We got ready together, picked out outfits and jewelry and handbags together (aka raided Blake’s closet), ate dinners together, and drove together to celebrate our favorite sister, @americaferrera and her brilliant performance in Barbie. I’m so proud of our girl in such a profoundly deep way, and the path she’s blazing for herself, and women everywhere. What a joy to come together in this way, in each other’s arms— the arms we’ve held, and linked with, and cradled as friends for 20 years— in honor of a woman who continues to take my breath away with everything she does, and is.
When I tell you some things are forever, this right here is it.
We got ready together, picked out outfits and jewelry and handbags together (aka raided Blake’s closet), ate dinners together, and drove together to celebrate our favorite sister, @americaferrera and her brilliant performance in Barbie. I’m so proud of our girl in such a profoundly deep way, and the path she’s blazing for herself, and women everywhere. What a joy to come together in this way, in each other’s arms— the arms we’ve held, and linked with, and cradled as friends for 20 years— in honor of a woman who continues to take my breath away with everything she does, and is.
When I tell you some things are forever, this right here is it.
We got ready together, picked out outfits and jewelry and handbags together (aka raided Blake’s closet), ate dinners together, and drove together to celebrate our favorite sister, @americaferrera and her brilliant performance in Barbie. I’m so proud of our girl in such a profoundly deep way, and the path she’s blazing for herself, and women everywhere. What a joy to come together in this way, in each other’s arms— the arms we’ve held, and linked with, and cradled as friends for 20 years— in honor of a woman who continues to take my breath away with everything she does, and is.
When I tell you some things are forever, this right here is it.
We got ready together, picked out outfits and jewelry and handbags together (aka raided Blake’s closet), ate dinners together, and drove together to celebrate our favorite sister, @americaferrera and her brilliant performance in Barbie. I’m so proud of our girl in such a profoundly deep way, and the path she’s blazing for herself, and women everywhere. What a joy to come together in this way, in each other’s arms— the arms we’ve held, and linked with, and cradled as friends for 20 years— in honor of a woman who continues to take my breath away with everything she does, and is.
When I tell you some things are forever, this right here is it.
Happy birthday to my favorite martyr.
Happy holidays from your mother and father and Sir Mr. Pip Ruffles-Bottom III in this very natural not at all awkward pose.
#HolidayCard
#SeasonsGreetings
#WeirdHandHolding
#SuperNormal
#SirMrPipRufflesBottomNotAmused
#SendHelpToThePub
Happy holidays from your mother and father and Sir Mr. Pip Ruffles-Bottom III in this very natural not at all awkward pose.
#HolidayCard
#SeasonsGreetings
#WeirdHandHolding
#SuperNormal
#SirMrPipRufflesBottomNotAmused
#SendHelpToThePub
Happy holidays from your mother and father and Sir Mr. Pip Ruffles-Bottom III in this very natural not at all awkward pose.
#HolidayCard
#SeasonsGreetings
#WeirdHandHolding
#SuperNormal
#SirMrPipRufflesBottomNotAmused
#SendHelpToThePub
Happy holidays from your mother and father and Sir Mr. Pip Ruffles-Bottom III in this very natural not at all awkward pose.
