Kathryn Hahn to play legendary comic Joan Rivers in Showtime s limited series The Comeback Girl dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Makeup, makeup and more makeup
Deborah: Deborah would wake up in the morning and have someone in-house to do her hair and makeup, even if she wasn’t leaving the house for the day.
Joan: “It’s scary when you see yourself totally without makeup. It gives me the willies,” Rivers once said. “So I get up in the morning and the first thing I do is get into makeup.”
Netflix
Opulent apartment
Deborah: Deborah loves her collectibles, whether it’s a sofa that Liberace sat on in the ’70s, a Verdure tapestry or an antique pepper shaker.
Joan: “This is my apartment and it’s very grand,” Rivers said in the documentary. “It’s how Marie Antoinette would have lived if she had had money.”
Whether you say yes or no to the power of the Ouija board, there s no dismissing the legacy of this supposed spirit communication tool that inspires intrigue and amusement and sometimes fear.
For more than 125 years, the Ouija has been an all-American invention that s alternately viewed as a practical way to reach out to the beyond, a slumber party game and a great narrative device in pop culture. Some even see it as a negative creation and a potential gateway for the nastier denizens of the spirit realm to enter our turf.
Regardless of the Ouija s power (or lack thereof?), it is an undeniable part of our nation s history. That history was honored on Oct. 14 when the Talking Board Historical Society led by the world s leading talking board expert, Robert Murch worked with the City of Baltimore to install a plaque commemorating the location of an April 1890 séance where the board was named.