans) is uptight, religious and almost quivers with the effort of seeing her daughter as she wants her to be and not as she actually is. While Alike’s closer to her father Arthur (Charles Parnell), a cop, he’s chosen to step back from the tensions at home and in his marriage. Liking boys and makeup comes naturally to her younger sister Sharonda (Shamika Cotton) — our heroine is alone in her own personal form of camouflage, trying to blend into the background wherever she goes. What sets writer/director Dee Rees’s sensitive feature debut Pariah (expanded from her 2007 short of the same name) apart from the standard coming out story is that Alike is just as much an outsider at the club as at home, adrift and uncomfortable while her more outgoing best friend Laura (Pernell Walker) picks up girls on the dance floor. She hasn’t found the place in which she feels she can be herself. Alike knows that she’s gay, but her understanding and acceptance of that fact doesn’t mean she knows where she fits, in the scene or out of it — she doesn’t easily fall into the divisions of butch and femme, and she doesn’t seems to do any better at school, where she’s a good student in whose writing a teacher has taken a special interest, but other dangles outside the established social groups. Pariah is a coming of age story that’s uncommonly aware of just how heartbreakingly important the trappings of fashion, of music choices, of hobbies are when you’re young — they’re symbols of everything you think you are or aspire to be, even as they’re woefully inadequate shortcuts to establishing your identity. Alike’s journey take place in a larger landscape of shifting identities — just as the lesbian community isn’t a monolithic entity, neither is the black neighborhood in which the majority of the action is set. Her family has worked its way into the middle class, and Audrey’s consciousness of this achievement informs her stiffness around the coworkers she clearly feels she’s a cut above and her overall fussy propriety. It’s this sense of the type of people with whom her family belongs that leads her to insist Alike hang out with the daughter of an acquaintance from church, Bina (Aasha Davis), as if enough time in each other’s proximity would make a friendship inevitable. Alike begrudgingly walks to school with Bina and hangs out with her on the weekends, and finds a connection with the girl she never expected, one that blossoms into a possible romance when Bina gives our heroine her first kiss. Bina’s the opposite of Alike in many ways, bold where the latter is shy, but also uncertain where she’s fully decided, and the halting tenderness with which their relationship builds is tinged with the knowledge that Bina is probably going to break her heart. Pariah wouldn’t work without Oduye’s luminous performance, capturing the emotional nuances of a character not prone to letting her emotions show. She makes Alike’s vulnerabilities clear through her defenses — Alike’s convinced she has the world fooled, but isn’t anywhere near as in control as she’d like to believe. It’s a lovely, subtle portrayal that’s deservedly been getting a lot of attention for Oduye, who originated the role in Rees’s short and who may also be familiar as the grocery store clerk Louis C.K. awkwardly follows home to try to ask out in the first season of Louie . It’s a performance that good enough to smooth over the fact that the film’s gears grind as it arrives at an ending that feels neat, with Alike finally confronting her parents and encountering the results we’ve been primed to expect from the outset. Pariah is a small story of a painful, formative era in its protagonist’s life, and it sometimes feels roughly hewn to fit into an arc it doesn’t necessarily need. It’s the intimate, unforced details — an exchange between Arthur and his friends at a store, the way Laura chooses to shut Alike out after feeling betrayed by her new relationship — that speak volumes more than the film’s obvious butterfly metaphor, and that attest to a filmmaker and actress worth keeping an eye on. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
If there’s one thing that we can all agree on here at Skin Central, it’s that girls who like girls are OK by us…especially when they let us watch. If it’s Sapphic and graphic, it’s bound to be a hit at Mr. Skin, so as we wrap up 2011 we’re looking back at our top 5 clam-slammers of the year. See Skin Central’s picks after the jump!