Mies van der Rohe and the Poetry of Purpose

Poets, Shelley famously wrote, “are the unacknowledged legislators of the world.” Of course, as a poet himself, the great Romantic might have been slightly biased in his own, and in his fellow bards’, favor.

Self-serving or not, his point is worth examining, and opening out a little further: do artists of all stripes shape our future more than the lawmaker?  If so, one could further argue that a single, specific artistic pursuit shapes the future more than any other: namely,  architecture.

From the Parthenon to the Taj Mahal to Fallingwater to the Empire State Building, consciously designed structures—temples, mausoleums, private dwellings and public edifices—are often the most eloquent messengers from one generation, and from one culture, to another. Architecture, when done right, embodies a civilization’s values and aspirations: it shows what mattered to a given group of people at a given time in history, and translates an artist’s vision into tangible, lasting form.

One such artist, whose work so defined his time that it’s impossible to imagine certain decades and cityscapes without his influence, was the German master Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886 – 1969). Like his contemporaries Walter Gropius and Le Corbusier, Mies (pronounced “mees,” like “peace”) championed simplicity in the cause of a truly Modern architecture, eschewing decorative elements in favor of clarity and emphasizing functionality as absolutely central to any structure’s aesthetic appeal.

Mies loved the George Washington Bridge, for example, not only because he so admired the at-once muscular and elegant proportions of the vast steel span above the Hudson River, but because one can see virtually every critical element of the bridge’s construction simply by glancing at it. The GWB does not hide or attempt to divert one’s attention from its underlying structure; instead, for Mies and for those who share his sensibility, the genuinely dramatic appeal of the bridge is its structure: the spare, gorgeous sinews that delineate its function.

Here, LIFE.com republishes a series of photographs by photographer Frank Scherschel from a feature that ran in the March 1, 1957 issue of LIFE, at the same time that the architect’s signature achievement—the 38-story Seagram Building on Park Avenue in New York—was nearing completion.

Titled “Emergence of a Master Architect,” the LIFE article made clear from the outset that until the mid-1950s, “Mies was renowned chiefly among fellow architects and his revolutionary ideas were known chiefly through models, a few buildings in Europe and the work of disciples.

“But today at 70, after living inconspicuously in the U.S. for 20 years, Mies is bursting into full, spectacular view … [A sudden surge of high-profile commissions] is accepted by Mies as vindication of his lifelong principle that architecture must be true to its time. His own severely geometric, unembellished buildings have been designed to express in purest forms a technological concept of our technological age. They also … express the simplicity and sturdy nobility of Mies himself.”

“Romanticists don’t like my buildings,” Mies told LIFE, speaking with the sort of simple, unadorned directness that one would expect from the visionary behind the Seagram Building, the Farnsworth House and other Modernist architectural touchstones. “They say [my designs] are cold and rigid. But we do not build for fun. We build for a purpose.”

Liz Ronk edited this gallery for LIFE.com. Follow her on Twitter at @LizabethRonk.

Architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe peers between two large models of ultra-modern apartment buildings he designed for Chicago's Lake Shore Drive, 1956.

Architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe peered between two large models of ultra-modern apartment buildings he designed for Chicago’s Lake Shore Drive, 1956.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Mies van der Rohe-designed apartment houses, 860-880 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 1956.

Mies van der Rohe-designed apartment houses, 860-880 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 1956.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Apartment house at 860 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, designed by Mies van der Rohe.

860 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Bronze I-beams ready to ship from Chicago's Extruded Metals Company to New York City, where they will be part of the construction of the new Seagram's Building tower in midtown, 1956.

Bronze I-beams for the Seagram’s Building tower in midtown New York, 1956.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Clouds reflected on the glass facade of an apartment building in Chicago designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, 1956.

Clouds reflected on the glass facade of an apartment building in Chicago designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, 1956.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Realtor Herbert Greenwald and architect Mies van der Rohe consider a model of a Mies building, 1956.

