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Luigi Almirante

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Luigi Almirante (1886–1963) was an Italian stage and screen actor. His slender body and his wiry face made him an incisive comic actor. In the 1930s, he established himself at the new Cinecittà studios in the telefoni bianchi films.

Luigi Almirante
Italian postcard by Ed. A Traldi, Milano, no. 44. Photo: Trevisani, Bologna.

Six Characters in Search of an Author


In 1886, Luigi Almirante was born in Tunis, French Protectorate of Tunisia (now Tunisia), where his father's stage company was touring at the time. He was the son of the actor Nunzio Almirante, brother of the actors Ernesto and Giacomo Almirante, and the director Mario Almirante. He was also the nephew of the silent film actressItalia Almirante Manzini.

Luigi Almirante began his career on stage at the age of 14 or 15 (sources differ), reciting small parts in the company of Angelo Pezzaglia. He appeared together with Pezzaglia's young niece Paola Pezzaglia, with whom he would later also work in the company of Dina Galli. Active in humorous roles since 1907, Almirante had his acting breakthrough in 1909 with the 'Grand Guignol' stage company directed by Alfredo Sainati.

During World War I, he served at the Soldier's Theatre in Udine, under Renato Simoni. After the war, he was part of the Antonio Gandusio company for three years, and then joined the Theater Company Niccodemi, staying there until 1923. He obtained a resounding success with the plays by Luigi Pirandello. He was very successful in the drama 'Sei personaggi in cerca d'autore' (Six Characters in Search of an Author), in his first performance at the Teatro Valle in Rome, on 9 May 1921.

In 1926, he made his cinema debut with the silent film La bellezza del mondo/Beauty of the World, directed by Mario Almirante. He starred alongside his aunt Italia. From then on, he also devoted himself to the cinema. With the advent of sound film, he began to emerge in comical roles, favoured by his slender body and his wiry face, which made him an incisive comic actor.

Equipped with a shrill and perfect voice to provoke ironic effects, he was considered one of the best character actors of his time, as demonstrated in the film Il presidente della Ba.Ce.Cre.Mi./The President of the Ba.Ce.Cre.Mi. (Gennaro Righelli, 1933). Also in 1933, he played Francis Flute in 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' by William Shakespeare, directed by Max Reinhardt. In 1935 he was the antiquarian in 'Savonarola' by Rino Alessi, staged at the Piazza della Signoria in Florence.

Luigi Almirante
Italian postcard by Ed. Stab. Capecchi, Livorno, no. 209.

Luigi Almirante
Italian postcard, no. 539. Photo: Scoffone.

Telefoni bianchi at the new Cinecittà studios


In the thirties, Luigi Almirante often acted alongside Eduardo and Peppino De Filippo, Assia Noris, Vivi Gioi, Franco Coop, and Anna Magnani. He established himself at the new Cinecittà studios in the telefoni bianchi films, where he made friends with the greatest Italian directors of the time, such as Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia, Mario Camerini, Mario Bonnard, Guido Brignone, Alberto Lattuada, Carmine Gallone, and Mario Mattoli.

Examples pf his telefoni bianchi are the comedy O la borsa o la vita/Your Money or Your Life (Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia, 1932) with Sergio Tofano, Darò un milione/I'll give a million (Mario Camerini, 1935), with Vittorio De Sica and Assia Noris, and Batticuore/Heartbeat (Mario Camerini, 1939) with, again, Noris, and Maurizio D'Ancora.

During the Second World War, and in the immediate postwar era, Almirante continued to work with the great names of Italian cinema, such as Delia Scala, Camillo Pilotto, Ave and Carlo Ninchi, Silvana Jachino, Totò Mignone, Alida Valli, Massimo Girotti, Giuditta Rissone, Umberto Spadaro, Totò, and Isa Barzizza.

He acted in many comedies, often directed by Mario Mattoli, but also in dramas by Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, and others. The last film Almirante played in was Gli ultimi cinque minuti/The Last Five Minutes (Giuseppe Amato, 1955). He retired from the stage the following year. He was also active as a teacher at the Accademia d'Arte Drammatica.

Luigi Almirante married Ebe Brigliadori in 1928. In 1951 he was forced to abandon his activity as an actor due to a severe nervous breakdown. Two years before his death he was struck by a serious loss, the death of his son Nunzio. He was the uncle of the politician Giorgio Almirante. Luigi Almirante passed away in Rome in 1963, at the age of 76.

Luigi Almirante
Italian postcard, no. 183. Photo: Vettori, Bologna.

Source: Wikipedia (Italian and English), and IMDb.

The Cinema of Jan Vanderheyden

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Outside of Belgium, little is known about the history of the Flemish cinema. The first Flemish sound film, De Witte/Whitey (1934) was an enormous success. The film's director, Jan Vanderheyden, and his wife, German scriptwriter Edith Kiel, made a series of popular folk comedies during the 1930s and early 1940s. The young star of De Witte, Jef Bruyninckx, grew up in their films. Lately, we found a series of rare postcards of the 1940s with some of the stars of the Jan Vanderheyden films.

Jef Bruyninckx in De Witte (1934)
Belgian postcard by Esclamator. Photo: Jan Vanderheyden-Film. Jef Bruyninckx in De Witte/Whitey (Jan Vanderheyden, 1934), based on the eponymous novel by Ernest Claes. In 1980 a new adaptation by Robbe De Hert would follow.

