Revealing Photos From The 1960s That Captured More Than Expected
By | August 24, 2022
There are certain people in history who deserve a closer look and we've gathered them all here for your viewing pleasure. This hand picked collection of the most beautiful women from times gone by will inspire nostalgia while raising your blood pressure... and we mean that in a good way.
These gorgeous photos may not be suitable for all audiences... but that's what makes them so fun. You'll want to pour over everyone of these pictures to make sure you don't miss a detail.
Take your time going over these photos, each and every one of them is a must see. You really won't believe what you're looking at, or how lucky you are to get to sneak a peak.
Proceed with caution... these photos are for mature audiences only.
While filming And God Created Women in 1956, Brigitte Bardot turned St. Tropez’s idyllic waterfront upside down. Bardot made her way through the seaside town with her husband, director Roger Vadim as her sexuality was exploding.
At the time the European press was incensed with the young actress, with many papers writing that they should "Ban Bardot," and this was just based on her sensuality not anything that she said or did - just the way she looked. This kind of negative media attention is likely what pushed Bardot out of the spotlight, she explained when she retired from acting:
It’s what I dreamed of. It’s what I always wanted... I don’t feel old or used up, and I don’t have time to waste thinking about aging, because I live only for my cause. Today, there are more regulations on cars than for animals.
Doris Day wows on Johnny Carson
Doris Day was the queen of the box office in the 196s, starring in massive films like Pillow Talk and The Man Who Knew Too Much, but she says that when she was first put on contract by Warner Bros. the company didn't really know what to do with her unique talent so they just put her in whatever they had that wasn't "dramatic."
Day says that her earliest roles were pretty milquetoast and that she doesn't even know what she was doing in the movies, she just needed to work. She told Parade:
At Warner Bros. they had serious films. All the dramatic actresses were there. When they hired me, they didn’t know what to do with me. The first thing they put me in was Romance on the High Seas, a little comedy. The next one was My Dream Was Yours—I don’t even know what that was about.
Lynda Carter prepping for a swim on Battle for the Network Stars
Throughout the 1970s and '80s there was only one way to know what star of the small screen was the best and brightest, and it wasn't through the Emmy Awards - it was through the Battle of the Network Stars. The show pit the stars of the Big 3 - NBC, ABC, and CBS - in a small scale battle that resembled the Olympics if they were held at a summer camp full of super attractive people.
In 1976, Carter's team featured stars like Farrah Fawcett, Penny Marshall, and Ron Howard, an amazing group that won the inaugural games. Carter ended up destroying the rest of the talent in her swimming relay lap.
It's clear that even though she played a superhero on TV she's just as physically powerful in her real life.
If there's one photo that shows us what the stars really think of each other it's this shot of Sophia Loren and Jayne Mansfield, but look closer... there's more to the story than meets the eye.
Taken in 1957, the photo was snapped at Loren's welcome to Hollywood party thrown by Paramount Pictures at Romanoff’s restaurant in Beverly Hills. When Mansfield arrived she was super late, and rushed to her spot at Loren's table in her low cut dress.
Mansfield was spilling out of her dress, and Loren couldn't help but take a look. The shots make Loren look like she's upset, but in 2015 she explained that she was just checking out the goods:
She came right for my table. She knew everyone was watching. She sat down. And now, she was barely… Listen. Look at the picture. Where are my eyes? I’m staring at her nipples because I am afraid they are about to come onto my plate. In my face you can see the fear. I’m so frightened that everything in her dress is going to blow—BOOM!—and spill all over the table.
Ann-Margret showing off for the cameras
Born in Sweden, blonde bombshell Ann-Margret came to the States in 1946 with her father and by the time she was 19 she was appearing in George Burns' Christmas show at the Sahara in Las Vegas. Although she looked similar to a lot of the actresses of her day, she was much more open to just going with the flow.
While some actresses from the '50s and '60s were clearly not trying to do the hard work, Ann-Margret is open about how much she loved digging into a role even if it means that she's going to end up hurting herself. She explained how she ended up cut up on the set of Tommy and kept on going. She explained:
For the scenes with all of the baked beans and the bubbles, there were actually three cameras on me, and Ken would be on the middle camera. He kept shouting, 'Closer! Closer!' In the scene, I’m just going crazy and whacking my way through these bubbles, and then suddenly I hit something. They had taken away all of the glass and the props, but they had forgotten about the glass in the TV set. So I hit that with a thud, and then I start to see pink appearing in the soap bubbles, which resulted in 27 stitches. Then the Lycra catsuit that I was wearing started shrinking, and I had all this blood on me. My hair is wet, my mascara is running … They threw a blanket over me and took me to the hospital.