Realtor Herbert Greenwald and architect Mies van der Rohe considered a model of a Mies building, 1956.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Testing a fountain in a laboratory at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Mies and his Seagram associate, architect Philip Johnson (second from left), who planned fountain, decide to use two of them to decorate Seagram Plaza.

Testing a fountain in a laboratory at Massachusetts Institute of Technology were Mies and his Seagram associate, architect Philip Johnson (second from left), who planned fountain. They decided to use two of them to decorate Seagram Plaza.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

00957887.JPGPlanning new project to remake Battery park, Mies discusses model with Herbert Greenwald, a real estate developer. Greenwald gave Mies his first Chicago apartments commission, now devotes himself to promoting Mies projects

Planning new project to remake Battery Park, Mies discussed a model with Herbert Greenwald, a real estate developer. Greenwald gave Mies his first Chicago apartments commission and later devoted himself to promoting Mies projects.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Shining spaciousness was achieved by Mies in Illinois Tech's Crow Hall, a 220-foot-long, glass-enclosed building which is in fact one gigantic room. Its ceiling and walls are suspended from four exterior girders (two can be seen above), eliminating the need for interior supporting columns

Shining spaciousness was achieved by Mies in Illinois Tech’s Crow Hall, a 220-foot-long, glass-enclosed building which is in fact one gigantic room. Its ceiling and walls are suspended from four exterior girders (two can be seen above), eliminating the need for interior supporting columns.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Spiritual simplicity was Mies' aim in designing the Illinois Tech Chapel. Maintaining the basic campus pattern, he insisted on flat-roofed rectangle but provided brick walls to give the chapel a sense of privacy and solitude. Steel mullions of the facade echo shape of the cross above the altar

Spiritual simplicity was Mies’ aim in designing the Illinois Tech Chapel. Maintaining the basic campus pattern, he insisted on a flat-roofed rectangle but provided brick walls to give the chapel a sense of privacy and solitude. Steel mullions of the facade echoed the shape of the cross above the altar.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Reflections mirrored in glass wall of an apartment building on Lake Shore Drive building merge like a mirage with outside view of companion building and the lights of traffic.

Room reflections were mirrored on the glass wall of a Lake Shore Drive Apartment by architect Mies van der Rohe.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Mies' Manhattan Tower, the 38-story Seagram Building under construction on Park Avenue, is flanked by elevator shafts for lifting building materials to top. In rare switch for Mies, indented area at left has marble walls, not glass.

The Seagram Building in New York City, when it was under construction.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, architect, 1956.

Mies van der Rohe, architect, 1956.

Frank Scherschel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli at 19: Rare Photos of a Legend on the Cusp of Stardom

In March 1965, when LIFE photographer Bill Eppridge spent time on assignment with Judy Garland’s enormously talented daughter, Liza Minnelli, Liza was just turning 19 and launching what would prove to be a monumental career of her own. She was about to debut on Broadway in Flora the Red Menace, in a role that would make her, at the time, the youngest woman to win a Tony Award for lead actress. Also on the show’s creative team was composer John Kander and lyricist Fred Ebb. They would team up on such Broadway classics as Cabaret—later made into a movie starring Minnelli in her Oscar-winning role as Sally Bowles—and Chicago.

Liza allowed Eppridge into her spirited Flora rehearsals, and even invited him to her 19th birthday party in New York City, but in the end LIFE published just one of Eppridge’s photos. Here LIFE.com presents a series of pictures most of which never ran in LIFE of a legend in the making.

Liza, of course, was no stranger to show business: her mom was Judy Garland, her dad was the director Vincente Minnelli. She had performed with her mother at the London Palladium and had done a little work Off-Broadway but Flora the Red Menace would be her highest profile role to date, the gig that would nudge her out of the shadow of her famous parents and into another spotlight entirely.

Of Minnelli’s opening-night performance in Flora, LIFE wrote: “She acted and danced with an awkward, captivating charm, threw out ‘What-am-I-doing-here?’ looks, sang in a voice that boomed and belted, quivered sweetly, and occasionally got out of control which only added to her likability. . . . She certainly did look like her mother several rainbows ago. When she sang, there were echoes of Judy, too the old catches and wavers and throbs that made a song sound as if it were going through a nervous breakdown. But soon Judy’s image faded and Liza’s came into focus.”