Jef Bruyninckx (1919-1995) was an important and popular Flemish actor and film and television director. He was one of the founders of both Flemish film production and Flemish television, in which he continued to play an important role later. Bruyninckx was also an editor and taught editing at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Ghent.

Nini de Boël
Belgian postcard by Huis Ern. Thill, Brussel (Brussels). Photo: Jan Vanderheyden-Film.

Nini de Boël (1898-1982) was a Flemish actress and soprano who was known as the 'Antwerp Nightingale'. She starred in many revues and operettas in the first half of the 20th century, and also appeared in several Flemish films, including the comedy Janssens tegen Peeters/Janssens against Peeters (Jan Vanderheyden, 1939).

René Bertal
Belgian postcard by Huis Ern. Thill, Brussel (Brussels). Photo: Jan Vanderheyden-Film.

René Bertal (1898-1962) was a Belgian actor who acted in Flemish folk films of the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s.  Bertal played the title role in the comedy Antoon, de flierefluiter/Anton, the Village Casanova (Jan Vanderheyden, 1942) with Nand Buyl. After this feature,  he appeared in two shorts, the escapist musical short film Muziek is schoon/Music is beautiful (Jan Vanderheyden, 1943), and Een zondags uitstapje/A Trip on Sunday (Jan Vanderheyden, 1943).


Martha Dua
Belgian postcard by Huis Ern. Thill, Brussel (Brussels). Photo: Jan Vanderheyden-Film.

Belgian actress Martha Dua is known for three Vanderheyden films: the comedy Janssens tegen Peeters/Janssens against Peeters (Jan Vanderheyden, 1939) with Charles Janssens, the sequel Janssens en Peeters dikke vrienden/Janssens and Peeters are close friends (Jan Vanderheyden, 1940) and the soccer comedy Wit is troef/White is Trump (Jan Vanderheyden, 1940).

Jan Vanderheyden


Jan Vanderheyden (1890-1961) was both a film producer and director. He was married to the German filmmaker Edith Kiel, who wrote the scripts for his films.

Their first film, De Witte/Whitey (1934), was also the first Flemish film production with sound. It was also very successful. Weeks after the première in Antwerp's Cinema Colosseum the public kept coming to the picture.

The story describes the boyishnesses of Louis Verheyden (Jef Bruyninckx), a white-haired rascal, nicknamed 'De Witte' (the white one) in Zichem, a village in the countryside. In the film, everything happens from the child's perspective. Edith Kiel added a love story to the original storyline made by Ernest Claes, something the original author did not like. Another adaptation with which the Church instead had difficulties was the minimalised role of the village priest.

In the following years, Vanderheyden and Kiel made such films as Alleen voor U/Only for you (Jan Vanderheyden, 1935), Uilenspiegel leeft nog/Uilenspiegel Still Lives (Jan Vanderheyden, 1935), De wonderdokter/The miracle doctor (Jan Vanderheyden, 1936), Havenmuziek/Music in the Harbour (Jan Vanderheyden, 1937), and Drie flinke kerels/Three good guys (Jan Vanderheyden, 1938). In most of these films, the boys Jef Bruyninckx and Nand Buyl played leading roles.

A huge success was the comedy Janssens tegen Peeters/Janssens against Peeters (Jan Vanderheyden, 1939) starring Charles Janssens, Louisa Lausanne and Jef Bruyninckx. The following year, the sequel Janssens en Peeters dikke vrienden/Janssens and Peeters as good friends (Jan Vanderheyden, 1940) was released.

During the German occupation of Belgium between 1940 and 1944, Vanderheuyden produced four of the six films made by Belgian companies in a market that was otherwise flooded by imported German films. His films included Veel geluk, Monika/Good Luck, Monique! (Jan Vanderheyden, 1941) featuring Louisa Colpeyn, and Antoon, de flierefluiter/Anton, the Village Casanova (Jan Vanderheyden, 1942) with René Bertal.

Vanderheyden hoped to benefit from the Flamenpolitik instituted by the Germans, as Belgian cinema had traditionally been dominated by English and French language films. Vanderheyden made his last film in 1942, after which Belgian feature film production was suspended due to an increasing shortage of film stock.

Antoon Janssens
Belgian postcard by Huis Ern. Thill, Brussel (Brussels). Photo: Jan Vanderheyden-Film.

Flemish actor Antoon Janssens (1866–1958) is better known as Toontje Janssens. He was one of Belgium's most popular comedians. Since 1929, he appeared in several Belgian films including the comedy Janssens tegen Peeters/Janssens against Peeters (Jan Vanderheyden, 1939) in which he played Granddad Peeters, the soccer comedy Wit is troef/White is Trump (Jan Vanderheyden, 1940) with soccer player Raymond Braine, and the sequel Janssens en Peeters dikke vrienden/Janssens and Peeters as good friends (Jan Vanderheyden, 1940).

Louisa Colpeyn
Belgian postcard by Huis Ern. Thill, Brussel (Brussels). Photo: Jan Vanderheyden-Film.

