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Of Course Sir Elton John's Birthday Party Was An A-List Affair

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When you’re Sir Elton John, all the stars come out to cheers to your birthday. 


Lady Gaga, Stevie Wonder, Katy Perry, Neil Patrick Harris, Jon Hamm, Heidi Klum and many others attended a special gala on Saturday, celebrating Elton John’s 70th birthday and 50-year songwriting partnership with Bernie Taupin. The event, held at RED Studios Hollywood, was hosted by Rob Lowe and benefited the Elton John AIDS Foundation and the UCLA Hammer Museum. 


According to People Magazine, guests sipped on Clase Azul tequila and Gaga and Wonder led the crowd in singing Happy Birthday to John.




John was apparently thrilled to be celebrating the big 7-0, telling Lowe, “70 sounds so archaic, doesn’t it? When I was growing up, 70 sounded like the end of the world. But things have changed — you’re only as old as you feel inside.”


Check out photos of the star-studded event below: 










Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. Eastern on Friday, March 31 on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 




-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


'Beauty And The Beast' Continues To Soar As 'Life' And 'Chips' Fall Flat At The Box Office

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LOS ANGELES (Variety.com) - Disney’s second weekend of blockbuster “Beauty and the Beast” is dominating moviegoing in North America with $88.3 million at 4,210 locations ― capping the best March ever.


Lionsgate’s rebooted “Power Rangers” is launching with a solid $40.5 million this weekend while Sony’s space-thriller “Life” showed only moderate traction with $12.6 million. Warner Bros.’ action-comedy “Chips” opened with a disappointing $7.6 million at 2,464 sites.


The “Beauty and the Beast” weekend is one for the record books as the fourth-largest second weekend of all time, trailing only “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” at $149 million, “Jurassic World” at $106 million, and “Marvel’s The Avengers” at $103 million.


“Beauty and the Beast,” starring Emma Watson as Belle and Dan Stevens as the Beast, declined just 49 percent from its opening weekend, which was the seventh-best ever. And after just 10 days in North American theaters, “Beauty and the Beast” is already 55th on the all-time domestic list at $317 million. It’s the fourth-largest 10-day domestic total ever.


“Beauty and the Beast,” along with Fox’s “Logan,” Warner’s “Kong: Skull Island,” and Universal’s “Get Out,” have led a charge over the past month that has given the domestic box office a major boost. According to comScore, March box office has already hit $1 billion for the first time ― with five days left in the month.


“March has become a rockstar of a month and in particular 2017 enjoyed a perfect storm of new hits and strong February releases that showed amazing staying power like ‘Get Out’ and ‘The Lego Batman Movie,’ “ said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst with comScore. “The cumulative allure of an impressive slate of films conjured up a flat out great month in theaters, generating impressive momentum as the industry charges into what promises to be a furious April and a smashing summer movie season that kicks off in May with ‘Guardians of the Galaxy 2.’ “


Last year’s March set a record with $948.8 million domestically, led by Disney’s “Zootopia” ($255.9 million for the month) and Warner Bros.’ “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” ($209.1 million).


“Power Rangers,” a re-imagining of the 1990’s television show about five teenage superheroes, outperformed expectations of about $30 million at 3,693 locations. The film earned an A CinemaScore from customers and A+ from the 30 percent of moviegoers under 18. The audience was 60 percent male.


The cast features Becky G as the Yellow Ranger, Ludi Lin as the Black Ranger, Naomi Scott as the Pink Ranger, Dacre Montgomery as the Red Ranger, and R.J. Cyler as the Blue Ranger. Elizabeth Banks plays the evil alien witch Rita Repulsa.


The movie centers on the origins of the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, a group of high schoolers given extraterrestrial powers who unite to save the world. Lionsgate and Haim Saban announced plans in 2014 for a live-action movie based on Saban’s “Power Rangers” property as the first film in a franchise; Lionsgate CEO Jon Feltheimer has asserted that it may do as many as seven films. “Power Rangers” carries a $100 million price tag.


David Spitz, Lionsgate’s domestic theatrical distribution president, noted that the movie showed strong traction amid all demographics ― even with “Beauty and the Beast” remaining a potent draw. “We always thought the two films could be complementary to each other,” he added.


Spitz also noted that “Power Rangers” debuted in the same late March slot as the studio’s “Hunger Games” and “Divergent,” enabling it to take advantage of the spring break for moviegoers. The third weekend of Warner-Legendary’s “Kong: Skull Island” was headed for third place with $14.4 million at 3,666 locations, which gives the giant ape a domestic total of $133.5 million in its first 17 days.



Sony-Skydance’s “Life” stars Rebecca Ferguson, Ryan Reynolds, and Jake Gyllenhaal as International Space Station astronauts threatened by an extraterrestrial life form. It’s performing at the lower end of expectations in third place, despite generating mostly positive reviews with a 67 percent “fresh” rating on Rotten Tomatoes.


David Ellison’s Skydance financed 75 percent of “Life,” which has a $58 million budget. Its audience was 55 percent male and 57 percent over 25.


The fourth weekend of Fox’s “Logan” followed in fourth with $10.1 million at 3,687 sites. “Logan” is 2017’s second highest grosser with $201.5 million in Hugh Jackman’s farewell to the Wolverine character.


Universal-Blumhouse’s fifth weekend of surprise hit “Get Out” finished fifth with $8.7 million at 2,474 locations. The horror-comedy, Jordan Peele’s directorial debut, has become enormously profitable, given its $4.5 million budget.