In the decades since Eppridge made these intimate shots of the budding star, Liza has performed at the world’s most famous concert halls, racked up countless awards for her singing and acting and delighted new generations of fans with scene-stealing appearances in contemporary pop-culture touchstones like Arrested Development. But her early years truly were something special. As Liza told LIFE in 1965: “Eighteen is great, but 19 is best of all. That’s when you’re opening in your first Broadway show.”

Surrounded by friends, and in the embrace of fiancé Peter Allen   she'd marry the Australian entertainer two years later   19-year-old Liza Minnelli cuts her birthday cake in 1965.

Surrounded by friends, and in the embrace of fiancé Peter Allen—she’d marry the Australian entertainer two years later—19-year-old Liza Minnelli cut her birthday cake in 1965.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli studies sheet music in rehearsals for Flora the Red Menace in 1965, a new musical in which she'd play a bohemian fashion designer during the Great Depression.

Liza Minnelli studied sheet music in rehearsals for Flora the Red Menace in 1965, a new musical in which she’d play a bohemian fashion designer during the Great Depression.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli runs lines with her Flora the Red Menace costar Bob Dishy. In the show, Liza's Flora falls for his character, a fellow designer who pulls her toward Communism.

Liza Minnelli ran lines with her Flora the Red Menace costar Bob Dishy. In the show, Liza’s Flora falls for his character, a fellow designer who pulls her toward Communism.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli and Bob Dishy are put through their paces by Flora the Red Menace choreographer Lee Theodore.

Liza Minnelli and Bob Dishy were put through their paces by Flora the Red Menace choreographer Lee Theodore.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli, 1965.

Liza Minnelli, 1965.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli, 1965.

Liza Minnelli, 1965.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli, 1965.

Flora the Red Menace rehearsals, 1965.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli huddles with Flora the Red Menace choreographer Lee Theodore (right) and an unidentified man (possibly Fred Ebb).

Liza Minnelli huddled with Flora the Red Menace choreographer Lee Theodore (right) and an unidentified man (possibly Fred Ebb).

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli burns up the floor at her 19th birthday party at Il Mio, a disco inside Delmonico's Hotel in New York, March 1965.

Liza Minnelli burned up the floor at her 19th birthday party at Il Mio, a disco inside Delmonico’s Hotel in New York, March 1965.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli, 1965.

Liza Minnelli, 1965.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli busts out the hottest dance of the day, "the Frug," at her birthday party in 1965.

Liza Minnelli busted out the hottest dance of the day, “the Frug,” at her birthday party in 1965.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Shoes kicked off, head thrown back, 19-year-old Liza Minnelli belts out a song for birthday party guests in 1965. From LIFE's report: "When a friend scolded her for singing for free she said, 'I don't care, I sing for me.'"

Shoes kicked off, head thrown back, 19-year-old Liza Minnelli belted out a song for birthday party guests in 1965. From LIFE’s report: “When a friend scolded her for singing for free she said, ‘I don’t care, I sing for me.'”

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli reacts as an unidentified well-wisher at her 19th birthday party presents her with a swan-shaped balloon.

Liza Minnelli reacted as an unidentified well-wisher at her 19th birthday party presented her with a swan-shaped balloon. Seated beside her was Peter Allen.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Liza Minnelli, 1965.

Liza Minnelli, 1965.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Birthday girl Liza Minnelli gets down on the floor with her guests, March 1965.

Birthday girl Liza Minnelli got down on the floor with her guests, March 1965.

Bill Eppridge The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First Girl Scout: Portraits of Daisy Gordon Lawrence

How often is a preteen celebrated as a genuine pioneer? In 1912, in Savannah, Ga., an 11-year-old girl named Daisy Gordon earned that lofty, evocative appellation when she became the first-ever Girl Scout in the United States.