A young Madonna hanging out on the lawn
Long before she was the Queen of Pop, Madonna was just a regular girl living in Michigan. She went to Rochester Adams High School where she scored mostly straight As and performed as a party of the cheerleading squad before scoring a scholarship to the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance.
There's a world where Madonna just goes to college for dance before going on to be a teacher or a back up dancer, but that's not the way things worked out. In 1978 she dropped out of college and moved to New York City where she worked at Dunkin' Donuts while performing with various modern dance troupes around the city. She later said of her decision to go to New York:
It was the first time I’d ever taken a plane, the first time I’d ever gotten a taxi cab. I came here with $35 in my pocket. It was the bravest thing I’d ever done.
Barbara Roufs imparting good luck before a race
For many drag racing fiends it's not the cars or the burning rubber that gets them going, it's the babes who stalk the track. One of the greatest trophy girls of the early '70s was Barbara Roufs, a woman who's a bit of mystery to everyone, regardless of whether or not they're keyed into the racing scene of Southern California.
Roufs is the embodiment of drag racing culture. She's got the flat ironed hair, the knee high go-go boots, and a tan that's earned through years under the west coast sun. No one really knows what happened to Roufs, but she'll live on in racing history forever through her photographs.
Arguably, the most alluring woman of the 60s... Marilyn Monroe at Santa Monica Beach, 1962
In 1962 Marilyn Monroe walked the beach in Santa Monica with George Barris, a photographer who snapped the final photographs of one of the most beautiful women of the 20th century. Monroe wasn't prepping to take her final photos, but she loved working with Barris from the moment they met in 1954 on the set for The Seven Year Itch.
This photo, along with the rest of the set, show Monroe on her final hang with Barris, fittingly on Friday the 13th. In some photos she sits in the sand, curled up in an oatmeal sweater, and in others she's wrapped in a green towel. Barris said later that this was the last time he saw her, and he always regrets not flying out to see her when she asked. He said:
She called me on Friday, and I was in New York, and she wanted to know if I could come to see her that weekend and that it was urgent.
Heather Thomas on Battle for the Network Stars
Anyone tuning into Battle of the Network Stars knew that they were in for some wild, unscripted prime-time pseudo athleticism on top of plenty of the hottest stars on television in barely there swimsuits.
The series, which ran from 1976 to 1988 was serious guilty pleasure viewing. Heather Thomas was the perfect actress to appear on this series. Not only was she known from her role on The Fall Guy, but she was a total babe - which you need to balance out the cast of Welcome Back Kotter.
Thomas was game for anything on this series, which is why her most well known appearance on Battle of the Network Stars features a very tight swimsuit and a dunk tank.
Robyn Hilton shocks Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show
Robyn Hilton is the perfect guest for the Tonight Show. You might think that you want to see Johnny Carson talk with someone like Don Rickles, but it's really Hilton that takes the cake. She funny enough on her own, but whenever she worked her mojo on the Tonight Show host it was incredibly fun to watch him get flustered.
Hilton only appeared in a few films with Blazing Saddles and Video Vixens being the standouts, but her real skill was working the talk show circuit. She could be daffy and air-headed or toss around jokes with the boys when she had to, but she always left the audience wanting more.
Honestly, how could you not want to see more of her?
Remember the beautiful Alexandra Bastedo and her soul piercing eyes?
Whether you remember this '60s glamor girl for her soul piercing eyes or for her work on The Champions (or Ab Fab if that's more your lane), Bastedo once explained that she wanted to be a vet all of her life, but that she ended up in Hollywood when she was 16 and her path was altered forever.
However, she found a happy medium later in life. Her love of animals led her out of the acting world and into a life of taking care of animals full time on her own 10 acre ranch. She discussed her new life, saying:
I'm up with the alarm every morning, but it's immensely rewarding. When I have a pony that comes to me with its ribs sticking out and in a state of collapse it's a wonderful feeling to be able to restore it to health and happiness... My philosophy is try and do your little bit.