Louisa Colpeyn (1918-2015) was a Belgian actress, who worked both in the theatre and in the film. In 1942, she moved to Paris. She appeared in more than thirty films from 1939 to 1983, including Janssens tegen Peeters/Janssens against Peeters (Jan Vanderheyden, 1939) and Veel geluk, Monika/Good luck Monique! (Jan Vanderheyden, 1941) in which she played the title role. Her son is the acclaimed author Patrick Modiano.

Fred Engelen
Belgian postcard by Huis Ern. Thill, Brussel (Brussels). Photo: Jan Vanderheyden-Film.

Fred Engelen (1912-1967) was a celebrated Belgian stage actor and director in Belgium, Germany, and the Netherlands. He also acted in Flemish films such as Met den helm geboren/Born with the helmet (Jan Vanderheyden, 1939), starring Jef Bruyninckx and Nand Buyl, the comedies Janssens tegen Peeters/Janssens against Peeters (Willem Benoy, Jan Vanderheyden, 1939), Een engel van een man/A man like an angel (Jan Vanderheyden, 1939), and Antoon, de flierefluiter/Anton, the Village Casanova (Jan Vanderheyden, 1942).

Jef Bruyninckx
Belgian postcard by Huis Ern. Thill, Brussel (Brussels). Photo: Jan Vanderheyden-Film.

Jef Bruyninckx (1919-1995) was an important and popular Flemish actor and film and television director. He gained fame through his leading role as De Witte van Zichem in the eponymous Flemish success film De Witte/Whitey by Jan Vanderheyden (1934). In the following series of folk films by Vanderheyden, he also always played one of the main roles. He was one of the founders of both Flemish film production and Flemish television, in which he continued to play an important role later. Bruyninckx was also an editor and taught editing at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Ghent.

Sources: Wikipedia and IMDb.

Dana Andrews

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American film actor Dana Andrews (1909-1992) was a major Hollywood star during the 1940s. He continued acting in less prestigious roles into the 1980s. He is remembered for his roles as a police detective-lieutenant in the Film Noir Laura (1944) and as war veteran Fred Derry in The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), the latter being the role for which he received the most critical praise. During his career, he worked with such directors as Otto Preminger, Fritz Lang, William Wyler, Jean Renoir, and Elia Kazan.

Dana Andrews in Deep Waters (1948)
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano, no. 250. Photo: RKO Radio Films. Dana Andrews in Deep Waters (Henry King, 1948).

Dana Andrews
Uruguayan postcard by CF. Photo: RKO Radio Films.

An innocent lynching victim


Carver Dana Andrews was born on a farmstead near Collins in southern Mississippi in Covington County in 1909. He was the third of 13 children of Charles Forrest Andrews, a Baptist minister, and his wife, the former Annis Speed. The family relocated subsequently to Huntsville in Walker County, Texas, the birthplace of his younger siblings, including future Hollywood actor Steve Forrest.

Andrews attended college at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville and studied business administration in Houston. He left school in 1929 to take a job as an accountant with the Texas oil company Gulf. In 1931, at the height of the Great Depression, he quit his job, and hitchhiked to Los Angeles, hoping to break into show business.

He worked in various jobs, such as working at a gas station in the nearby community of Van Nuys. To help Andrews study music at night, the station owners stepped in ... with a deal: $50 a week for full-time study, in exchange for a five-year share of possible later earnings. Andrews studied opera and also entered the Pasadena Community Playhouse, the famed theatre company, and drama school. He appeared in scores of plays there in the 1930s, becoming a favourite of the company. He played opposite future star Robert Preston in a play about composers Gilbert and Sullivan, and soon thereafter was offered a contract by Samuel Goldwyn. Andrews signed the contract, but it still took two years before Goldwyn and 20th Century-Fox to whom Goldwyn had sold half of Andrews' contract had work for him.

Finally, nine years after arriving in Los Angeles, he made his film debut at 20th Century Fox in Lucky Cisco Kid (H. Bruce Humberstone, 1940) starring Cesar Romero. He was in Sailor's Lady (Allan Dwan, 1940), developed by Goldwyn but sold to Fox. Andrews was loaned to Edward Small to appear in Kit Carson (George B. Seitz, 1940) before Goldwyn used him for the first time in a Goldwyn production: William Wyler's The Westerner (1940), featuring Gary Cooper. Andrews had support parts in Fox films Tobacco Road (1941), directed by John Ford; Belle Starr (Irving Cummings, 1941), with Gene Tierney, billed third; and Swamp Water (1941), directed by Jean Renoir. His next film for Goldwyn was the comedy Ball of Fire (Billy Wilder, 1941), again teaming with Cooper, where Andrews played a gangster.

Back at Fox, Andrews was given his first lead, in the B-movie Berlin Correspondent (Eugene Forde, 1942). He was second lead to Tyrone Power in Crash Dive (Archie Mayo, 1943) and then appeared in the film adaptation of The Ox-Bow Incident (William A. Wellman, 1943) with Henry Fonda. He played an innocent lynching victim, a role often cited as one of his best. Andrews then went back to Goldwyn for The North Star (Lewis Milestone, 1943). He worked on a government propaganda film December 7th: The Movie (John Ford, Gregg Toland, 1943), then was used by Goldwyn again in Up in Arms (Elliott Nugent, 1944), supporting Danny Kaye. Andrews was reunited with Milestone at Fox for The Purple Heart (Lewis Milestone, 1944), then was in Wing and a Prayer (Henry Hathaway, 1944).