Daisy’s aunt, Juliette Gordon Low—also known as “Daisy” to family and friends—was the founder of the Girl Scouts of America. Juliette was inspired to start the organization during a trip to the United Kingdom in early 1912. When she returned to Savannah in March of that year, she resolved to create a new type of sorority for girls modeled on the Boy Scout movement she’d witnessed and so admired in England. On March 12, 1912, at a “Girl Scout” party at Juliette’s Savannah home, her niece Daisy was the first to sign the new organization’s membership register. The rest, as they say, is history.

Here, more than a century after the founding of the Girl Scouts of America, LIFE.com pays tribute to the GSA with a gallery of pictures featuring none other than “the first Girl Scout,” Daisy Gordon herself.

In its November 22, 1948 issue, LIFE ran a feature titled, like this gallery, “The First Girl Scout.” The subtitle of the article, meanwhile, was even more enticing—”She shows off a new uniform and some old tricks”—and indicated what was to come: namely, pictures of Daisy Gordon Lawrence (47 years old and married when the article appeared) wearing new Girl Scout duds while also showing contemporary Girl Scouts how to tie knots, start a fire with a “firebow” and work semaphore flags.

“Girl Scouts,” LIFE wrote, “have proved an important force in the nation’s youth. Today they can get proficiency badges in anything from journalism to international affairs. When Daisy was a Scout, the program was more violent. Her guidebook taught how to stop runaway horses (‘run as fast as the horse and throw your full weight on the reins’), how to shoot guns, and fly airplanes (‘it is best not to go out in a hurricane.’) ‘Rubber,’ it warned, ’causes paralysis.’ To make First Class Scout a girl had to ‘show a list of 12 satisfactory good turns’ or ‘swim 50 yards in her clothes.’ Daisy stayed Second Class.'”

Daisy remained active in the GSA for years; in 1958 she co-authored a book on her aunt, titled Lady of Savannah: The Life of Juliette Low. Daisy Gordon Lawrence died in Seattle in 1982.

Liz Ronk edited this gallery for LIFE.com. Follow her on Twitter at @LizabethRonk.

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

Daisy Gordon Lawrence with a young scout in 1948.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

The first uniform officially approved was severe, military and khaki-colored. The new uniform for leaders (right), designed by Mainbocher, was green but still severe.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

Daisy Gordon Lawrence addressed a crowd in Savannah, Georgia, during a celebration honoring her aunt, Juliette Low, founder of the Girl Scouts of America.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

Signaling, Mrs. Lawrence waved semaphore flags. She could remember most letters up to M, and also W (above). She had three children; all were boy scouts.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

Daisy Gordon Lawrence with young scouts in 1948.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

Lighting a fire with a firebow, Lawrence demonstrated the friction method used in her day. The tinder failed to light. In 1948 the Girl Scouts were using matches.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

Tying a knot, she made a clove hitch on a tree. In 1948 scouts did less knotting and woodcraft, concentrating more on homemaking and hospital work.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

Daisy Gordon Lawrence with young scouts in 1948.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

Daisy Gordon Lawrence schooled young Scouts on first aid in 1948.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

The Girl Scout Office and Juilette Low Museum in Savannah, Georgia.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

Daisy Gordon Lawrence walked with young scouts near the Girl Scout office and Juilette Low Museum in Savannah, Georgia.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The First American Girl Scout Daisy Gordon Lawrence in 1948

Daisy Gordon Lawrence with a young scout in 1948.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Classic Photos of Stars in Stop Motion

Ask 20 random people, “What is the nature of time?” and chances are pretty good that you’ll get 20 different answers. Time is an arrow, says one. Time is a circle, suggests another. Time is relative. Time is an illusion. 

But no matter how assured or unhesitating their answers might be, most people would be hard-pressed to offer a single, definitive method for illustrating time. Here, LIFE.com offers a selection of marvelous photographs, stroboscopic and otherwise, by the great Gjon Mili. These  technically brilliant pictures  fiddle with moments, junctures, sequences, and in the process offer a playful commentary on time.