Jamie Lee Curtis stuns in a short sleeve sweater
In the 1970s Jamie Lee Curtis was just a fresh faced actress hitting the scene with one big movie under her belt - Halloween. Most actors who get their big break in a horror movie tend to be embarrassed about the whole deal, but seeing as how Halloween is one of the most important films of the 20th century Curtis embraced the bloody good film.
Curtis has been working hard since the '70s, but according to the star it's not because she has a rise and grind mentality, it's just because she's lucky. She told The Daily Beast:
Every job I get is because it comes my way. I have zero ambition. Zero. I don’t want anything. Because I do not want what I have not got, everything is a f*cking blessing. I have a family, I have some money in the bank, I have a sense of humor. And, I’m sober.
The always stunning Ann-Margret
Ever since she arrived on the big screen Ann-Margret has been a source of obsession for audiences. Most people came to her when she starred alongside Elvis in Viva Las Vegas, a time she remembers as being absolutely wild - mostly because of her relationship with The King.
At the time the two were seeing each other secretly - he was engaged to Priscila at the time, but she and Elvis spent every waking moment during the filming together. However, things came to an end in 1964 when Elvis felt that she let information about the relationship slip to the press.
In spite of the arduous affair, Ann-Margret continued on with her amazing life, and still acts in films today. Who knew she would still be tantalizing audiences into the 21st century?
The very groovy Sharon Tate, 1960s
Sharon Tate has come to embody a certain energy from the '60s. Struck down before she ever got her major break, all we really have of her are her few film appearances and the story of her horrific death.
But before all of that horrible business, Tate was just a regular gal from Texas who happened to be one of the most beautiful women on the planet. She was initially hired as an extra in films that were shooting in London, but when she moved to Los Angeles in 1962 she was pretty given representation the moment she got off the plane.
In just a few short years she was hired to play small parts on Mister Ed and The Beverly Hillbillies, watching her appearances on those shows today is absolutely surreal.
Suzanne Somers in 1977
In the 1970s Suzanne Somers made every guy in America wish that they were her roommate with her role in Three's Company. However, things fell apart after a few years when she told executives at the network that she deserved to make the same amount of money as co-star John Ritter.
Somers was fired from the show and replaced, and if that wasn't bad enough she was blacklisted for years. While discussing the frustrating turn of events Somers says that the worst part of the experience was how she was thought of as a puppet to her then husband, who was acting as her manager at the time. She explained:
That was part of their PR campaign. He was this Svengali. He had this reputation. He ruined her career. And I was the greedy… 'Who does she think she is?' I never would have left Three’s Company. Ever. I loved the character. But, in year six, you have to renegotiate because it’s the last year of the contract. But, before the negotiations, (Alan) and I were talking about it. I felt it was about who sells the most tickets. ‘I’m selling more tickets than anybody on the network now. Why are the men getting 10 to 15 times more?’
Faye Dunaway in The Happening 1967
In 1967 Faye Dunaway performed a cinematic hat trick, she starred in three movies in one year: The Happening, Hurry Sundown, and Bonnie and Clyde. This fascinating turn of events turned her into the face of New Hollywood, but what's wild is that it all happened in one year. There's really no one who's had a career like Faye Dunaway.
While speaking with ET Online, Dunaway admitted that she's still flummoxed that she was able to gain such notoriety in 12 months time:
When I was discovered, everything happened like Dominoes. I don't know how to talk about it now because it’s mind blowing. It's so unreal yet it's real. I'm grateful for it but I guess part of that is missing it — when one grows older.
Pam Grier and Juanita Brown on the set of Foxy Brown
When Pam Grier hit the screen in Foxy Brown she turned the world of Blaxploitation cinema - and just the film business in general - upside down. Her turn as a funky babe who exacts revenge on a drug cartel after they kill her boyfriend rises above genre filmmaking into something altogether new and dare we say artistic.
Much of that is thanks to Brown's incredible charm and acting ability, something that she says she honed while growing up in North Carolina. She explained how the heartland formed her skills to Vice:
The thing about it is, in real life, being active with cars, animals, tractors, boats, guns, and hunting and my family, I just brought what I do to work. That was normal for me. I was already that before I went to film, and living outside of Los Angeles, living in the heartland, you can really develop your character. You can see the world from other eyes, other lenses when you don’t live in Hollywood or New York. You can see the beats, rebel flags, rednecks, and guns all over the place. See different things or different people. That forms your gift that you have.