#HolidayCard
#SeasonsGreetings
#WeirdHandHolding
#SuperNormal
#SirMrPipRufflesBottomNotAmused
#SendHelpToThePub
“I grew up in Southern California in an apartment building complex where I’d often spend evenings around a communal bonfire listening to my father, the artist, and acrobatic dancer, Russ Tamblyn, tell stories about the heydays of Hollywood. My dad starred in everything from the original West Side Story, to David Lynch’s Twin Peaks, rubbed elbows with the likes of Fred Astaire and Henry Miller, and is a beloved culture icon of sorts. You could hear a pin drop – or just the sounds of the crackling fire and my father’s voice – as neighbors and friends alike leaned in to listen closely to his stories of the adventures from his youth. There was the time he received his best friend, the actor Dennis Hopper, in bad shape over the border of Mexico in an ambulance. Or the time he picked up a strange hitchhiker who turned out to be Charles Manson, and his harem of women in Topanga. Or the time he helped Elvis Presley with some dance moves for “Jailhouse Rock.” Or the time his other best friend, the songwriter Neil Young, wrote one of his most famous songs in the backseat of dad’s car on a road trip. Or the time dad turned down that lead role in “Gilligan’s Island.” Or the second time he met the Queen of England. Those stories are just a fraction of his life, and what he writes about in his new memoir, Dancing on the Edge: A Journey of Living, Loving, and Tumbling Through Hollywood. At 89 years old, I like to think it’s a pretty amazing feat, to have come this far, literally and professionally; to have lived for so long, and so hard, and so good, as my dad has, and get to publish a book about it—his first book!— in his golden years. May we all be so fortunate. (Especially the living part.) For The Bare Magazine, I sat down with my dad in my backyard in Brooklyn, New York during his recent press tour for the book to talk about some of his favorite memories from growing up in Hollywood, thinking about life’s biggest regrets at the end of the road, and of course, the essential products he can’t live without (spoiler alert: one of them is a cologne he has worn since I was born, and still wears to this day.)” — @amberrosetamblyn @officialrusstamblyn ♥️ #linkinbio
“I grew up in Southern California in an apartment building complex where I’d often spend evenings around a communal bonfire listening to my father, the artist, and acrobatic dancer, Russ Tamblyn, tell stories about the heydays of Hollywood. My dad starred in everything from the original West Side Story, to David Lynch’s Twin Peaks, rubbed elbows with the likes of Fred Astaire and Henry Miller, and is a beloved culture icon of sorts. You could hear a pin drop – or just the sounds of the crackling fire and my father’s voice – as neighbors and friends alike leaned in to listen closely to his stories of the adventures from his youth. There was the time he received his best friend, the actor Dennis Hopper, in bad shape over the border of Mexico in an ambulance. Or the time he picked up a strange hitchhiker who turned out to be Charles Manson, and his harem of women in Topanga. Or the time he helped Elvis Presley with some dance moves for “Jailhouse Rock.” Or the time his other best friend, the songwriter Neil Young, wrote one of his most famous songs in the backseat of dad’s car on a road trip. Or the time dad turned down that lead role in “Gilligan’s Island.” Or the second time he met the Queen of England. Those stories are just a fraction of his life, and what he writes about in his new memoir, Dancing on the Edge: A Journey of Living, Loving, and Tumbling Through Hollywood. At 89 years old, I like to think it’s a pretty amazing feat, to have come this far, literally and professionally; to have lived for so long, and so hard, and so good, as my dad has, and get to publish a book about it—his first book!— in his golden years. May we all be so fortunate. (Especially the living part.) For The Bare Magazine, I sat down with my dad in my backyard in Brooklyn, New York during his recent press tour for the book to talk about some of his favorite memories from growing up in Hollywood, thinking about life’s biggest regrets at the end of the road, and of course, the essential products he can’t live without (spoiler alert: one of them is a cologne he has worn since I was born, and still wears to this day.)” — @amberrosetamblyn @officialrusstamblyn ♥️ #linkinbio