Dana Andrews
Dutch postcard by Fotoarchief Film en Toneel, no. 3503. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

Dana Andrews
Dutch postcard, no. a.x. 230. Photo: RKO Radio Films.

A laconic city detective


One of his Dana Andrews's famous roles was as a detective in Laura (Otto Preminger, 1944) with Gene Tierney at Fox. His matter-of-fact, deadpan acting style was perfectly suited to laconic city detective Mark McPherson. The Los Angeles Times: "The story of a cynical detective falling in love with a portrait of a supposed murder victim became a classic and seemed to vault Dana Andrews to a level of stardom that he would inhabit for the rest of his career."

He co-featured with Jeanne Crain in the musical State Fair (Walter Lang, 1945), a huge hit, and was reunited with Preminger for Fallen Angel (Otto Preminger, 1945). In 1946, he co-featured with Susan Hayward in an excellent Western, Canyon Passage (Jacques Tourneur, 1946). Andrews did another war film with Milestone, A Walk in the Sun (Lewis Milestone, 1945), then was loaned to Walter Wanger for a Western, Canyon Passage (Jacques Tourneur, 1946).

Andrews's second film with William Wyler, also for Goldwyn, was his most successful: The Best Years of Our Lives (William Wyler, 1946). It was both a popular and critical success with seven Oscars and became the role for which Andrews is best known. Andrews appeared in Boomerang! (1947), directed by Elia Kazan; opposite Merle Oberon in Night Song (John Cromwell, 1947), at RKO; and in Daisy Kenyon (Otto Preminger, 1947).

In 1947, he was voted the 23rd most popular actor in the U.S. Andrews starred in the anti-communist The Iron Curtain (William A. Wellman, 1948), reuniting him with Gene Tierney, then Deep Waters (1948). He made the comedy No Minor Vices (Lewis Milestone, 1948), then went to England for Britannia Mews (Jean Negulesco, 1949). Andrews went to Universal for Sword in the Desert (George Sherman, 1949), then Goldwyn called him back for My Foolish Heart (Mark Robson, 1949) with Susan Hayward. He also played a brutal police officer in Where the Sidewalk Ends (Otto Preminger, 1950), also with Tierney.

Around this time, alcoholism began to damage Andrews's career, and on two occasions it nearly cost him his life as he drove a car. Edge of Doom (Mark Robson, 1950) for Goldwyn was a flop. He went to RKO to make Sealed Cargo (Alfred L. Werker, 1951) which was the only film he made with his brother, Steve Forrest. At Fox, he was in The Frogmen (Lloyd Bacon, 1951). Goldwyn cast him in I Want You (Mark Robson, 1951), an unsuccessful attempt to repeat the success of The Best Years of Our Lives. From 1952 to 1954, Andrews was featured in the radio series, 'I Was a Communist for the FBI', about the experiences of Matt Cvetic, an FBI informant who infiltrated the Communist Party of the United States of America.

Dana Andrews
French postcard by Editions P.I., Paris, no. 676. Photo: Universal.

Farley Granger and Dana Andrews in Edge of Doom (1950)
Publicity still by Goldwyn Production / RKO Radio Pictures. Farley Granger and Dana Andrews in Edge of Doom (Mark Robson, 1950).

A young hero who no longer looked the part


Dana Andrews's film career struggled in the 1950s. In 1952, with his studio contracts expired, he began to free-lance and formed his own production company, Lawrence Productions. Assignment: Paris (Robert Parrish, 1952) was not widely seen. He did Elephant Walk (William Dieterle, 1954) in Ceylon, a film better known for Vivien Leigh's nervous breakdown and replacement by Elizabeth Taylor.

Duel in the Jungle (George Marshall, 1954) was an adventure tale; Three Hours to Kill (Alfred L. Werker, 1954) and Smoke Signal (Jerry Hopper, 1955) were Westerns; Strange Lady in Town (Mervyn LeRoy, 1955) was a Greer Garson vehicle; Comanche (George Sherman, 1956), another Western. By the middle 1950s, Andrews was acting almost exclusively in B-movies.

However, his acting in two films for Fritz Lang during 1956, While The City Sleeps and Beyond A Reasonable Doubt, and two for Jacques Tourneur, Curse of the Demon (1957) and The Fearmakers (1958), is well regarded. Around this time he also appeared in Spring Reunion (Robert Pirosh, 1957), Zero Hour! (Hall Bartlett, 1957), and Enchanted Island (Allan Dwan, 1958).

By the late 1950s, work was increasingly harder to get. He was typed in films as a young hero, but he no longer looked the part. His hair was turning white. In 1952, Andrews had toured with his wife, Mary Todd, in 'The Glass Menagerie', and in 1958, he replaced Henry Fonda on Broadway in 'Two for the Seesaw'. He stayed in the play for a year, co-starring with Anne Bancroft. It briefly revitalised his career. Andrews began appearing on television on such shows as Playhouse 90, General Electric Theatre, The Barbara Stanwyck Show, The Twilight Zone, and The Dick Powell Theatre. He also continued to make films like Madison Avenue (H. Bruce Humberstone, 1961). He went to Broadway for 'The Captains and the Kings', which had a short run in 1962.