It's rare that a one and done actor on a TV show works their way into the consciousness of a random as well as Emily Banks has in the character of Yeoman Tonia Barrows. Her appearance in the much beloved episode "Shore Leave" is one that's played with the imagination of Trekkies across the universe.
This obsession with the episode is clearly because Yeoman Barrows is a babe, something that Emily Banks is fine with. However, the thing that bothered her about filming the episode was all of the running. She explains:
I didn't realize that I was going to be running around with legs hanging out [from the uniform] and shoulders hanging out [from the torn tunic]. But I do remember I did a lot of running. And I remember thinking on the first couple of days, 'They don't want an actress, they want an athlete.' I was exhausted, and we kept running and running.
Diana Rigg, 1977
One of the most low key stars of England in the 1970s, Diana Rigg managed to stay on television for decades, first in On Her Majesty's Secret Service and then on The Avengers, one of the coolest spy shows of the era.
While many stars of today have a plan to get famous, buy the perfect house, and make sure they stay in the papers, Diana Rigg contends that the reason she was so successful is because she got into the industry with no plan at all. When it came time to film The Avengers Ring says that she had to fight for every penny she made, even though it made her into a pariah. She told Variety:
That was my first battle with male authority. I discovered after a while in The Avengers that I was earning less than the cameraman. I made a bit of a song and dance about it and demanded more. I was ahead of the game, in that respect, because nobody backed me up. There was no sisterhood. In those days, you were on your own.
Model-actress Cybill Shepherd, 1969
From the moment her face first appeared on magazine covers in the 1960s it was clear that Cybil Shepherd was a star. She received her big break from Peter Bogdonavich who saw her on the cover of a magazine and put her in The Last Picture Show.
While Shepherd dated Bogdonavich for years, she says that it was her relationship with Elvis that was the most exciting to her even when she was on the big screen, mostly because he just knew how to be a man. She wrote for The Guardian:
Elvis Presley, as a lover, was ... indescribable. It was 1972, and all the guys wore cheap cologne, apart from him. He smelled soapy, and sweet, like sugar and sweat. I felt a lot for him. I knew about his drug addiction. I knew his tragic side, and I wish I could have been a better friend to him. But there was a sort of alchemy going on. At the time I thought he was too old for me - the Beatles were my music - but there was this chemistry between us.
The late great Janis Joplin. Photographed by Elliott Landy at Rhode Island, 1968
The brief and brilliant life of Janis Joplin saw the singer escape from small town Texas before becoming one of the most important voices in the psychedelic rock scene of the '60s. Joplin didn't see herself as a psychedelic performer, simply as a blues singer who was performing in the tradition that began in the early 20th century.
While she was alive, Joplin refused to be placed in any box, she never wanted to be anything that people pegged her for. While speaking with the Village Voice, Joplin explained that she just wanted to be successful on her own terms - no one else's:
It seems to bother a lot of women’s lib people that you’re kind of so upfront sexually. I’m representing everything they said they want.… It’s sort of like: you are what you settle for.… You’re only as much as you settle for. If you don’t settle for that and you keep fighting it, you know, you’ll end up anything you want to be… I’m just doing what I wanted to and what feels right and not settling for bullsh*t and it worked. How can they be mad at that?
Sally Field in the late 1960s
Sally Field first came to the public consciousness as Gidget, the little surfer girl from Southern California. Looking back on the series now it seems quaint, but in the '60s there weren't characters like the smart, independent, and sarcastic character embodied by Field.
At the time audiences were used to housewives like June Cleaver, women who doted on their families without thinking anything of themselves. It took Sally Field and Didget to blow the whole thing up.
After the success of Gidget a series of a Gidgets followed across television from That Girl, to Get Smart, and The Avengers. She may have just been a surfer girl, but Gidget was the catalyst for some amazing television.
Another shot of Brigitte Bardot in Saint-Tropez in the early 1960s
Brigitte Bardot did more than bring a beautiful blonde visage to movie screens across the world, she introduced the world to Saint Tropez, a one time fishing village that was changed forever after the filming of And God Created Woman.