“I grew up in Southern California in an apartment building complex where I’d often spend evenings around a communal bonfire listening to my father, the artist, and acrobatic dancer, Russ Tamblyn, tell stories about the heydays of Hollywood. My dad starred in everything from the original West Side Story, to David Lynch’s Twin Peaks, rubbed elbows with the likes of Fred Astaire and Henry Miller, and is a beloved culture icon of sorts. You could hear a pin drop – or just the sounds of the crackling fire and my father’s voice – as neighbors and friends alike leaned in to listen closely to his stories of the adventures from his youth. There was the time he received his best friend, the actor Dennis Hopper, in bad shape over the border of Mexico in an ambulance. Or the time he picked up a strange hitchhiker who turned out to be Charles Manson, and his harem of women in Topanga. Or the time he helped Elvis Presley with some dance moves for “Jailhouse Rock.” Or the time his other best friend, the songwriter Neil Young, wrote one of his most famous songs in the backseat of dad’s car on a road trip. Or the time dad turned down that lead role in “Gilligan’s Island.” Or the second time he met the Queen of England. Those stories are just a fraction of his life, and what he writes about in his new memoir, Dancing on the Edge: A Journey of Living, Loving, and Tumbling Through Hollywood. At 89 years old, I like to think it’s a pretty amazing feat, to have come this far, literally and professionally; to have lived for so long, and so hard, and so good, as my dad has, and get to publish a book about it—his first book!— in his golden years. May we all be so fortunate. (Especially the living part.) For The Bare Magazine, I sat down with my dad in my backyard in Brooklyn, New York during his recent press tour for the book to talk about some of his favorite memories from growing up in Hollywood, thinking about life’s biggest regrets at the end of the road, and of course, the essential products he can’t live without (spoiler alert: one of them is a cologne he has worn since I was born, and still wears to this day.)” — @amberrosetamblyn @officialrusstamblyn ♥️ #linkinbio
“I grew up in Southern California in an apartment building complex where I’d often spend evenings around a communal bonfire listening to my father, the artist, and acrobatic dancer, Russ Tamblyn, tell stories about the heydays of Hollywood. My dad starred in everything from the original West Side Story, to David Lynch’s Twin Peaks, rubbed elbows with the likes of Fred Astaire and Henry Miller, and is a beloved culture icon of sorts. You could hear a pin drop – or just the sounds of the crackling fire and my father’s voice – as neighbors and friends alike leaned in to listen closely to his stories of the adventures from his youth. There was the time he received his best friend, the actor Dennis Hopper, in bad shape over the border of Mexico in an ambulance. Or the time he picked up a strange hitchhiker who turned out to be Charles Manson, and his harem of women in Topanga. Or the time he helped Elvis Presley with some dance moves for “Jailhouse Rock.” Or the time his other best friend, the songwriter Neil Young, wrote one of his most famous songs in the backseat of dad’s car on a road trip. Or the time dad turned down that lead role in “Gilligan’s Island.” Or the second time he met the Queen of England. Those stories are just a fraction of his life, and what he writes about in his new memoir, Dancing on the Edge: A Journey of Living, Loving, and Tumbling Through Hollywood. At 89 years old, I like to think it’s a pretty amazing feat, to have come this far, literally and professionally; to have lived for so long, and so hard, and so good, as my dad has, and get to publish a book about it—his first book!— in his golden years. May we all be so fortunate. (Especially the living part.) For The Bare Magazine, I sat down with my dad in my backyard in Brooklyn, New York during his recent press tour for the book to talk about some of his favorite memories from growing up in Hollywood, thinking about life’s biggest regrets at the end of the road, and of course, the essential products he can’t live without (spoiler alert: one of them is a cologne he has worn since I was born, and still wears to this day.)” — @amberrosetamblyn @officialrusstamblyn ♥️ #linkinbio
“I grew up in Southern California in an apartment building complex where I’d often spend evenings around a communal bonfire listening to my father, the artist, and acrobatic dancer, Russ Tamblyn, tell stories about the heydays of Hollywood. My dad starred in everything from the original West Side Story, to David Lynch’s Twin Peaks, rubbed elbows with the likes of Fred Astaire and Henry Miller, and is a beloved culture icon of sorts. You could hear a pin drop – or just the sounds of the crackling fire and my father’s voice – as neighbors and friends alike leaned in to listen closely to his stories of the adventures from his youth. There was the time he received his best friend, the actor Dennis Hopper, in bad shape over the border of Mexico in an