Warner Bros. rolled out action-comedy “Chips,” starring Dax Shepard and Michael Pena, amid muted expectations. The R-rated reboot of the TV series, which starred Erik Estrada and Larry Wilcox, has not gained much critical traction with a 20 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes, but the budget is a relatively modest $25 million.




Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. Eastern on Friday, March 31 on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 




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This Beautiful Magazine Is Elevating The Lives And Work Of Queer Creatives

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One year ago, the second edition of Posture magazine, a publication that prides itself in the “creative exploration of identity” and elevating the work of some of the rising queer artists in navigating the modern art world, was released.


Now Posture’s third issue, “The Boss Issue,” focuses on creatives across the spectrum of queer identity who are committed to “making it” career-wise on their own terms. Posture founder Winter Mendelson told The Huffington Post:



“I wanted to create an issue dedicated to people who are working to ‘succeed’ — ie: create personal brands, build companies, become widely known artists, produce massive projects, etc — to show that there are a lot of women of color and queer/trans folks who do wish to ‘make it’ so to speak, on their own terms or within existing industries. On the one hand we have people who rebel against capitalism as much as they can, and some who want to infiltrate problematic systems in order to inspire change. Both goals are valid in my opinion, and The Boss Issue is about celebrating artists, designers, and activists seeking to make global impact.”



Check out some images from this issue of Posture below, as well as a more extensive interview with Mendelson.




The Huffington Post: How has Posture evolved since its inception?


Winter Mendelson: This issue definitely signifies our evolution in ideology, content, and quality. When Posture launched as a blog in 2013, it was actually a blog for “queer women,” whereas now we take a holistic and inclusive approach to identity. I started to realize the problematic nature with gendered language, but also I think a lot of Posture’s evolution was related to my personal identity. I grew to realize that I was genderqueer/nonbinary (versus lesbian and/or female-identified), and I continued to meet more and more people like me, so I wanted to work on a project that reflected reality as well as what I believe to be the future. Our tagline is “the creative exploration of identity,” and what that means is that we feature creative people whose work addresses what is means to survive, dismantle, and/or succeed in a society that is created for the hetero, cis white male patriarchy. Posture is purposefully inclusive and not focused on particular labels.



After putting out two print issues, our network widened a lot, and we were able to work with so many talented people for Issue 03 (The Boss Issue). I have a two-person core creative team comprised of Phil Gomez, our Fashion Art Director, and Asher Torres, our Photo Art Director, and having a talented and dedicated team has impacted the brand significantly. We’re still a small grassroots kind of magazine, but are able to make magic happen with minimal resources.  


We went from printing 200 copies to being nationally distributed, and I am beyond excited to put important stories and perspectives on bookshelves across the world. Up to this point the print has been the centerpiece of the brand, but we’ve got some big plans for digital as well coming up in 2017.




This issue is titled “The Boss Issue” ― what does this mean to you? Why did you choose this theme?


I felt like our second print issue, The Ornamentation Issue, was heavily focused on challenges certain communities face and emphasized a lot of negatives. This perspective is crucial and important, but I wanted to create an issue dedicated to people who are working to “succeed” — ie: create personal brands, build companies, become widely known artists, produce massive projects, etc — to show that there are a lot of women of color and queer/trans folks who do wish to “make it” so to speak, on their own terms or within existing industries. On the one hand we have people who rebel against capitalism as much as they can, and some who want to infiltrate problematic systems in order to inspire change. Both goals are valid in my opinion, and The Boss Issue is about celebrating artists, designers, and activists seeking to make global impact.



How did you chose the subjects you featured in this issue?


Each issue is an organic process when it comes to deciding who will be featured. I sit down with Asher and Phil and we reference our existing database of potential features, and also start adding people that come to mind that would be a perfect fit for our theme. It can take over a month to determine exactly who we want. A lot of the process comes from paying attention to what’s happening in the world and pinpointing exactly who we want to work with.



Why are publications like Posture so crucial during times of political and social turmoil like we’re in right now?


The first thing that comes to mind is the importance of power and ownership. The majority of global media companies are owned by white hetero cis men, even many sites dedicated to women’s fashion or issues. In my opinion it is extremely important to have companies owned and run by LGBTQIA+ and POC entrepreneurs because that affects everything at the core. Posture is a project of longevity, we don’t exist to be tokenized or to give outlets cool points. This is a matter of basic human rights. It’s about proclaiming to society that we’re not going anywhere and deserve to be recognized for the important and ongoing cultural contributions made throughout history by marginalized communities. Posture is crucial because we represent a demographic who are not only on the forefront of innovation and trend-setting, but are the pioneers of change and revolution. Our content has no filter. We publish important perspectives and projects made by communities who are the most targeted always, but especially during what we’re facing now in the Trump Era.





What do you want people to take away from this issue of Posture?


I want people to know that we exist to support the people who are not always seen or heard for the right reasons. We’re a community first and foremost and are always open for submissions or collaboration so please reach out to us with any ideas!


The Boss Issue of Posture is available for purchase in the publication’s online shop.






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Haunting Photos Transport You To The World’s Largest Spiritualist Community

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In 2001, photographer Shannon Taggart visited Lily Dale, New York, home to a community of healers, mediums and other practitioners of Spiritualism ― the belief that we can communicate with the dead.


Established by Spiritualists in the 1870s, the town is now the practice’s center, attracting over 20,000 visitors each year to convene with its residents, and to witness or participate in their practices, including healing circles and séances.


Taggart thought she’d only stay for one summer, but was entranced by the movement’s followers, who she describes on her site as “earnest” and “surprising.” That summer was the beginning of Taggart’s 16-year effort to capture Spiritualism on camera.