In 1963, he was elected president of the Screen Actors Guild. In 1965, Andrews resumed film work with supporting roles in The Satan Bug (John Sturges, 1965) and In Harm's Way (Otto Preminger, 1965). He also had the lead in Crack in the World (Andrew Marton, 1965), and Brainstorm (William Conrad, 1965). However, he was cast increasingly in supporting roles: such as in the Eurospy film Berlino appuntamento per le spie (Operazione Polifemo)/Berlin, Appointment for the Spies (Vittorio Sala, 1965), The Loved One (Tony Richardson, 1965), and Battle of the Bulge (Ken Annakin, 1965) starring Henry Fonda.

Andrews still played leads in low-budget films like Hot Rods to Hell (John Brahm, 1967). By this time, Andrews had evolved into a character actor, as in the war film The Devil's Brigade (Andrew V. McLaglen, 1968) and the Italian production I diamanti che nessuno voleva rubare/No Diamonds for Ursula (Gino Mangini, 1967). Later, Andrews returned to the leading role of college president Tom Boswell on the soap opera Bright Promise (1969-1971).

Dana Andrews
Dutch postcard by Takken, Utrecht, no. 3532. Photo: RKO Radio Films Foto archief: Film en Toneel.

Dana Andrews
Vintage postcard. Photo: RKO Radio Films.

Controlling his alcoholism


Dana Andrews' increasing alcoholism caused him to lose the confidence of some producers. Andrews took steps to curb his addiction and eventually controlled his alcoholism. He worked actively with the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence and appeared in a television public service advertisement concerning the subject in 1972.

Andrews spent the 1970s in supporting Hollywood roles such as The Last Tycoon (Elia Kazan, 1976) starring Robert de Niro, and the TV film The Last Hurrah (Vincent Sherman, 1977), with Carroll O'Connor. He also appeared regularly on TV in such shows as Ironside, Get Christie Love!, Ellery Queen, The American Girls, The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries, and The Love Boat.

It was at this time, the 1970s, that Andrews became involved in the real estate business. Andrews's final roles included the Mini-series Ike: The War Years (Boris Sagal, Melville Shavelson, 1979) in which he played General George C. Marshall, The Pilot (Cliff Robertson, 1980), and the soap opera Falcon Crest (1982-1983). His last film was Prince Jack (Bert Lovitt, 1985).

Andrews had married Janet Murray in 1932. Murray died in 1935 as a result of pneumonia. Their son, David (1933–1964), was a musician and composer who died from a cerebral hemorrhage. In 1939, Andrews married a Pasadena Playhouse actress, Mary Todd, by whom he had three children: Katharine, Stephen, and Susan. For two decades, the family lived in Toluca Lake, California.

During the last years of his life, Andrews suffered from Alzheimer's disease. He spent his final years living at the John Douglas French Center for Alzheimer's Disease in Los Alamitos, California. On 17 December 1992, 15 days before his 84th birthday, Andrews died of congestive heart failure and pneumonia. His wife died in 2003 at the age of 86.

Dana Andrews in Sword in the Desert (1949)
Dutch postcard, no. 395. Photo: Universal International. Dana Andrews in Sword in the Desert (George Sherman, 1949).

Susan Hayward and Dana Andrews in My Foolish Heart (1949)
Belgian card, no. 850. Photo: R.K.O. Susan Hayward and Dana Andrews in My Foolish Heart (Mark Robson, 1949).


Trailer Laura (1944). Source: BFI Trailers (YouTube).

Source: Hal Erickson (AllMovie), Los Angeles Times, Wikipedia, and IMDb.

Ernst Rückert

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Ernst Rückert (1886-1950) was a German stage and screen actor. In the 1910s he was a popular film actor, while in the mid-1920s he starred in so-called Prussian films.

Ernst Rückert
German postcard by Verlag Hermann Leiser, Berlin-Wilm., no. 220. Photo: Atelier Elite, Berlin.

Ernst Rückert
German postcard by Verl. Herm. Leiser, Berlin-Wilm., no. 226. Photo: Atelier 'Elite', Berlin.

Ernst Rückert
Austrian postcard by Iris Verlag, no. 686. Photo: Naxos-Film / Verleih E. Weil & Co.

Ernst Rückert
German postcard by Verlag Ross, Berlin, no. 1062/2, 1927-1928. Photo: Elite, Berlin W.

Ernst Rückert
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 4023/1, 1929-1930. Photo: Mac Walten, Berlin.

A sought-after silent film actor


Ernst Rückert was born Anton Ernst Rücker (without -t) in Berlin, Germany, in 1886 (according to IMDb in 1892).

He began his theatre career in 1908 and appeared on stage in Bleicherode, Königsberg, and Kiel, among others. In 1910, he started an engagement at the Luisentheater in Berlin. From 1911, he was a sought-after silent film actor, initially in leading roles at the company Continental Kunstfilm.

In 1912 he played the first officer of the Titanic in the Continental production In Nacht und Eis/In Night and Ice, directed by Mime Misu. The film was produced by Continental-Kunstfilm of Berlin, and while most of its footage was shot in a glasshouse studio, some footage was shot in Hamburg, and some footage was possibly done aboard the German ocean liner SS Kaiserin Auguste Victoria, then docked at Hamburg. With a running time of 35 minutes, In Nacht und Eis was three times longer than the average film of 1912. Shot in black and white, various scenes were tinted to heighten their impact, such as night scenes in dark blue and a shot of a stoker feeding a burner in red.