ambulance. Or the time he picked up a strange hitchhiker who turned out to be Charles Manson, and his harem of women in Topanga. Or the time he helped Elvis Presley with some dance moves for “Jailhouse Rock.” Or the time his other best friend, the songwriter Neil Young, wrote one of his most famous songs in the backseat of dad’s car on a road trip. Or the time dad turned down that lead role in “Gilligan’s Island.” Or the second time he met the Queen of England. Those stories are just a fraction of his life, and what he writes about in his new memoir, Dancing on the Edge: A Journey of Living, Loving, and Tumbling Through Hollywood. At 89 years old, I like to think it’s a pretty amazing feat, to have come this far, literally and professionally; to have lived for so long, and so hard, and so good, as my dad has, and get to publish a book about it—his first book!— in his golden years. May we all be so fortunate. (Especially the living part.) For The Bare Magazine, I sat down with my dad in my backyard in Brooklyn, New York during his recent press tour for the book to talk about some of his favorite memories from growing up in Hollywood, thinking about life’s biggest regrets at the end of the road, and of course, the essential products he can’t live without (spoiler alert: one of them is a cologne he has worn since I was born, and still wears to this day.)” — @amberrosetamblyn @officialrusstamblyn ♥️ #linkinbio
“I grew up in Southern California in an apartment building complex where I’d often spend evenings around a communal bonfire listening to my father, the artist, and acrobatic dancer, Russ Tamblyn, tell stories about the heydays of Hollywood. My dad starred in everything from the original West Side Story, to David Lynch’s Twin Peaks, rubbed elbows with the likes of Fred Astaire and Henry Miller, and is a beloved culture icon of sorts. You could hear a pin drop – or just the sounds of the crackling fire and my father’s voice – as neighbors and friends alike leaned in to listen closely to his stories of the adventures from his youth. There was the time he received his best friend, the actor Dennis Hopper, in bad shape over the border of Mexico in an ambulance. Or the time he picked up a strange hitchhiker who turned out to be Charles Manson, and his harem of women in Topanga. Or the time he helped Elvis Presley with some dance moves for “Jailhouse Rock.” Or the time his other best friend, the songwriter Neil Young, wrote one of his most famous songs in the backseat of dad’s car on a road trip. Or the time dad turned down that lead role in “Gilligan’s Island.” Or the second time he met the Queen of England. Those stories are just a fraction of his life, and what he writes about in his new memoir, Dancing on the Edge: A Journey of Living, Loving, and Tumbling Through Hollywood. At 89 years old, I like to think it’s a pretty amazing feat, to have come this far, literally and professionally; to have lived for so long, and so hard, and so good, as my dad has, and get to publish a book about it—his first book!— in his golden years. May we all be so fortunate. (Especially the living part.) For The Bare Magazine, I sat down with my dad in my backyard in Brooklyn, New York during his recent press tour for the book to talk about some of his favorite memories from growing up in Hollywood, thinking about life’s biggest regrets at the end of the road, and of course, the essential products he can’t live without (spoiler alert: one of them is a cologne he has worn since I was born, and still wears to this day.)” — @amberrosetamblyn @officialrusstamblyn ♥️ #linkinbio
“I grew up in Southern California in an apartment building complex where I’d often spend evenings around a communal bonfire listening to my father, the artist, and acrobatic dancer, Russ Tamblyn, tell stories about the heydays of Hollywood. My dad starred in everything from the original West Side Story, to David Lynch’s Twin Peaks, rubbed elbows with the likes of Fred Astaire and Henry Miller, and is a beloved culture icon of sorts. You could hear a pin drop – or just the sounds of the crackling fire and my father’s voice – as neighbors and friends alike leaned in to listen closely to his stories of the adventures from his youth. There was the time he received his best friend, the actor Dennis Hopper, in bad shape over the border of Mexico in an ambulance. Or the time he picked up a strange hitchhiker who turned out to be Charles Manson, and his harem of women in Topanga. Or the time he helped Elvis Presley with some dance moves for “Jailhouse Rock.” Or the time his other best friend, the songwriter Neil Young, wrote one of his most famous songs in the backseat of dad’s car on a road trip. Or the time dad turned down that lead role in “Gilligan’s Island.” Or the second time he met the Queen of England. Those stories are just a fraction of his life, and what he writes about in his new memoir, Dancing on the Edge: A Journey of Living, Loving, and Tumbling Through Hollywood. At 89 years old, I like to think it’s a pretty amazing feat, to have come this far, literally and professionally; to have lived for so long, and so hard, and so good, as my dad has, and get to publish a book about it—his first book!