Thanks to Bardot and the gravity that she created around her, the small fishing village became a must visit place for the rich and famous of the 1960s. It wasn't just that this was a great place to swim and play, there was the possibility of seeing Bardot.
It was a magical time to be alive, with a young Bardot driving around in a speedboat as fishermen cast their nets and playboys had the time of their lives.
The beautiful Lynda Carter after her Battle of the Network Stars win
Is there anything cooler than an Olympic-esque team made up of Wonder Woman and a Charlie's Angel? No way! When Battle of the Network Stars premiered in 1976 viewers were given the chance to watch some of their favorite stars compete in everything from volleyball, to tug-of-war, and even various swimming events.
It's honestly insane that this show existed, placing stars in some of the wildest events that were possible at the time. It's genuinely crazy that this kind of thing would be on network television but it was the '70s so it must have made sense at the time.
The best part about this series was viewers were able to see their favorite celebrities acting like real people, essentially making it the predecessor to the reality television of today.
Barbara Roufs strikes a pose before a race
Who was Barbara Roufs? That's the question that's been dogging race fans since she disappeared from the two-lane black top in the 1970s, but one one's been able to answer that question - or if they have they've been keeping their lips zipped.
What we do know about Roufs is that she was a titillating presence on the race track. She cut a striking figure and did what trophy girls were meant to do - she made people want to watch races. With her go-go boots and short shorts she brought the eyes of the nation to a sport previously only attracted gear heads.
Jungle Pam, one of the original asphalt babes
There's no one who captured the imagination of the two lane black top more than Jungle Pam, the short short wearing legend who is intrinsically linked to Jungle Jim Liberman. It's likely that Pam is the main reason that most people remember funny car drag racing.
Pam wasn't a gear head from a young age, but after a chance meeting with Liberman she joined up with him and became his calling card. Jim was a wild man on the track, but with the addition of Pam he became the guy that everyone wanted to see.
Initially, Pam was just an awesome sidekick and cheerleader, but the longer she was with Liberman the more she learned about cars and took to changing oil and helping Jim's car get in place before the race.
Sexy mod fashion of the swinging '60s
London in the swinging '60s was the epicenter of fashion. Young people were throwing out the stodgy old clothing of the post war era and slipping into skin tight outfits and growing their hair out long. There was a freedom in this new style that parents and authority figures just couldn't handle.
Mod style in the '60s wasn't as dandyish as we think, sure there were velvet coats and the occasional cape, but women often went the easy route when it came to getting dressed. Baby doll dresses came to fruition in this era, as did miniskirts combined with turtlenecks.
These outfits could be as relaxed as possible, but if they wanted to be super psychedelic they could be combined with wild designs.
Dorothy Mays looking indescribably delicious
Born in Nuremberg, Germany, Dorothy Mays became the obsession of many a teenage boy when she appeared in Playboy in 1979. She was discovered when she was only 19 years old and working as a hairdresser in Maryland. Supposedly she started her journey towards modeling when she was left at the altar by who must be the dumbest guy on the planet.
Unlike a lot of Playmates at the time, Mays didn't want to be a model for the rest of her life, she just wanted to open a killer salon. She told Playboy:
I hope to have enough money saved to open [a salon] by the time I'm 25 years old. I already know how the shop will be laid out. It'll have those old style comfortable barber chairs, but there'll be a lot of mirrors. You know, a touch of the old, a touch of the new.
We hope she was able to open that salon.
Before being stranded on Gilligan's Island, Tina Louise was in The Warrior Empress 1960
When Tina Louise came onto the scene in the late 1950s she was something to marvel at, an actress who was gorgeous, intelligent, and who worked out. The media couldn't figure it out. While speaking with the Journal-American she discussed lifting weights, saying:
I'm a new woman since I discovered exercise... I concentrate on exercises from the waist down, since that is the laziest part of a woman's body.
Aside from being fawned over because of her workout routine, Louise won plenty of good remarks in her early reviews, especially as Griselda Walden in God's Little Acre, a role that she felt affinity for because of the way people focused on the character's looks. She explained:
Griselda only seems sexy because she looks sexy and maybe feels that way but...hers is a tragic story and one I know too well. Men just can't keep their hands off Griselda, because that's the way she affects them every time a man sees her he tries to kiss her and rough her up... Sex is a part of her, but is really not her. I understand this so well, because I don't like men to treat me as I look either... you don't understand, do you? I'm not one dimensional at all. If anybody spends any time with no, they learn that. Man, it's rough trying to convince people that I'm really a serious actress.