From 1914 to 1917, he took part in the First World War. In 1917 he continued his film career and continued to receive leading roles and important supporting roles. In the late 1910s, he was at Deutsche Mutoskop & Biograph  (DMB) the film partner of Lotte Neumann in such films as Hinter verschlossenen Türen/Behind Closed Doors (Paul von Woringen, 1917) and the two-part film Schweigen im Walde/The Silence in the Forest (Paul von Woringen, 1918).

When Neumann left the Deutsche Mutoskop und Biograph, he was the partner of Magda Madeleine in e.g. Die lachende Maske/The laughing mask (Willy Zeyn Sr., 1918).

In the early 1920s, Rückert alternated the various Berlin studios with that of Emelka and in particular Union-Film in Munich. At Union, Franz Seitz was Rückert's regular director, while Dary Holm often had the female lead. At Emelka, Rückert often acted opposite Fritz Greiner, in e.g. the rural drama Der Ochsenkrieg/The War of the Oxen (Franz Osten, 1920).

Rückert was reunited with Lotte Neumann, but while, she played Julia, he had to be satisfied with playing the father of Romeo (Gustav von Wangenheim) in Ernst Lubitsch's Shakespeare spoof Romeo und Julia im Schnee/Romeo and Juliet in the Snow (1920), set in a 19th-century Alpine village. Rückert was enormously productive acting in well 24 films in the year 1920 alone. These were supporting parts, either major ones as the antagonist of the male leads, or smaller parts.

Lotte Neumann in Hinter verschlossenen Türen (1917)
German postcard by Photochemie, Berlin, K. 2097. Photo: Lotte Neumann-Film, Berlin. Lotte Neumann and Ernst Rückert in Hinter verschlossenen Türen/Behind Closed Doors (Paul von Woringen, 1917).

Lotte Neumann in Hinter verschlossenen Türen (1917)
German postcard by Photochemie, Berlin, K. 2098. Photo: Lotte Neumann-Film, Berlin. Lotte Neumann and Ernst Rückert in Hinter verschlossenen Türen/Behind Closed Doors (Paul von Woringen, 1917).

Lotte Neumann and Gustav von Wangenheim in Romeo und Julia im Schnee (1920)
German postcard. Ross Verlag, no. 638/2. Photo: Maxim Film. Publicity still for Romeo und Julia im Schnee/Romeo and Juliet in the Snow (Ernst Lubitsch, 1920), with Lotte Neumann (Julia Capulethofer) and Gustav von Wangenheim (Romeo Montekugerl). Behind them, their shocked parents.

Ernst Rückert in Was Steine erzählen (1925)
German postcard by Verlag Ross, Berlin, no. 1062/3, 1927-1928. Photo: Elite, Berlin. Ernst Rückert as Theodor Körner in Was Steine erzählen/What the Stones Tell (Rolf Randolf, 1925).

Ernst Rückert in Die elf Schill'schen Offiziere
German postcard. Ernst Rückert as Fritz von Wedel in Die elf Schill'schen Offiziere/The Eleven Schill Officers (Rudolf Meinert, 1926).

Historical films about the German resistance during the Napoleonic wars


In the mid-1920s, Ernst Rückert had major parts in the so-called Prussian films, historical films about the resistance of the Germans during the Napoleonic wars. In 1925 Rückert starred as Theodor Körner in the period piece Was Steine erzählen/What the Stones Tell (Rolf Randolf, 1925).

In Die elf schill'schen Offiziere/The Eleven Schill Officers (Rudolf Meinert, 1926), Rückert played a major part as Fritz von Wedel, one of a group of Prussian officers who have resisted the Napoleonic army. Their Major, Von Schill is killed and the others are captured, including Udo (Werner Pittschau), in love with Fritz's sister Marie. Fritz takes Udo's place, so Udo can flee with Marie (Mary Nolan). When Udo hears of the death sentence against the officers he runs back but too late.

Rückert had once more the lead as Theodor Körner in another patriotic film with a Prussian theme, Lützows wilde verwegene Jagd/Lützow's Wild Hunt (Richard Oswald, 1927), with Arthur Wellin in the title role. The film deals with a combination of the amorous encounters with a stage actress (Mary Kid) and a modern Jeanne d'Arc (Wera Engels), and the fight of the Germans against Napoleon (Paul Bildt) and his army, and this all in the year 1813, in which Körner died himself.

Less serious was Rückert's part as the Prince in Franz Hofer's remake of his own film, Das rosa Pantoffelchen/The Pink Slippers (Franz Hofer, 1927), with Hanni Reinwald in the female lead.

In the 1930s, Rückert became a minor, often uncredited actor in films. He also rarely got engagements in theater, such as in 1933 at the open-air stage of the Märkisches Museum. Until 1935, he regularly worked in film, with the last bit part in Parkstrasse (Jürgen von Alten, 1939), starring Olga Tschechova. In 1940 he was drafted, in the season 1941/1942, he was an actor and director at the Berlin Tourneetheater Gastspieldirektion IX. Finally, he was assigned to the K.d.F. front theater.