“Early on in the project I became frustrated photographing Spiritualism, because much of what I was supposed to be recording was invisible,” Taggart told The Huffington Post in an interview. “I was surrounded by people who were describing intense interactions with unseen spirits ― not your standard documentary situation. I felt that my straightforward photographs were not doing justice to the psychological reality of these events.”



So, she was excited when an accident gave her the idea for a new aesthetic, and a new approach to the project. While photographing a séance using a long exposure, she captured a blurred image of a woman’s face, one that made it look like she was floating above herself. It just so happened that attendees claimed to see the woman’s doppelgänger floating beside her that night, and so Taggart felt that the effect mirrored the mood of the event.


“I embraced conventions that are considered wrong, messy, or ‘tricky’, and crossed the boundary of what is commonly considered unprofessional,” Taggart said. The resulting images are often grainy, blurry, or otherwise distorted, meant to capture the otherworldly quality of the material itself. 


Taggart explores Lily Dale ― the subject of a 2010 HBO special, which described the assembly as the world’s largest community of mediums ― both as an observer and a participant; she says she aims to blur the lines between art, journalism and ethnographic study. 


“My ultimate goal would be that these images create a mysterious experience for the viewer,” she said.



Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. Eastern on Friday, March 31 on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The Dance Theatre Of Harlem Just Put On The Best Impromptu Airport Show

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When facing a delayed flight, most people pass the extra airport time by overdoing it on Panda Express, splurging on a paperback bestseller, or taking a classy nap on the floor.


But for the Dance Theatre of Harlem, a slight airport holdup just means more time to practice. 


Ballerina Ingrid Silva posted a video on Instagram on Sunday, in which a talented group of DTH dancers transform a moving walkway at the Pittsburgh International Airport into an impromptu stage. The team wiggles, kicks, and arabesques their way through the terminal ― set to a choice soundtrack ― showing that some of us don’t need an airplane to defy gravity. 


Prepare for liftoff and check out the stellar moves above. 





Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. Eastern on Friday, March 31 on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Hey, Tom Hardy, Never Stop Reading Us Bedtime Stories

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This political landscape got you too anxious to fall asleep? Let Tom Hardy help.


The actor has already proven himself a bedtime story aficionado after performing a reading on New Year’s Eve, and another for Valentine’s Day.


Thankfully, Hardy is back at it again ― this time with a Mother’s Day tale. Specifically, the actor reads Ross Collins’ “There’s a Bear on My Chair,” a story about a mouse who tries to get a giant polar bear out of his chair.


Here’s a 25-second trailer:




That accent. That beard. THAT CARDIGAN. Are you swooning yet? Is anyone else really hot in here? 


There’s one line in the reading that goes, “I will jump out in my underwear.” It seems Twitter found it just as ... exciting as we did: 






















Never stop reading stories, Tom. NEVER. You can watch the whole reading here. We need to go lie down.


Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. ET on Friday, March 31, on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

12 Times Seth Meyers Got Real About Parenting

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Seth Meyers has officially been a dad for a year. 


His son, Ashe Olson Meyers, turns 1 year old today, and what a 12 months it’s been for the talk show host. From mastering the diaper game to deciphering his baby’s personality, the new dad has clearly learned a lot in Ashe’s first year.


In honor of the baby’s first birthday, we’ve rounded up some of Meyers’ best quotes about parenting. 


On his son’s birth:


“It was just this crazy moment where I exploded into laughing and sobbing at the same time.”


“The weird thing is that you’re just not a parent ... and then you are. It takes your brain a couple hours to catch up to that.”



Eating my foot and hitting the road!

A post shared by @sethmeyers on




On diapers:


I like changing diapers. There’s a beginning, middle and an end, so I feel accomplished. When the baby is crying and you can’t communicate with it, then I’m frustrated. At least with the diaper, I know that it started dirty and now it’s clean.”


On parenting anxiety:


“I haven’t been great as far as being an assistant to my wife, in that the baby will wake up a couple times in the middle of the night, and then I’ve been adding a third wake-up because I have night terrors about where the baby is. I’ve been waking up, grabbing my wife’s face and saying, ‘I don’t know where the baby is.’ Then I just go back to sleep.”




On his baby’s personality:


He seems like a good dude. He also seems like an over thinker — there’s a lot of furrowed brows, so he’s probably going to be a happy guy 80 percent of the time and then worry the other 20 percent.”


“We can make him laugh, but now we feel like he has a fake cocktail-party laugh, that he doesn’t actually think anything’s funny, but he just sort of throws off this ‘Ha ha ha.’ It seems at 11 months you shouldn’t be so dismissive of us because we know the difference between his real laugh and this new cocktail-party laugh.”



Looking forward to this coming up in therapy and 25 years #ParentsToBlame

A post shared by @sethmeyers on




On how fatherhood changes you:


“Most noticeable difference since becoming a dad: I’ve cried hard TWICE at ‘America’s Got Talent’ this season.”


“So embarrassing how I went from a person who did not care about anyone’s children, ever ... and then you have them, and you brag about the same stuff that you never cared about. You tell people ‘he’s got four teeth,’ like they’d care. No one cares, until you have a kid and then you say, ‘Oh my god that’s great, four ― mine has eight.’”


“It’s fantastic. Your life completely changes, but it changes so much less than the mother’s life changes. Mine’s pretty similar except there’s a baby at home in the morning and at night, but I still go to work.”


On Father’s Day:


“I got nothing from Ashe ― no gift, no card, which is very selfish! It’s early, but I’m concerned.



