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  2. Pin-ups of Yank, the Army Weekly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pin-ups_of_Yank,_the_Army...

    The Statue of Liberty featured as the "Yank pin-up girl" at the end of the war. The women who posed for the pin-ups included both famous and unknown actresses, dancers, athletes, and models. Betty Grable and Rita Hayworth, the most famous pin-up models of World War II, both appeared in Yank pin-ups. Grable appeared in June 1943 wearing a ...

  3. Zoë Mozert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoë_Mozert

    During World War II, her pin-up series for the company, called Victory Girls, was published both in calendar and mutoscope-card form. In 1946, Mozert created the publicity poster for Republic Pictures' Calendar Girl , a movie about the Gibson Girl .

  4. Pin-up model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pin-up_model

    Pin-up girl nose art on the restored World War II B-25J aircraft Take-off Time. From the early 19th century, when pin-up modeling had "theatrical origins"; burlesque performers and actresses sometimes used photographic business cards to advertise shows.

  5. Frances Vorne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Vorne

    Vorne was raised in New York. She spoke and read Russian and Ukrainian fluently. [4] In his book, The Pin-Up Girls of World War II, Brett Kiser wrote that Vorne was a "simple" and "modest" girl with an "awe-inspiring anatomy" who never drank alcohol, never visited night clubs, and avoided staying out late.

  6. Chili Williams - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chili_Williams

    Marian Uhlman [1] (née Sorenson; December 16, 1921 – October 17, 2003), known as Chili Williams or the Polka Dot Girl, was an American pin-up model and actress. A photograph of her wearing a polka-dot two-piece bathing suit appeared in Life magazine in 1943 and became one of the most popular pin-up photographs of World War II. Following the ...

  7. Nose art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nose_art

    The artistic work of Alberto Vargas and George Petty's pin-up girls from Esquire Magazine were often duplicated, or adapted, by air force crews and painted on the nose of American and allied aircraft during World War II. Some nose art was commemorative or intended to honor certain people, such as the Boeing B-29 Superfortress "The Ernie Pyle". [20]