Cindy Morgan was every boy's crush in Caddyshack (1980)
Chances are if you came of age in the late '70s and early '80s you had a thing for Cindy Morgan, the knockout blonde Lacey Underall from Caddyshack. Morgan says that filming this film as much fun as it looked, not only because some of the funniest people on the planet were hanging out together for the duration of the shooting, but because the whole set was like one big party.
While speaking with Tulsa World, Morgan explained that one of the biggest thrills of her life was hot-wiring golf carts with guys like Bill Murray to go joy riding:
They took away our keys to the golf carts. Do you think that stopped us? No. Do you know how easy it is to hot-wire one of those old golf carts? It’s really easy. I found out later you are really not supposed to drive golf carts around the green and have golf cart races because that tears up the grass... Four of the funniest men on the planet were locked up on a golf course with a bunch of new actors and we had complete license to (have fun).
A Scandinavian Stewardess examines a new uniform proposal for Scandinavian Airlines in 1964, strangely enough it wasn't approved
In the 1960s air travel was becoming more prevalent among the public, but especially in the business class. Men with jobs at ad firms and the like were flying across the country and the world on a regular basis. One of the ways that airlines tried to keep their business was with skimpy outfits.
It's clear to see why this stewardess uniform was sent back... it reveals a bit too much. But it's not that far off base from what some airlines were dressing their flight attendants in. While the outfits that made it to the air weren't as low cut or revealing, they were tight, and designed to make fliers return again and again.
British stunner Fiona Lewis
Few British starlets are as striking as Fiona Lewis, the woman who made audiences purr in The Fearless Vampire Killers and Brian de Palma's Fury, but Lewis never really thought she'd be on the big screen. While living with roommate Jacqueline Bisset (yes that Jacqueline Bisset) the two of them just fell into the acting game.
After working in England for a while she moved to the States where she ended up posing for Playboy, something that Lewis says she's proud of. She told Women Fitness:
When I came to America I posed for Playboy because I needed the money. I was never embarrassed about this. I was liberated enough (thought I didn’t realize it) to think it was okay to be naked. I knew I had a brain, I was already writing pieces for the Los Angeles Times. In a way, of course, I was also naïve. I was astounded when other people (men, mostly) were shocked to see me in Playboy. A nice girl like me! But I’m glad I did it now––that young body has gone!
Pretty as a picture; Goldie Hawn in the 1960s
The first time most of us saw Goldie Hawn was on Laugh-In. She may have played a short haired, bikini wearing waif but she was clearly in on the joke. And not only that, she was obviously having an amazing time.
As funny and cool as Hawn was on Laugh-In, not everyone got what she was trying to do. In an interview with Harpers Bazaar she explained how she was constantly bothered by journalists who thought she was setting women back to the Stone Age with her bikini body:
An editor from a women’s magazine came up to me and said, ‘Don’t you feel terrible that you’re playing a dumb blonde?’ I said, ‘I don’t understand that question because I’m already liberated. Liberation comes from the inside.’
Lynda Carter was a Wonder Woman in or out of costume
Best known for her role as Wonder Woman, Lynda Carter wasn't so sure about taking on the iconic role when she was offered the job after years of struggling to find success. It wasn't imposter syndrome holding her back, but the worry that the outfit was too revealing.
Carter's hourglass figure is obvious whenever you see her no matter what she's wearing, but she still couldn't shake the worry that she would look too delicate in the tiny outfit. She explained:
I wore less on the beach! It was more than a bikini–it was the American flag in a one-piece suit...
Lynda Carter's red carpet look was a eye catching
After the massive success of Wonder Woman Lynda Carter could basically write her own checks. She moved on from the superhero show to take on well paid advertising campaigns and even host her own CBS special where she was able to show off her amazing singing voice.
After leaving the role and moving on to different roles, Carter made sure it was clear that she wasn't ashamed of playing the Amazonian hero, only that she wanted to do something new. She explained:
Wonder Woman was soft and feminine in her own way. I tried to give her a sense of humor and vulnerability. I’m a lot more vulnerable than she ever was, that’s for sure. But I don’t want anyone to think I’m trying to get away from the Wonder Woman image completely.