“To see a world in a grain of sand,” William Blake once wrote, “and a heaven in a wild flower, hold infinity in the palm of your hand and eternity in an hour.” At their best, Gjon Mili’s stroboscopic photographs not only serve as a kind of modern adjunct to Blake’s vision; they also celebrate with an unsentimental, clear-eyed wonder the reality of sentient beings moving through both time and space.

Stroboscopic image of a trick shot by billiards champion Willie Hoppe in 1941.

Stroboscopic image of a trick shot by billiards champion Willie Hoppe in 1941.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Stroboscopic image of ballerina Nora Kaye performing a pas de bourrée in 1947.

Stroboscopic image of ballerina Nora Kaye performing a pas de bourrée in 1947.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Choreographer Martha Graham performs her own work at Gjon Mili's studio, 1941.

Choreographer Martha Graham performs her own work at Gjon Mili’s studio, 1941.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Drummer Gene Krupa at Gjon Mili's studio, 1941.

Drummer Gene Krupa at Gjon Mili’s studio, 1941.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

United States pentathlon champion John Borican leaps a hurdle in 1941.

United States pentathlon champion John Borican leaps a hurdle in 1941.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A nude descends a staircase, 1942

A nude descends a staircase, 1942

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

New York Giants pitcher Carl Hubbell throws a curve ball, 1940.

New York Giants pitcher Carl Hubbell throws a curve ball, 1940.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Dancer and actor Gene Kelly in a multiple-exposure dance sequence from the movie Cover Girl, 1944.

Dancer and actor Gene Kelly in a multiple-exposure dance sequence from the movie Cover Girl, 1944.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Stroboscopic image of FBI agent Del Bryce drawing his gun, 1945.

FBI agent Del Bryce draws his gun, 1945.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Rope-skipping champion Gordon Hathaway in action, 1947.

Rope-skipping champion Gordon Hathaway in action, 1947.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Multiple exposure photograph of Pablo Picasso using a small flashlight to "draw" a figure in the air in 1949.

Multiple exposure photograph of Pablo Picasso using a small flashlight to “draw” a figure in the air in 1949.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Stroboscopic image of Martha Graham dancer Ethel Butler in 1941.

Stroboscopic image of Martha Graham dancer Ethel Butler in 1941.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Sammy Davis Jr. as "Sportin' Life" in the MGM production of Porgy and Bess, 1958.

Sammy Davis Jr. as “Sportin’ Life” in the MGM production of Porgy and Bess, 1958.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Stan Cavenaugh juggles tenpins, 1941.

Stan Cavenaugh juggles tenpins, 1941.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Stroboscopic image of the head and shoulders of a model wearing an elaborate hat and jewelry, 1946.

Stroboscopic image of the head and shoulders of a model wearing an elaborate hat and jewelry, 1946.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Stroboscopic image of New York University fencing champion Arthur Tauber (left) parrying with Sol Gorlin, 1942.

Stroboscopic image of New York University fencing champion Arthur Tauber (left) parrying with Sol Gorlin, 1942.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Stroboscopic image showing a repetitive closeup of Isaac Stern playing violin at photographer Gjon Mili's studio in 1959.

Stroboscopic image showing a repetitive closeup of Isaac Stern playing violin at photographer Gjon Mili’s studio in 1959.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Stroboscopic image of choreographer George Balanchine watching New York City Ballet dancers rehearse in 1965.

Stroboscopic image of choreographer George Balanchine watching New York City Ballet dancers rehearse in 1965.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

College Basketball’s Golden Days

These days college basketball careers go by in a flash—no sooner does a player make an impression on fans than he has left school to play professionally. It used to be different. Athletes stayed in college for four years. Fans could see stars mature and develop before they moved on to the NBA. 

Here, LIFE.com presents a gallery of photographs from a golden era of college hoops, featuring all-time greats (Lew Alcindor, a.k.a, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar; Oscar Robertson; Pete Maravich; Wilt Chamberlain; Bob Cousy; Jerry Lucas) as well as other players who made brief splashes in their time and then like so many athletes, quietly faded from the public’s view.