I'm crushing my first #fathersday as an honoree

A post shared by @sethmeyers on




On his baby name choice:


“A couple of people have said to us, ‘Ashe Olson, do you think people will think you named him after Ashley Olsen?’ And to them I said, ‘No one will think that because I’ve long been a Mary-Kate guy.’”


On parenting in the Big Apple:


“I can also confirm that when you have a baby in New York you pretty much just sing ‘The Schuyler Sisters’ for the first 12 hours.”


 

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In 1981, Margaret Atwood Made A Stirring Case For Investing In Culture

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If only we’d all just listened to Margaret Atwood.


The acclaimed author of The Handmaid’s Tale has been acting as something of a political sage recently. Thanks in part to an upcoming, timely Hulu adaptation of her dystopian classic about a woman forced to act as a breeder for a powerful, childless couple, many have found the book’s depiction of a theocratic totalitarian state to be painfully relevant commentary on this political moment.


A woman’s right to control her own body isn’t Atwood’s only political hobbyhorse. An interview published by the CBC shows that as far back as 1981, she was arguing powerfully for the primacy of art and culture in defining a nation. 


Asked by interviewer Russ Patrick whether “survival of country” is really so strongly linked to the vibrancy of a nation’s culture, she responded philosophically: “Well, what is a country?” She elaborated, ”If you think of Britain in the 19th century, you probably don’t know a lot about statistics on who had bathrooms — although that is interesting. You think of Charles Dickens and you think of George Eliot, do you not? It’s what people made. It’s the expression of the culture that lasts.”


Aside from a sudden yen to know a great deal more about toilets in 1850s England, Atwood’s interview leaves us with a poignant lesson about the necessity of fostering great art: Centuries from now, our cultural achievements will be the most important way later generations will remember us.


Though her words were given in a Canadian context and have now been recirculated by Canadian media, the relevance to the U.S. right now seems unmistakeable, even pointed. The unusually severe blow President Donald Trump proposed to deal to national arts and culture programs in his budget has prompted many to debate the value of a country funding artistic pursuits at all. When viewed through Atwood’s lens, the answer seems clear: Stimulating the arts and culture sector helps a nation ensure its own historical legacy.


The Handmaid’s Tale also, heartbreakingly, made this point; heroine Offred’s narrative is framed by a lecture given by an academic. Many years after her memoir takes place, the all-powerful Republic of Gilead has been reduced to a handful of cultural artifacts, including her self-told story of resistance, mulled over by scholars for their authenticity and enduring meaning. The theocracy’s restrictive, censorious nature didn’t foster a wealth of culture or accurate records; in many ways, Offred had the last laugh on her oppressors by telling a tale that outlasted them.


Atwood’s 1981 words in defense of celebrating culture were resurfaced by the CBC in anticipation of the public broadcaster’s battle-of-the-books program Canada Reads. At the time the interview took place, she was several years away from publishing The Handmaid’s Tale, but she did publish a book that year: Bodily Harm, her fifth novel. Safe to say that she has made her own indelible mark in literary history.


Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. Eastern on Friday, March 31 on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 


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How A Grandma's Modest Closet Found Its Way Into The Metropolitan Museum Of Art

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Sara Berman kept her closet in perfect order ― shoes lined up in an unerring row, crisply ironed white shirts stacked one atop the other, her signature bottle of Chanel 19 perched within easy grasp. Her children and grandchildren would gaze into the modest, meticulously organized niche reverently, as if staring at a work of art.


Still, they never actually imagined their mom or grandma’s closet would one day, quite literally, find its way into The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 


“If someone told my mother her closet would be in the Met one day, she would have thought they were crazy,” artist, author and illustrator Maira Kalman said during a talk held at the museum last week, alongside her son, Alex Kalman, and Amelia Peck, a curator of American decorative arts at the Met. And yet, among the period rooms in the museum’s American Wing, most of which display opulent domestic craftsmanship from the 17th to 19th centuries, is Berman’s neat and tidy closet of the ‘80s, a dressing quarters Marie Kondo would surely approve of. 



Berman was born in Belarus in 1920, when pogroms and poverty were daunting realities. At 12 years old, she moved with her family to Tel Aviv, in what was then Palestine, where they lived in a paltry beach shack by the Mediterranean Sea, which Berman was constantly sweeping free of sand. Still, Berman dressed in style; her mother would sew her outfits copied from European fashion magazines. She was especially fond of the color white, a common choice for those wishing to mollify the rancor of the beating sun.


In 1954, Berman moved again, this time to New York with her husband and two daughters, Maira and Kika, putting down roots in a Bronx apartment. Fifteen years later, at 60 years old, Berman uprooted her life once more, divorcing her husband after 38 years and moving into a Greenwich Village studio on her own. She left many of her belongings behind. 


It was in the Greenwich apartment that Berman’s knack for organization reached its peak. Berman had started a new life chapter ― a rarity for a 60-year-old woman, especially in the 1960s ― and had few objects to her name. What things she did have were painstakingly cleaned, ironed and folded, each methodically positioned in its proper place. Following her divorce, Berman began exclusively wearing the color white. Her children never asked why, but Kalman imagines it has something to do with the flowing white linens that swayed from the laundry clotheslines back in Tel Aviv. 


In 2004, Berman passed away at 84 years old. In her wake, her closet was imbued with additional power, the orderly white garments humbly offering guidance for how to live. “How do you construct your life?” Kalman elaborated. “How do you sort out what is important and what isn’t? How do you create order? Find beauty? Make meaning?” Among the towers of T-shirts and folded men’s pants, Berman tendered her approach. 