— in his golden years. May we all be so fortunate. (Especially the living part.) For The Bare Magazine, I sat down with my dad in my backyard in Brooklyn, New York during his recent press tour for the book to talk about some of his favorite memories from growing up in Hollywood, thinking about life’s biggest regrets at the end of the road, and of course, the essential products he can’t live without (spoiler alert: one of them is a cologne he has worn since I was born, and still wears to this day.)” — @amberrosetamblyn @officialrusstamblyn ♥️ #linkinbio
“I grew up in Southern California in an apartment building complex where I’d often spend evenings around a communal bonfire listening to my father, the artist, and acrobatic dancer, Russ Tamblyn, tell stories about the heydays of Hollywood. My dad starred in everything from the original West Side Story, to David Lynch’s Twin Peaks, rubbed elbows with the likes of Fred Astaire and Henry Miller, and is a beloved culture icon of sorts. You could hear a pin drop – or just the sounds of the crackling fire and my father’s voice – as neighbors and friends alike leaned in to listen closely to his stories of the adventures from his youth. There was the time he received his best friend, the actor Dennis Hopper, in bad shape over the border of Mexico in an ambulance. Or the time he picked up a strange hitchhiker who turned out to be Charles Manson, and his harem of women in Topanga. Or the time he helped Elvis Presley with some dance moves for “Jailhouse Rock.” Or the time his other best friend, the songwriter Neil Young, wrote one of his most famous songs in the backseat of dad’s car on a road trip. Or the time dad turned down that lead role in “Gilligan’s Island.” Or the second time he met the Queen of England. Those stories are just a fraction of his life, and what he writes about in his new memoir, Dancing on the Edge: A Journey of Living, Loving, and Tumbling Through Hollywood. At 89 years old, I like to think it’s a pretty amazing feat, to have come this far, literally and professionally; to have lived for so long, and so hard, and so good, as my dad has, and get to publish a book about it—his first book!— in his golden years. May we all be so fortunate. (Especially the living part.) For The Bare Magazine, I sat down with my dad in my backyard in Brooklyn, New York during his recent press tour for the book to talk about some of his favorite memories from growing up in Hollywood, thinking about life’s biggest regrets at the end of the road, and of course, the essential products he can’t live without (spoiler alert: one of them is a cologne he has worn since I was born, and still wears to this day.)” — @amberrosetamblyn @officialrusstamblyn ♥️ #linkinbio
Had a powerful conversation at @vitalvoices festival, “Voices of Solidarity,” discussing the critical role men play in the fight for gender equality across the world, and how men must get involved and care about this issue not as a favor to us, but because all our struggles are deeply intertwined. We need allies, yes, but more than that, we need action.
I spoke to leaders at the forefront of this work:
-President of @equimundo_org Gary Baker
-VP of Gender-Based Violence Advocacy at Vital Voices, Marina Pisklakova-Parker (who also started the first ever domestic abuse hotline in Russian more than 30 years ago)
-Artist and Co-founder of @artlordsnet Omaid Sharifi
-The Secretary General, Organization of the American States, Luis Almagro.
To learn more visit vitalvoices.org
#vvfestival
#leadingtherise
Styling: @cristinaehrlich
Linen green suit: @argent
Makeup: #PennyNikoDesigns
Had a powerful conversation at @vitalvoices festival, “Voices of Solidarity,” discussing the critical role men play in the fight for gender equality across the world, and how men must get involved and care about this issue not as a favor to us, but because all our struggles are deeply intertwined. We need allies, yes, but more than that, we need action.
I spoke to leaders at the forefront of this work:
-President of @equimundo_org Gary Baker
-VP of Gender-Based Violence Advocacy at Vital Voices, Marina Pisklakova-Parker (who also started the first ever domestic abuse hotline in Russian more than 30 years ago)
-Artist and Co-founder of @artlordsnet Omaid Sharifi
-The Secretary General, Organization of the American States, Luis Almagro.
