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Ships within 2 business days
Getting posters and prints of art for your home is a simple and meaningful way to improve how your space feels and looks. Art is more than just decoration—it helps make your home feel warm, personal, and complete. Choosing artwork that matches your style and interests can make your home truly reflect who you are. Art can also lift your mood, making your space more enjoyable and relaxing.
Here’s why adding art to your home is a great idea:
– It adds personality and warmth, turning a house into a home.
– It expresses your unique style and taste.
– It reduces stress and increases happiness.
– It makes any room more colorful and inviting.
With the right artwork, you can create a space that’s not only beautiful but also feels like a true reflection of yourself.
Blaze Starr Goes Nudist is a 1962 nudist film, produced and directed by exploitation film director Doris Wishman. The film stars legendary burlesque queen Blaze Starr and crooner Ralph Young (as “Russ Martine”). The film is also known as “Blaze Starr Goes Back to Nature,” “Blaze Starr Goes Wild,” “Blaze Starr the Original,” and “Busting Out.”
Plot
Screen siren Blaze Starr (Starr) is tired of the rigors of celebrity life. After wandering into a screening of a nudist exploitation film, she travels to Sunny Palms Lodge, a nearby nudist camp, to apply for membership. Blaze enjoys the relaxed atmosphere the camp offers and becomes friends with the camp’s director, Andy Simms (Young). Her lack of interest in her professional life quickly becomes apparent to her manager and boyfriend Tony (Berk), however, who worries that Blaze will lose her acting contract if the studio finds out she’s a nudist. As fate would have it, it turns out the studio head endorses the nudist lifestyle, and Blaze and Andy start a new romance.
Biography
Blaze Starr (born Fannie Belle Fleming; 1932 2015) was an American stripper and burlesque star. Her vivacious presence and inventive use of stage props earned her the nickname “The Hottest Blaze in Burlesque”. She was also known for her affair with Louisiana Governor Earl Kemp Long. The 1989 film Blaze is based on her memoir. Diane Arbus photographed Starr in 1964.
Her trademark routine was “the exploding couch”. As she explained in 1989, “I had finally got my gimmick, a comedy thing where I’m supposed to be getting so worked up that I stretch out on the couch, and “when I push a secret button” smoke starts coming out from like between my legs. Then a fan and a floodlight come on, and you see all these red silk streamers blowing, shaped just like flames, so it looked like the couch had just burst into fire.”
Doris Wishman-Director and Producer
Doris Wishman (1912 2002) was an American film director, screenwriter and producer. She is credited with having directed and produced at least thirty feature films during a career spanning over four decades, most notably in the sexploitation film genre.
Doris Wishman was born in New York City. She later worked as a film booker for her cousin Max Rosenberg, an independent film distributor. By her own account, Wishman began her film production career after Abrams’ death in 1958.
Wishman claimed in several interviews to have borrowed $10,000 from her sister to produce her first film. Wishman produced eight nudist films in total between 1958 and 1964, including “Blaze Starr Goes Nudist” in 1962. In 1957, a New York Appeals court ruling allowed films depicting nudism to be exhibited in movie theaters in New York State. Films about nudism became a popular genre for a few years. After the popularity of the genre began to wane, she decided to abandon nudist exploitation films and transition into the new sexploitation genre. Sexploitation is a class of independently produced, low-budget feature film that is generally associated with the 1960s, and that serves largely as a vehicle for the exhibition of non-explicit sexual situations and gratuitous nudity. Wishman began to produce and direct sex-exploitation or sexploitation features in 1964.
A cult following started to form and Wishman was honored at the New York Underground Film Festival in 1998 and appeared twice on Late Night with Conan O’Brien. Filmmaker John Waters featured a clip from Deadly Weapons in his film Serial Mom. Film critic Joe Bob Briggs described Wishman as “The greatest female exploitation film director in history.” She was one of the most active women directors in the world during the 1960s and ’70s.
Blaze Starr Movies
Two of Starr’s performances, including the combustible sofa, are among the burlesque routines featured in the 1956 compilation film “Buxom Beautease,” produced and directed by Irving Klaw. Director Doris Wishman’s 1962 film “Blaze Starr Goes Nudist,” a nudie-sexploitation film, features Starr’s one lead movie role. As the title suggests, she plays herself.
This artwork is available in the following sizes and types (measurements are in inches): 12×18 paper poster – 12×18 paper giclee – 12×18 canvas print – 12×18 canvas giclee – 16×24 paper giclee – 16×24 canvas print – 18×27 paper giclee – 20×30 paper poster – 20×30 paper giclee – 20×30 canvas print – 20×30 canvas giclee – 24×36 paper giclee – 24×36 canvas print – 24×36 canvas giclee
Sizes refer to the image itself. In addition there is a white border of approximately 2 inches on each side, which can be trimmed for framing or mounting.
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