When curator Peck first saw Sara Berman’s closet it was at Mmuseum, Berman’s grandson Alex Kalman’s teeny tiny museum nook located off Canal Street in lower Manhattan. The space, Kalman explained, is designed to exhibit “vernacular objects, no masterpieces.” Peck came to visit one day, and it was over a long cup of coffee that followed when Peck had the wild idea to frame Berman’s closet as a period room. “I’m a big believer in period rooms’ ability to bring people into other times, other lives,” Peck said, be they the lives of an 18th century aristocrat or a 20th century divorcée. 


Sara Berman’s closet now lives alongside rooms from a very different crowd, namely extravagant homes from the 17th to 19th centuries. The space is next to the dressing room of Arabella Worsham who, after marrying railroad magnate Collis Huntington in 1882, became the richest woman in America. Like Berman, Worsham underwent a mid-life reinvention of sorts, transforming from a Southerner of meager means to one of New York’s high society elite. Her dressing room is nothing less than palatial, from its ornate wooden armoire to the gown hanging inside. 


Side by side, Berman and Worsham make lovely foils for one another. While Berman is all order and minimalism and so much white, Worsham is luxury, abundance and warm wood. The rooms offer two diverging portraits of women, living one century apart in time and perhaps worlds apart in spirit, though both seeming to share an aesthetic sensibility and a feeling of pride and care for their possessions. The rooms also represent rare spaces where women of the past could possess full agency over their domains ― what they wore and how and why. For women who, like Berman and Worsham, were financially dependent on men and never had jobs of their own, dressing offered an opportunity for power and independence.


As Peck half-joked, “I like to call this our feminist wing. We finally got one!” 



There is much to unpack inside Sara Berman’s closet aside from underwear and sweaters. In part, the space is an immigrant story, of how one woman’s journey from Belarus to Palestine to New York City is represented through cheese graters, sunglasses and watches (the latter of which Berman always wore three ― one for New York time, one for Los Angeles, and one for Tel Aviv.) In part, it’s a meditation on loss and how inanimate objects can come to possess the spirit of a human being, especially after her physical body is no longer. It’s also an ode to feminine independence, self-discovery and re-invention ― or as Kalman put it, that “nothing in life has an expiration date. You are free to change at any age.” It’s a story of love and family and art and how extraordinary regular people and their things truly are, if you take the time to look. Finally, it’s great inspiration to clean out your closet. Or, create a masterpiece worthy of The Met, however you want to put it. 


Sara Berman’s Closet” is on view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art until September 5, 2017. 


Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. ET on Friday, March 31, on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 


Correction: An earlier edition of this article misstated that Berman passed away in 1982, not 2004. We regret the error. 

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A Book About Resisting Tyranny Turns Into An Incredible Public Art Project

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Last month, a slim and timely book ― Timothy Snyder’s On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century ― made The New York Times best-seller list and topped The Washington Post’s. The premise of the book is straightforward: Europe’s failure to recognize and combat tyranny in the past had tragic results that can, at least, provide lessons for the future.


Rather than pontificating on this idea, Snyder bullet-points blunt advice. “Anticipatory obedience is a political tragedy,” he begins in the book’s first chapter, before briskly segueing into historical evidence for his claim. In 1938, he writes, Austrian Nazis stole Jewish property and bystanders either partook or looked on, rather than dissenting. To prevent that from happening again, Snyder outlines actionable guidance.


Taking his message a step further, Snyder’s publisher worked with a crew of artists who adapted it into posters, which appeared as a public art project in East London on Monday.


The book’s entire text is published on a series of posters designed by students at Kingston University ― “as a tool, a provocation and a rallying call,” the publisher said in a statement. They’ll be on view for one week.


“Be kind to our language,” one poster reads in big, playful lettering. “Avoid pronouncing the phrases everyone else does,” it continues. The text suggests instead finding new ways to phrase old ideas, to insure that we pause and reflect rather than merely regurgitating powerful, pathos-appealing rhetoric.


“Learn from peers in other countries,” another poster reads. “... No country is going to find a solution by itself,” it continues.


The posters filter Snyder’s salient advice into palatable sayings, serving as reminders that there’s more to communication than noisy exclamations. Take a look at a few of them below.



Images courtesy of VINTAGE and The Bodley Head.


Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. ET on Friday, March 31, on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 

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The Big Bend, A U-Shaped Skyscraper, Could Become The Longest In The World

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U have to see this.


Architecture firm Oiio Studio has released a proposal for a curved skyscraper called The Big Bend that it hopes will become the “longest building in the world.” 


Renderings for the 4,000-foot structure show it towering above New York City’s so-called Billionaire’s Row in midtown Manhattan. The building rises from one base, curves over in a U shape, and touches the ground again at its second base.


Oiio says the design is meant to creatively solve challenges that builders face due to zoning laws in New York City.


“But what if we substituted height with length? What if our buildings were long instead of tall?” the building proposal on Oiio’s website asks. “If we manage to bend our structure instead of bending the zoning rules of New York, we would be able to create one of the most prestigious buildings in Manhattan. The longest building in the world.”



Not everyone is excited by the prospect of a record-setting building, however. Architectural Digest shared images of the proposed structure with the headline “This Skyscraper Could Ruin New York’s Skyline.”


Curbed New York says it’s improbable the project would ever become a reality.


“It seems highly unlikely that a project like this would ever get off the ground, so to speak—community members and preservation groups (including the Municipal Art Society) have already condemned the rise of supertalls along Central Park South, so adding another one to the mix couldn’t possibly go over well,” the website explained.