A prime example: Yale’s Tony Lavelli, a terrific 6′ 3″ forward in the late 1940s who scored close to 2,000 points and graduated as the fourth highest-scorer in college history. (Today, he is  no longer in the all-time top 250.) Lavelli was selected as the Boston Celtics’ first pick in the 1949 draft. But as music was his true passion and he had hoped to study at Julliard in New York, Lavelli agreed to sign with Boston on one unusual condition: that the Celtics pay him an extra $125 per game to play his beloved accordion at half-time at the old Boston Garden.

Lavelli played two years of pro ball, but ultimately returned to his first love, going on to a long career as a performer and songwriter.

Pete Maravich (LSU) fires off a fade-away jumper against Alabama in 1969.

Pete Maravich (LSU) fired off a fade-away jumper against Alabama in 1969.

Art Rickerby The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Wilt Chamberlain

Wilt Chamberlain (Kansas) soared in 1957.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Burke Scott (above, with ball) was a starter on Indiana's 1953 NCAA championship team, the second of Indiana's five title winners.

Burke Scott (above, with ball) was a starter on Indiana’s 1953 NCAA championship team.

Francis Miller The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Seven-foot, two-inch Lew Alcindor (later Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, here being fitted for trousers with a 51-inch inseam in 1967) left his native New York for UCLA, where he helped the Bruins win a record 88 games in a row and three national titles.

Seven-foot, two-inch Lew Alcindor (later Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, here being fitted for trousers with a 51-inch inseam in 1967) left his native New York for UCLA, where he helped the Bruins win a record 88 games in a row and three national titles.

Bill Ray The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Long Island Univ. Blackbirds practice in 1940. Under Hall of Fame coach Clair Bee, the Blackbirds were a powerhouse in the 1930s and '40s, winning two NIT titles.

The Long Island University Blackbirds practiced in 1940. Under Hall of Fame coach Clair Bee, the Blackbirds were a powerhouse in the 1930s and ’40s, winning two NIT titles.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Oregon State Beavers travel by train, 1953.

The Oregon State Beavers travelled by train, 1953.

Nat Farbman The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Yale basketball star Tony Lavelli playing the accordion

Yale basketball star Tony Lavelli played his accordion, circa 1948.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The 6' 8" Jerry Lucas (above, in 1960) is still regarded as one of the best big men in the history of the game. In three college seasons with Ohio State he averaged 24.3 points and 17.2 rebounds and led the Buckeyes to three NCAA title games. They won it all in 1960.

The 6′ 8″ Jerry Lucas (above, in 1960) is still regarded as one of the best big men in the history of the game. In three college seasons with Ohio State he averaged 24.3 points and 17.2 rebounds and led the Buckeyes to three NCAA title games. They won it all in 1960.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Bradley vs. St. John's, Madison Square Garden, New York, in 1951.

Bradley vs. St. John’s, Madison Square Garden, New York, in 1951.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

New York's Madison Square Garden (the old Garden, built in 1925 and razed in '68) was the mecca of college basketball, hosting every round of the NIT for 40 years and home to the Final Four for much of the 1940s. Above: Bradley vs. St. John's (in white, still the seventh-winningest program in NCAA history), 1951.

New York’s Madison Square Garden (the old Garden, built in 1925 and razed in ’68) was the mecca of college basketball, hosting every round of the NIT for 40 years and home to the Final Four for much of the 1940s. Above: Bradley vs. St. John’s (in white, the ninth-winningest program in NCAA history), 1951.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The legendary Kansas coach Forrest Allen, nicknamed "Phog," is often referred to as the "Father of Basketball Coaching," although these days not too many people mention him when discussing the greatest college coaches in history. Allen (here demonstrating some sort of funky move in 1957) coached Dean Smith; he recruited Wilt Chamberlain to Kansas; the Jayhawks' famous Allen Fieldhouse is named for him, and a banner hanging in the fieldhouse reads, "Pay heed all who enter, beware of the Phog."

