In 1972, the cultural barometer of cool peaked in Jamaica. Ali MacGraw and Steve McQueen, Hollywood’s preeminent power couple, were photographed on the sun-drenched set of Papillon—an image that has since become the definitive visual shorthand for 1970s allure. To the casual observer, it is a masterclass in effortless celebrity glamour. But when viewed through the lens of history, that single frame reveals the fractures of a romance that was as volatile as it was magnetic.
The photograph contains a central irony: Ali MacGraw was never a member of the Papillon cast. She was there as a spectator, having recently upended her life for the man known as the “King of Cool.”