The building would measure 200 feet higher than One World Trade Center, the tallest building in the city, Business Insider noted.


See a selection of Oiio’s images of the building below.


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'Moonlight' Director Barry Jenkins To Turn Last Year's Biggest Book Into A TV Series

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The movie of 2016 was, according to most standards, “Moonlight,” a gorgeous coming-of-age film that took home (with no small fanfare) the coveted Oscar for Best Picture. The book of 2016, on the other hand, was easily Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad, earning not only Oprah’s stamp of approval but the National Book Award, too.


So who better to adapt Whitehead’s critically acclaimed novel than the man behind “Moonlight,” Barry Jenkins?


According to Variety, Jenkins will write and direct a TV adaptation of The Underground Railroad, a one-hour drama series currently in development with Amazon. The New York Times reports that the show will be executive produced by Pastel, a company co-founded by Jenkins, and Brad Pitt’s Plan B Entertainment.






“Going back to ‘The Intuitionist,’ Colson’s writing has always defied convention, and ‘The Underground Railroad’ is no different,” Jenkins told Variety. “It’s a groundbreaking work that pays respect to our nation’s history while using the form to explore it in a thoughtful and original way. Preserving the sweep and grandeur of a story like this requires bold, innovative thinking and in Amazon we’ve found a partner whose reverence for storytelling and freeness of form is wholly in line with our vision.”














The Underground Railroad, described by HuffPost’s Claire Fallon as “an instant classic,” tells a story of the eponymous railroad familiar to students of American history, filtered through the lens of speculative fiction. The book centers on Cora, a young woman enslaved on a Georgia plantation, who descends into a literal subway system in an attempt to escape into freedom.


“This book has kept me up at night, had my heart in my throat, almost afraid to turn the next page,” Oprah explained in her review of the book.


Adapting Railroad isn’t Jenkins’ first foray into TV. He directed an episode of the upcoming Netflix adaptation of the movie “Dear White People” and an episode of the PBS series “Futurestates.”


According to the NYT, the Amazon production has not officially received the green light; it’s been in development for months, but it’s unclear when it will arrive or how many episodes it will span. If it gets the definitive go-ahead, the show will skip Amazon’s typical pilot procedure and move straight to series.


It’s pretty safe to say this TV show, if and when it comes to fruition, will be a must-see.











Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. ET on Friday, March 31, on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 


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That Time Audra McDonald Tried To 'Give Birth And Parent At The Same Time'

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Audra McDonald’s funny birth story is proof that parenting duties never truly stop.


The Broadway icon and “Beauty and the Beast” actress shared with People what it was like giving birth for the second time. In October, her daughter Zoe Madeline Donovan, who turned 16 on Valentine’s Day, was in the room as her mom gave birth to daughter Sally James McDonald-Swenson.


“While I was giving birth to Sally James, Zoe wasn’t planning on being in the hospital room, but she got too curious so she came in,” McDonald said.


In true parenting fashion, McDonald was caught up in making sure Zoe was comfortable ― even at the exact moment she was giving birth. 


“I was so worried about her being overwhelmed that literally, as I was pushing out Sally, I was looking over at Zoe saying, ‘Are you OK? Is there anything you need from me, are you OK?’” she told People. “And Zoe kept saying, ‘Mom, would you just concentrate on having the baby!’ But I was literally trying to give birth and parent at the same time.”


Since that day, McDonald has been keeping it real on Twitter about what it’s like having a baby in the household again. 














Funny stories and tweets aside, McDonald clearly has a lot of love for her daughters.


“If you want to make me melt, just put my two daughters together, and I’m a puddle,” she told People.


H/T People


The HuffPost Parents newsletter, So You Want To Raise A Feminist, offers the latest stories and news in progressive parenting. 

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This Terrifying Glass 'Ledgewalk' Is Not For The Faint Of Heart

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If Skyslides and drop rides make you gulp, then you won’t want to see this.


The owners of Chicago’s Willis Tower are mulling over plans for Ledgewalk, an outdoor climbing attraction that would be built on the skyscraper’s 102nd floor.


Ledgewalk is described as an “open air glass ledge in which thrill seekers can walk the exterior of the building while secured by state-of-the-art harness and climbing systems” in a report by Morningstar Credit Ratings. And it’s giving us the scaredy-cat shivers just looking at the renderings. 



Willis Tower, formerly called Sears Tower, is the second-tallest building in the U.S. Other skyscrapers like it have recently installed attractions similar to Ledgewalk in efforts to woo visitors, perhaps based on the success of the famous glass “Skydeck” that already draws tourists to Willis Tower’s existing observation deck. 


But timid travelers can breathe easy, at least for now: There are no firm plans to build Ledgewalk at Willis Tower just yet, according to the tower’s owner Blackstone Group.


“Any discussions about potential changes to the Observation Deck are in a preliminary stage,” spokeswoman Paula Chirhart told HuffPost.


The city of Chicago would need to approve plans for Ledgewalk befomre construction could begin, the Morningstar report added.


The attraction is a possible part of larger renovation plans for Willis Tower that may also include a rappelling station where visitors can rappel from the 103rd floor to the 102nd floor in a glass box on the outside of the building, a rooftop event space and more retail and dining options on the building’s lower floors.



Looks grand, indeed. We’ll stay tuned for updates and book our flights to Chicago soon.

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Artist's 'Trumpbeast' Is A Chilling Portrait Of The Current Administration

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Artist, journalist and illustrator Molly Crabapple called out President Donald Trump’s hypocrisy, absurdity and “soufflé”-like hair long before he ran for president. Now that Trump is the leader of the free world, she has no intention of easing up.


