It was the era of free love, the time when the Beatles sang about holding hands and The Rolling Stones asked you spend the night with them.
Ashley Greene represented the rather demure beginnings of the decade that swung in her Pam Am costume on set today.
The only inkling of the times to come was a warm embrace for her character with randy pilot Ted Vanderway, played by Michael Mosley.
Filming on the set of the American period drama Pan Am, the 24-year-old actress was seen strutting her stuff in a blue dress and black overcoat.
Ashley had no less than five sets of pearls adorned around her neck and wore a pair of black gloves as she carried her handbag in her hand.
With her elegant up ‘do Ashley appeared to have stepped straight out of the 1960s as she shot scenes on the Upper East Side.
Ashley joins the likes of Christina Ricci, Kelli Garner and former Neighbours star Margot Robbie on the ABC show which first aired in September this year.
While Ashley is now concentrating on her three-episode appearance in the airline-themed show she has been busy promoting the latest instalment in the Twilight saga recently.
Before the Thanksgiving holiday Ashley was seen drumming up support for Breaking Dawn at the New York and Toronto premiere.
Next year is looking extremely busy for the actress, who is best known for playing Alice Cullen in the vampire saga.
Not only does she star in the final instalment of the Twilight films but she also stars in LOL: Laughing Out Loud and The Boom Boom Room.
But for now, Pan Am is her labour of love, and she told EOnline about her character, Amanda, a childhood friend of womaniser Ted Vanderway, who is played by Mosley.
She said: 'Their fathers are very good friends and [she] may or may not be romantically interested in him.
But she definitely has a twist. I feel like all of the characters have a twist, and so it was a very interesting character that I haven’t done yet.'
She added: 'I think Pan Am to me, when I look at it and when I watch it, seems like a mix of movie and TV; it’s not quite a film, it’s not quite TV.'
'And it’s a really interesting thing, kind of along the lines of what HBO does. I think it’s just very beautifully and well shot. And it’s in the 1960s, and I’ve been wanting to do something like that for a while.
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