The great Kansas coach Forrest Allen, nicknamed “Phog,” is often referred to as the “Father of Basketball Coaching.” Allen (here demonstrating some sort of funky move in 1957) coached Dean Smith; he recruited Wilt Chamberlain to Kansas; the Jayhawks’ Allen Fieldhouse is named for him, and a banner hanging in the fieldhouse reads, “Pay heed all who enter, beware of the Phog.”

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Yes, they play basketball at MIT, but success has been fleeting: In 2005-06 the Division III Engineers won 20 games for the first time in school history. Dimitry Vergun (above, in 1956, the year he graduated) is now an expert on designing buildings to withstand earthquakes.

MIT’s Dimitry Vergun (above, in 1956, the year he graduated) became an expert on designing buildings to withstand earthquakes.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

One of the first big guards in basketball, 6' 5", 220-pound Oscar Robertson (above, in 1959) led the nation in scoring in each of his three seasons at Cincinnati and left school as the top scorer in college history. His 33.8-point career average is still the third-highest in NCAA history. The Big O was inducted into the NBA Hall of Fame in 1980 and in 1996 was voted one of The 50 Greatest Players in NBA History.

One of the first big guards in basketball, 6′ 5″, 220-pound Oscar Robertson (shown in 1959) led the nation in scoring in each of his three seasons at Cincinnati and left school as the top scorer in college history. The Big O was inducted into the NBA Hall of Fame in 1980.

Yale Joel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

La Salle's Tom Gola (above, driving to the hoop in 1954) was one of the college game's earliest superstars, a do-it-all forward who still holds the Division I record for career rebounds (2,201). The four-time All-American also scored 2,462 points, for career averages of 20.9 points and 18.7 rebounds.

La Salle’s Tom Gola (driving to the hoop in 1954) was one of the college game’s earliest superstars, a do-it-all forward. The four-time All-American also scored 2,462 points, for career averages of 20.9 points and 18.7 rebounds.

Hank Walker The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

In the eight-team 1958 Dixie Classic, the Michigan State Spartans (in the dark uniforms) made it all the way to the final before falling to host North Carolina State (in white). At the end of the season, N.C. State was ranked sixth and Michigan State seventh in the final AP poll.

In the eight-team 1958 Dixie Classic, the Michigan State Spartans (in the dark uniforms) made it all the way to the final before falling to host North Carolina State (in white)..

Hank Walker The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Bob Cousy (above, at right, in 1950 when he was with Holy Cross) brought a showman's flair to the sport before it was an accepted part of the game, regularly dribbling behind his back and throwing no-look passes. Known as the Houdini of the Hardwood, he was basketball's first great pure playmaker.

Bob Cousy (above, at right, in 1950 when he was with Holy Cross) brought a showman’s flair to the sport before it was an accepted part of the game, regularly dribbling behind his back and throwing no-look passes.

Yale Joel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Legendary North Carolina State Wolfpack coach Everett "The Gray Fox" Case cuts down the net after winning the Dixie Classic title in 1959.

The great North Carolina State Wolfpack coach Everett “The Gray Fox” Case cut down the net after winning the Dixie Classic title in 1959.

Hank Walker The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The Nobel Prize in Literature: Portraits of Legendary Laureates

The Swedish Academy, which began bestowing the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1901, has missed some opportunities to honor deserving authors (Tolstoy, Joyce, Borges, Nabokov, Proust, Virginia Woolf and Graham Greene are but a few of the giants without Nobel laurels). But this is a failing that, to most, pales beside the excellence and striking variety in style and subject matter, if not race and gender, among those who have won.

Among literary prizes, the Nobel carries unique weight. Unlike the Pulitzer, the Man Booker, the Goncourt, et al. which each year honor discrete fiction and nonfiction titles, the Nobel celebrates and solemnizes a writer’s life work.

Here, LIFE.com looks back at how LIFE magazine portrayed some Nobel winners through the years.