Crabapple is known for her fine-line drawings, sometimes punctuated with splashes of watercolor, which swing rabidly between realism and caricature, yielding nightmarish images that feed off the juiciest details from fantasy and reality. If you couldn’t imagine anything more bone-chilling than Trump’s cabinet as is, leave it to Crabapple to help you out by drafting the entire GOP squad as a multi-headed, reptilian beast. 


Crabapple posted an image of her horrifying creation, which she dubbed “Trumpbeast,” to Twitter on Monday. The thing features the heads of White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, among others. Their faces appear perched atop coiling, serpentine necks leading back to the same mammalian torso. Trump’s oblong hairdo is pierced by a scepter holding a “Make America Great Again” cap, which I guess the sundry heads have to share. 






According to Twitter, Crabapple is currently on the hunt for a blank wall to host a giant wheatpaste of the hungry Trumpbeast. If you know of any local businesses who might want to make a political statement while seriously traumatizing all passersby, let her know.


The artist is also selling prints of the image, titled “Make America Squamous Again,” for $100. Ten percent of the proceeds will go toward the Black Alliance for Just Immigration.


And for those who are curious, squamous is defined as being “covered with or characterized by scales,” or “relating to, consisting of, or denoting a layer of epithelium that consists of very thin flattened cells.” Don’t google it. 


We wish Crabapple luck on finding a home for her malformed monster, though we would also be content to never see this creature ever again. Either way. 











Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. Eastern on Friday, March 31 on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 

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Romeo And Juliet Born Hours Apart In Same Hospital Star In Shakespearean Photos

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Two babies born 18 hours apart in the same hospital made headlines last week when they were coincidentally named Romeo and Juliet.


Romeo Archangel Hernandez was born at 2:06 p.m. on Sunday, March 19 at Coastal Carolina Hospital in Hardeeville, South Carolina. Juliet Evangeline Shifflett appeared on the scene 18 hours and 8 minutes later, at 8:14 a.m. the following morning.


Although the parents were in adjacent rooms, no one made the connection until newborn photographer Cassie Clayshulte spotted the babies’ names. After coordinating with both sets of parents, she proceeded to take some adorable photos of them together at the hospital.


Now that the babies are both home with their families, Clayshulte arranged a themed newborn shoot as a nod to their Shakespearean names. 



“I had been thinking about doing a little themed shoot for them since their first photo was taken in the hospital, but I wasn’t sure how I was going to style a newborn Romeo and Juliet shoot without it looking a little bit cheesy or morbid because of the way the story ends and because newborns are typically asleep for their session for safety reasons,” Clayshulte told The Huffington Post.


Though the photographer was hesitant to suggest the idea due to concerns about negative online comments, she was thrilled when the parents reached out to her requesting a Shakespeare photoshoot and promised to do her best to keep internet trolls at bay.


“We didn’t want to do an overly themed shoot, just a little session of the two of them with a Shakespearean feel,” Clayshulte explained. The photographer makes her own props, backdrops and outfits. She selected a lace romper and made a floral crown for Juliet, and Romeo’s mom chose a brown romper from a few options Clayshulte presented. The artist also created Romeo’s crown.



The day of the shoot was very joyful. “Romeo and Juliet were content through their shoot! They were so happy and comfy snuggling each other!” Clayshulte said, adding that it was great to see the two families, who have become friends since meeting at the hospital.


The finished product turned out wonderfully as well. “The parents and I love the photos and could care less what the trolls of the internet think,” said the photographer. “And yes, we know how the story ends, and we don’t care because guess what, this isn’t the 1300s.”

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School Pulls Book About Gender Non-Conforming Kid After Backlash

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A pair of children’s authors is firing back after a North Carolina school district scrapped plans to incorporate their book about a gender non-conforming boy into its anti-bullying curriculum. 


Charlotte-Mecklenburg school administrators had been planning to use Jacob’s New Dress, about a young boy who likes to wear dresses, in first-grade classes as part of Child Abuse Prevention Month in April. On Friday, however, Superintendent Ann Clark told The New York Times that the 2014 book had been replaced “due to some concerns” about content. Michael Hall’s Red: A Crayon’s Story, which follows a blue crayon misidentified with a red label, would be read instead. 


Written by Sarah and Ian HoffmanJacob’s New Dress had been criticized by the N.C. Values Coalition, which supports “standards in higher education that do not violate religious freedom and free speech rights of students” and is opposed to same-sex marriage, according to its website.


“The purpose of our elementary schools is to teach writing, reading and arithmetic, not to encourage boys to wear dresses,” an N.C. Values Coalition official wrote in a statement to The Charlotte ObserverJacob’s New Dress, the official argued, was “not appropriate for any child whose parents support traditional family values.”


The Hoffmans, who reside in California, said the furor that Jacob’s New Dress had generated was “confusing,” telling The Charlotte Observer that their book’s message was one of “love and acceptance.” The couple based the book on their experiences raising their 14-year-old son, Sam, who favored pink and once asked to wear a dress to preschool.  


Speaking to The Huffington Post, Ian Hoffman dismissed the N.C. Values Coalition’s claim that Jacob’s New Dress encouraged boys to wear dresses. “Our hope, when we wrote this book, was that someday it would be considered quaint,” he said. “We imagined future generations saying, ‘What was the fuss about?’ Clearly, there’s more work to do ... our book is a small piece of a much larger effort to build a more empathetic, compassionate culture.”


