Esquire Girls (1946-56) /15
- Virtual Pin-ups Art Galleries featuring illustrations of pin-ups art, glamour art, calendar girls, vintage cheesecake art by selected artists. Illustrations published by Esquire Magazine from 1946-56.
- Virtual pin-ups art galleries, illustrations of pin-ups art, glamour art, calendar girls, vintage cheesecake art, Esquire, Esquire Magazine (1946-56).
- Copyright respective artists and/or Legal Representatives/or Publishers and Esquire Magazine.
- Visit the official Esquire Magazine website at Esquire Magazine.
Esquire is a men's magazine by the Hearst Corporation. Founded in 1933, it flourished during the Great Depression under the guidance of founder and editor Arnold Gingrich.
It began as a racy publication for men, published by David A. Smart and Arnold Gingrich.
It transformed itself into a more refined periodical with an emphasis on men's fashion and contributions by Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald. In the 1940s, the popularity of the Vargas Girls provided a circulation boost. In the 1960s, Esquire helped pioneer the trend of New Journalism by publishing such writers as Norman Mailer, Tim O'Brien, John Sack, Gay Talese and Tom Wolfe. Under Harold Hayes, who ran it from 1961 to 1973, it became as distinctive as its oversized pages. The magazine shrank to the conventional 8½x11 in 1971.
Beginning in the late 1950s, Dorothy Parker wrote book reviews for Esquire, as noted by Daniel Itzkovitz:
Parker also produced a great deal of literary criticism, published over many decades in The New Yorker (under the title "Constant Reader") and, from 1958 to 1963, in Esquire. These reviews were often penned with the same unblinking brutality as her earlier drama reviews (of A.A. Milne's The House at Pooh Corner, she said, "Tonstant Weader Fwowed Up"), although as often they were generously sensitive and enthusiastic.
ATTENTION - This description about Esquire Magazine was borrowed from the excellent website: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
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