Sunday, 29 October 2017

Sunday Crush - Margaret Nolan - Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Silver Bikini


Nolan is an actress and former glamour model mostly known for her appearances in a number of classic British films and television series during the 1960s and 1970s, she epitomised the glamorous so-called "dolly bird" and was often hired for her looks and figure. Also, she tread the boards in serious theatre.

She was never the star but she was in demand for television and films has the “dolly bird”, the dumb girlfriend, and much the same with the majority of her film work but she still worked on some British classics. On TV, she appeared in episode such as Steptoe and Son and Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads both classic British TV comedy. In film, she played James Bonds masseuse in Goldfinger and famously had a number of roles within the ‘Carry On’ franchise.

She was definitely eye candy but nothing like in “Carry on Girls”

Brief bio
Sidney Fiddler (Sid James) conning the local council into running a beauty pageant to promote their community. He's thrilled with the prospect of entertaining all the lovely young contestants, but his girlfriend has a different plan in mind as he fills her hotel up with them. Soon, a women's liberation group invades the premises and takes over -- promptly ruining everything.


Nolan makes more than an impressive figure in the film she is imprinted on the collective psyche as Dawn Brakes in 'Carry On Girls' (1973). There was the catfight when a beauty contest rival Miss Fircombe (Barbara Windsor) accused her of stealing an item of her clothing at a previous contest. Then the fight, handbags when Brakes disrobes sitting on a donkey in the said outfit, and a very tiny silver bikini showing ample breasts. They are quite impressive and not forgettable the fight gives those interested in the study of breasts plenty of time to assess them.

There is the scene where the two rivals have a comedic run around a table joke given you an eye full of assets on show but before a short crawl around the floor than the rumble on the carpet. Good comic British slapstick.

Bless You

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