Ernst Rückert survived the war and died in 1950. He was 63 or 57 (the sources differ). According to IMDb, he acted in over 150 films.

Ernst Rückert
German postcard by Verlag Hermann Leiser, no. 910. Photo: Atelier Eberth, Berlin.

Ernst Rückert
German postcard by Photochemie, Berlin, no. K. 3000. Photo: Mac Walten, Berlin.

Ernst Rückert
German postcard by Photochemie, Berlin, no. K. 3001. Photo: Mac Walten, Berlin.

Ernst Rückert
German postcard by Verlag Ross, Berlin, no. 1062/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Elite, Berlin W.

Ernst Rückert
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4023/2, 1929-1930. Photo: Atelier Mac Walten.

Sources: Filmportal.deFilmportal.de, Wikipedia (German), and IMDb.

Kohlhiesels Töchter (1930)

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One of Henny Porten's biggest successes during the silent era was Ernst Lubitsch's Kohlhiesels Töchter/Kohlhiesel's Daughters (1920). The comedy was extremely popular at the box office and was re-released more than once. So when sound film was introduced Henny Porten once again played the two sisters, sweet-natured Gretel and notoriously bad-tempered Liesel in Kohlhiesels Töchter/Gretel and Liesl (Hans Behrendt, 1930).

Henny Porten in Kohlhiesels Töchter (1930)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 126/1. Photo: Atelier Schmoll, Berlin / Nero-Porten-Film. Henny Porten in Kohlhiesels Töchter/Kohlhiesel's Daughters (Hans Behrendt, 1930).

Henny Porten in Kohlhiesels Töchter (1930 sound version)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 126/2. Photo: Atelier Schmoll, Berlin / Nero-Porten-Film. Henny Porten in Kohlhiesels Töchter/Kohlhiesel's Daughters (Hans Behrendt, 1930).

Henny Porten sings!


In the sound version, Kohlhiesels Töchter/Gretel and Liesl (Hans Behrendt, 1930), Henny Porten starred again as both sisters, this time opposite Fritz Kampers and Leo Peukert. Again it was an adaptation of the play Kohlhiesel's Daughters by Hanns Kräly, adapted by Julius Urgiß and Wilhelm Raff.

The plot centers on innkeeper Kohlhiesel's daughters, the beautiful Liesl, and the homely Gretel. The local butcher (Kampers) wants to marry Liesl, but Kohlhiesel (Peukert) refuses to bless their union until he finds a husband for older sister Gretel. Callously, the butcher proposes to Gretel, intending to divorce her and then marry Liesl. But guess what happens instead.

Henny sang two songs in the film, 'In Oberammergau, da blueht der Flieder' and 'Ich moecht ein Bild von Dir auf meinem Herzen tragen', both written by Robert Gilbert.

Hal Erickson at AllMovie: "Fritz Kampers assumes the Jannings role in the 1930 version, and while critics felt that he wasn't quite as talented as his predecessor, all agreed that Kampers did full justice to the part."

Just like Ernst Lubitsch's Kohlhiesels Töchter/Kohlhiesel's Daughters (1920) had been, the remake was a significant success at the box office. The comedy established Henny Porten as a sound star.

In the following decades two more versions would follow. In Kohlhiesels Töchter (Kurt Hoffmann, 1943), Heli Finkenzeller and Margaretha Haagen played the two sisters. And Liselotte Pulver played a double role in Kohlhiesels Töchter (Axel von Ambesser, 1962).

Henny Porten and Fritz Kampers in Kohlhiesels Töchter (1930)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 126/3. Photo: Atelier Schmoll, Berlin / Nero-Porten-Film. Henny Porten and Fritz Kampers in Kohlhiesels Töchter/Kohlhiesel's Daughters (Hans Behrendt, 1930).

Henny Porten in Kohlhiesels Töchter (1930)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 126/4. Photo: Atelier Schmoll, Berlin / Nero-Porten-Film. Henny Porten in Kohlhiesels Töchter/Kohlhiesel's Daughters (Hans Behrendt, 1930).

Henny Porten in Kohlhiesels Töchter (1930)
German collectors card by Ross Verlag in the series 'Vom Werden deutscher Filmkunst - Der Tonfilm', album no. 11, picture no. 145. Photo: Atelier Schmoll, Berlin / Nero-Porten-Film. Henny Porten in Kohlhiesels Töchter/Kohlhiesel's Daughters (Hans Behrendt, 1930).

Sources: Hal Erickson (AllMovie), Wikipedia, and IMDb.

Ugo Piperno

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Ugo Piperno (1862-1922) was a renowned Italian stage actor and director. From 1914, he also played several parts in the Italian silent cinema for Roman film companies such as Cines, Caesar, Celio, and Tiber Film.

Ugo Piperno
Italian postcard by Fotocelere.

Stuck in New York


Ugo Piperno was born in Livorno in 1870 (though IMDb claims 1862).

He debuted on stage in 1891 with the company of C. Rossi. In 1896 he played with Ermete Zacconi, later also with Ruggero Ruggeri. In 1898 Piperno played with the company Lorenzo-Andò, e.g. in the Enrico Annibale Butti play 'La fine di un ideale' (The end of an ideal).