NOTE: Only two honorees have ever declined the Nobel for literature, one voluntarily, the other under threat. In 1964, Jean-Paul Sartre sent his regrets, stating at-once graciously and forcefully, “A writer must refuse to allow himself to be transformed into an institution, even if it takes place in the most honorable form.”

In 1958, the great Russian poet and author of Dr. Zhivago, Boris Paternak, accepted the Nobel, but was later forced by the Soviet authorities, to the enduring shame of the USSR, to decline the prize. In 1989 Pasternak’s son, Evgenii, accepted the Nobel medal on his father’s behalf at a ceremony in Stockholm.

German novelist, short story writer, social critic, philanthropist, essayist and 1929 Nobel Prize laureate Thomas Mann in Tulsa, OK, in 1939.

German novelist, short story writer, social critic, philanthropist, essayist and 1929 Nobel Prize laureate Thomas Mann in Tulsa, OK, in 1939.

William Vandivert The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

1947 Nobel laureate Andre Gide, at work (left) and in a portrait by LIFE's Yale Joel.

1947 Nobel laureate Andre Gide, at work (left) and in a portrait by LIFE’s Yale Joel.

Yale Joel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

French writer Albert Camus smokes a cigarette on the balcony outside his friend and publisher Michel Gallimard's office in Paris, 1955. Camus won the Nobel in 1957; in 1960, when he was 46 years old, he was killed in a car crash along with Gallimard, who was driving.

French writer Albert Camus smokes a cigarette on the balcony outside his friend and publisher Michel Gallimard’s office in Paris, 1955. Camus won the Nobel in 1957; in 1960, when he was 46 years old, he was killed in a car crash along with Gallimard, who was driving.

Loomis Dean The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Ernest Hemingway in Cuba in 1952. He was awarded the Nobel in 1954. When LIFE magazine published Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea, in its entirety, in its September 1, 1952, issue, five million copies of the magazine were sold . . . in two days.

Ernest Hemingway in Cuba in 1952. He was awarded the Nobel in 1954. When LIFE magazine published Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea, in its entirety, in its September 1, 1952, issue, five million copies of the magazine were sold . . . in two days.

ALFRED EISENSTAEDT

Pearl Buck at her desk in 1942 (left), and in 1956 (right). She was awarded the Nobel for Literature in 1938.

Pearl Buck at her desk in 1942 (left), and in 1956 (right). She was awarded the Nobel for Literature in 1938.

Peter Stackpole The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Sinclair Lewis in New York in 1937. He won his Nobel for Literature in 1930.

Sinclair Lewis in New York in 1937. He won his Nobel for Literature in 1930.

Alfred Eisenstaedt The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

George Bernard Shaw, 90 years old, stands in the yard of his home in the Hertfordshire village of Ayot St. Lawrence, England, in 1946.

Irish-born playwright George Bernard Shaw, 90 years old, stands in the yard of his home in the Hertfordshire village of Ayot St. Lawrence, England, in 1946. He was awarded the Nobel for Literature in 1925.

Ralph Morse The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The 1949 Nobel laureate William Faulkner, photographed in Hollywood in 1940.

The 1949 Nobel laureate William Faulkner, photographed in Hollywood in 1940.

PIX Inc. The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The 1962 Nobel laureate John Steinbeck in New York City in 1937.

The 1962 Nobel laureate John Steinbeck in New York City in 1937.

Peter Stackpole The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Jean-Paul Sartre at his home in Paris in 1946. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1964, but famously declined to accept it.

Jean-Paul Sartre at his home in Paris in 1946. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1964, but famously declined to accept it.

Gjon Mili The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Philosopher Bertrand Russell at his desk at UCLA in 1940 (left), and in England in 1951 (right). He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1950.

PhilosopherBertrand Russell at his desk at UCLA in 1940 (left), and in England in 1951 (right). He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1950.

Playwright Eugene O'Neill in New York in 1950.

Playwright Eugene O’Neill in New York in 1950. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1936.

PIX Inc. The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

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