To learn more visit vitalvoices.org
#vvfestival
#leadingtherise
Styling: @cristinaehrlich
Linen green suit: @argent
Makeup: #PennyNikoDesigns
Had a powerful conversation at @vitalvoices festival, “Voices of Solidarity,” discussing the critical role men play in the fight for gender equality across the world, and how men must get involved and care about this issue not as a favor to us, but because all our struggles are deeply intertwined. We need allies, yes, but more than that, we need action.
I spoke to leaders at the forefront of this work:
-President of @equimundo_org Gary Baker
-VP of Gender-Based Violence Advocacy at Vital Voices, Marina Pisklakova-Parker (who also started the first ever domestic abuse hotline in Russian more than 30 years ago)
-Artist and Co-founder of @artlordsnet Omaid Sharifi
-The Secretary General, Organization of the American States, Luis Almagro.
To learn more visit vitalvoices.org
#vvfestival
#leadingtherise
Styling: @cristinaehrlich
Linen green suit: @argent
Makeup: #PennyNikoDesigns
Had a powerful conversation at @vitalvoices festival, “Voices of Solidarity,” discussing the critical role men play in the fight for gender equality across the world, and how men must get involved and care about this issue not as a favor to us, but because all our struggles are deeply intertwined. We need allies, yes, but more than that, we need action.
I spoke to leaders at the forefront of this work:
-President of @equimundo_org Gary Baker
-VP of Gender-Based Violence Advocacy at Vital Voices, Marina Pisklakova-Parker (who also started the first ever domestic abuse hotline in Russian more than 30 years ago)
-Artist and Co-founder of @artlordsnet Omaid Sharifi
-The Secretary General, Organization of the American States, Luis Almagro.
To learn more visit vitalvoices.org
#vvfestival
#leadingtherise
Styling: @cristinaehrlich
Linen green suit: @argent
Makeup: #PennyNikoDesigns
Had a powerful conversation at @vitalvoices festival, “Voices of Solidarity,” discussing the critical role men play in the fight for gender equality across the world, and how men must get involved and care about this issue not as a favor to us, but because all our struggles are deeply intertwined. We need allies, yes, but more than that, we need action.
I spoke to leaders at the forefront of this work:
-President of @equimundo_org Gary Baker
-VP of Gender-Based Violence Advocacy at Vital Voices, Marina Pisklakova-Parker (who also started the first ever domestic abuse hotline in Russian more than 30 years ago)
-Artist and Co-founder of @artlordsnet Omaid Sharifi
-The Secretary General, Organization of the American States, Luis Almagro.
To learn more visit vitalvoices.org
#vvfestival
#leadingtherise
Styling: @cristinaehrlich
Linen green suit: @argent
Makeup: #PennyNikoDesigns
Nothing says I Love You like a bundle of books as a gift for the holidays. Always purchase from your local independent bookstore please or checkout one of my personal favorite online companies which pulls titles from independent booksellers all over the world: @bookshop_org
📚🎁🎁📚
FREE STALLION:
Poems for the budding feminist in you.
📖
BANG DITTO:
Poems for the wild, in love, feelin’ sexy in you.
📖
DARK SPARKLER:
Poems & Art for the existential reboot in you.
📖
ANY MAN:
A novel for the holy terror thriller in you.
📖
ERA OF IGNITION:
Essays for the activist and ally you.
📖
THE PUNISHMENT GIFT:
Unrequited love poems for the aching heart in you. (Limited edition)
📖
LISTENING IN THE DARK:
An anthology on women’s intuition for the looking to grow and get inspired in you.
📖
Happy birthday to the poet of the people, Jack Hirschman, who would have been 90 today. My mentor, my second father, my friend. This clip is from the documentary by Matthew Furey made about his life and legacy, Red Poet, which you can find on YouTube and it’s free to watch for everyone (the way Jack would have wanted it). In this clip is also the poem he wrote about New York, which is, in my opinion, one of the best ones ever written about this city.
Support Jack’s legacy and work by visiting JackHirschman.com and buying some of his books for holiday gifts.
#JackHirschman