Friday, October 1, 2010

Pamela Green:

Pamela Green: Tits up again as Grumpy restores lost nude pic


Pamela Green, restored

Pamela Green was the first woman ever to appear nude in a British movie - Michael Powell's 1960 nudge-nudge classic Peeping Tom. Before this she'd built up a considerable fanbase among acned wankers* as a 50s glamour model, a Jordan precursor but without the gob, acrylic talons and OK! tie-ups. Sadly Pamela passed away last month aged 81.

The Telegraph, Times and Guardian ran obits: her quiet survival into 21st Century porno times assured her a posthumous cultural curiosity status by those who'd never wanked over her image.

Now, the reason why I'm writing about her is because the author and publisher Michael Allen has contacted Madame Arcati with a Pamela reminiscence. You'll know him as the writer of the much missed Grumpy Old Bookman blog, and he runs Kingsfield Publications.

His story is about the photo above. He begins: 'Today her pictures are still collected by elderly gentlemen with long memories [click here]. I certainly can't call Pamela a friend, but a few years ago I sent her a book which I thought might be of interest and we exchanged correspondence. More recently, I sent her a photographic print [the one above].'

He continues:

'The image has an unusual history. In the 1980s, I was trying to interest a publisher in a proposed book about nude photography of the 1940s and ’50s. One of the shots I wanted to have in the book was this image of Pamela. It was taken, I believe, in 1952, and the photographer was a professional called Roger Wood. The image appeared on the cover of Health and Efficiency for March 1953.

'I contacted Roger Wood and asked him if he was willing for the photo to be included in the proposed book, and if so whether he would supply me with a print. He rang me up to explain that it was impossible for him to keep the negative of every photo he had ever taken, because they took up too much space. However, he was a very organised man, with detailed records, so he was able to tell me the precise date on which he had thrown out this negative. Not that that was much use

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