In an interview with The Charlotte Observer, Sarah Hoffman echoed those sentiments, arguing against the implication that the book would somehow turn children gay or transgender. “If a white kid reads a book about Martin Luther King Jr.,” she said, “will they become black?”


The couple’s book has stirred controversy before. In 2015, some parents of kindergarten students in Pennsylvania’s Lampeter-Strasburg School District objected to Jacob’s New Dress being read to their children without prior notification.


An area pastor also spoke out against the book in an interview with Lancaster Online at the time, saying that a family associated with his church was troubled since they had a child in the class where the book had been read. 


“I am not suggesting that any of the school officials are pushing the gay agenda, yet their actions give the appearance that they are,” Pastor Jamie Mitchell of Harvest Bible Chapel said. He called upon Lampeter-Strasburg school administrators to “apologize, take responsibility and then publicly promise never to introduce this kind of material with this kind of agenda to our children.”


For more ways to combat bigotry, check out the Queer Voices newsletter.

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Racist Who Stabbed Timothy Caughman Says He Regrets Not Killing A 'Young Thug'

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The Army veteran who fatally stabbed a 66-year-old black man in New York last week said that he carried out the crime to express his intolerance of white women dating black men and to stop them from entering interracial relationships. 


In a new interview with the New York Daily News, James Jackson, 28 ― who told prosecutors last week that he planned to “kill as many black men as he could”― expressed no remorse over Timothy Caughman’s death, only regret that he had not killed a younger victim. 


“I didn’t know he was elderly,” Jackson told the Daily News, before suggesting that he would have rather killed “a young thug” or “a successful older black man with blondes ... people you see in midtown. These younger guys that put white girls on the wrong path.” 


Jackson, who is currently being held at Rikers Island, confessed to the crime last Wednesday, more than 24 hours after he struck Caughman with a 26-inch sword. He said he deliberately traveled from Baltimore to New York to carry out the crimes because it is the “media capital of the world,” and that he wanted to get maximum exposure for his violent hatred toward black men. He said he had been plotting to kill black men for years.


“I had been thinking about it for a long time,” Jackson told the Daily News. “I figured I would end up getting shot by police, kill myself, or end up in jail.”


Jackson, who grew up in an “almost all-white” neighborhood in Baltimore and was raised by “typical liberal” parents, said his ideal society is “1950s America.” He said he hoped that the bloodshed would lead white women to reject interracial relationships, even reportedly saying that their ideal response to his killings would be: “Well, if that guy feels so strongly about it, maybe I shouldn’t do it.” 


Jackson’s premeditated plans sound similar to those of Dylann Roof, who revealed that he shot and killed nine black churchgoers in Charleston, South Carolina, in June 2015 partly because he thought it would protect white women from black men. 


“I have to do it. You rape our women and you’re taking over our country. And you have to go,” Roof reportedly said during his massacre.


Roof’s claims reflect dangerous myths that paint black men as vile savages. And unpacking this trope requires digging deeper into the long history of white female sexuality being used by white men to justify racial violence.  


As for Jackson, when asked about the white women who are repulsed by his racist views and actions, he responded: “That’s the problem.” 

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Darlene Cates, 'What's Eating Gilbert Grape' Star, Dead At 69

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Darlene Cates, who starred as Bonnie Grape in 1993’s “What’s Eating Gilbert Grape,” died in her sleep on Sunday morning, her family told TMZ.  


Cates, best known for playing Johnny Depp and Leonardo DiCaprio’s housebound and overweight mother in the Peter Hedges novel-turned-movie, was 69. Her daughter, Sheri, took to Facebook to share the news, writing, “We take comfort in knowing that she is no longer in pain and is in the arms of our Heavenly Father.” 





Cates was reportedly cast in “Gilbert Grape” after Hedges watched her on a 1992 segment on “Sally Jessy Raphael,” entitled “Too Heavy to Leave Their House.” Casting directors offered Cates ― who was close to 600 pounds and housebound at the time ― the role of Bonnie, and she accepted. It was a standout performance by Cates, who went on to appear in shows like “Picket Fences” and “Touched by an Angel.” She is also set to star in the new movie “Billboard,” which is currently in post-production. 


In 2012, Cates revealed she lost 250 pounds after years of health problems. She told the Dallas Morning News that she hoped to act again, as she had such a lovely experience with “Gilbert Grape.” 


Her on-screen son DiCaprio wrote her a note after the film, telling Cates, “I’m not really the best in expressing my words in writing but you are the most special person I have ever [met]. I’ll always remember you as the best acting mamma I ever had. You triumphed in your role.”


Rest in peace, Darlene Cates. 





Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. ET on Friday, March 31, on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017




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20 Breathtaking Birth Photos That Highlight The Strength Of Doulas

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Doulas play a powerful support role in childbirth.


In honor of World Doula Week, the birth photography blog and community, Birth Becomes Her, compiled a collection of photos that highlight their strength. 


“When you talk to people about their birth stories, their doula’s name often comes up right away,” Birth Becomes Her co-founder Monet Nicole told The Huffington Post. “There is something so powerful about having a person who supports you, loves on you and comforts you during one of the most intense days of your life. Doulas hold space for birthing people.”


While many think of doulas as figures who advocate for their clients during labor and delivery, Monet believes the best doulas are those who encourage their clients to find their own voices and tap into their own innate wisdom and strength.


The below photos represent the physical and emotional support that doulas provide. Said Monet, “Be it holding a hand, wiping away a tear, pouring another pot of hot water, or offering counter-pressure, these doulas are giving their clients the gift of judgment-free support.”


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