Around 1900 he acted at the stage company Talli-Grammatica-Calabresi company e.g. in 'Lucifero' (Lucifer) by Enrico Annibale Butti in 1900-1901.

In 1912 he founded with Lyda Borelli and Antonio Gandusio the Drammatica Compagnia Italiana Borelli-Gandusio-Piperno, in which also Wanda Capodaglio, Lola Braccini, Tullio Carminati, Memo Benassi, Luigi Almirante, and a young Renzo Ricci acted.

In Rome the company acted at the Teatro Valle. In 1914 the company did a Latin American tour but got stuck in New York when the First World War broke out. Eventually, they managed to get back. Borelli left the company in 1915 but returned in 1916-1918. Around 1918 Piperno led the so-called Compagnia di Propaganda per le Terre Redente.

Ugo Piperno
Italian postcard, no. 45. Photo: Sciutto.

Ugo Piperno
Italian postcard. hoto: Unione Cinematografica Italiana.

Piperno and the film divas


In the 1910s Ugo Piperno worked at the Roman Cines film studio. In 1914 he debuted on screen in the Maria Carmi drama Retaggio d'odio/The Inheritance of Hate (Nino Oxilia, 1914), also with Bruto Castellani and Pina Menichelli.

In La donna nuda/The Naked Truth (Carmine Gallone, 1914), Piperno played the old painter Rouchard opposite - now film diva - Lyda Borelli as the model Lolette, Lamberto Picasso as the young painter Pierre Bernier who cheats on her, and Wanda Capodaglio as the flirtatious princess who steals Pierre, and drives Lolette to madness.

After La casa di nessuno/The House of Nobody (Enrico Guazzoni, 1915) with Pina Menichelli, Piperno again acted opposite Lyda Borelli in La storia dei tredici/The Thirteenth Man (1917), after Honoré de Balzac, and today one of the few lost films of Borelli.

Then followed Il tesoro di Isaaco/Isaac's Treasure (Mario Caserini, 1918), Primerose (Caserini, 1919) with Elena Sangro, La notte del 24 aprile/The night of 24 April (1919) with Thea (Teresa Termini), and L'odissea di San Giovanni/The odyssey of San Giovanni (Vasco Salvini, 1919).

Piperno acted opposite diva Francesca Bertini in Spiritismo/His Friend's Wife (Camillo De Riso, 1919) and La contessa Sara/Countess Sara (Roberto Roberti, 1920), shot for Bertini Film/Caesar Film. Piperno had the title role in Papà Lebonnard/Dear Old Dad (1920) by Mario Bonnard, with whom he had also collaborated in La stretta/The Grip (1919). Opposite Hesperia, Piperno acted in Chimere (Baldassarre Negroni, 1920).

His final film was again with Mario Bonnard, the latter's Stendhal adaptation Il rosso e il nero/The red and the black (1920). Two years after, in 1922, Ugo Piperno died in Casalecchio di Reno, near Bologna. He was 60. Piperno was a mason since 1905 and became a grandmaster in 1908.

Ugo Piperno
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 21. Photo: Badodi, Milano.

Sources: Roberto Galimberti (Blog dell' Arco Reale - Rito di York - Italian), and IMDb.

Trini Lopez (1933-2020)

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American singer, guitarist, and actor Trini Lopez died on 11 August at the age of 87. His first hit was 'If I Had a Hammer' in 1963, which earned him a Golden Disc. His other hits included 'Lemon Tree', 'I'm Comin' Home, Cindy' and 'La Bamba'. He appeared in several films and designed two guitars for the Gibson Guitar Corporation, which are now collectors’ items.

Trini Lopez (1933-2020)
French postcard by E.D.U.G., no. 388. Photo: Reprise / Disques Vogues.

A steady engagement at the nightclub PJ's


Trinidad 'Trini' López III was born in the Little Mexico neighbourhood of Dallas, Texas, in 1933 (some sources say 1937). His father, Trinidad Lopez II, worked as a singer, dancer, actor, and musician in Mexico; his mother was Petra Gonzalez.

Lopez has four sisters and a brother, Jesse, who was also a singer. He attended N. R. Crozier Tech High School but had to drop out in his senior year because he needed to earn money to help support the family.

Lopez formed his first band in Wichita Falls, Texas, at the age of 15. Around 1955, Trini Lopez and his band worked at The Vegas Club, a nightclub owned by Jack Ruby, the nightclub owner who assassinated Lee Harvey Oswald, avenging Oswald's assassination of JFK.

In 1957, at the recommendation of Buddy Holly's father, Trini and his group The Big Beats went to producer Norman Petty who secured a contract for them with Columbia Records. Lopez left the group and made his first solo recording, his own composition 'The Right To Rock', for the Dallas-based Volk Records, and then signed with King Records in 1959, recording more than a dozen singles for that label, none of which charted.

In late 1962, after the King contract expired, Lopez followed up on an offer by producer Snuff Garrett to join the post-Holly Crickets as a vocalist. After a few weeks of auditions in Los Angeles, that idea did not go through. He landed a steady engagement at the nightclub PJ's, where his audience grew quickly. He was heard there by Frank Sinatra, who had started his own label, Reprise Records, and who subsequently signed Lopez.

Trini Lopez (1933-2020)
Dutch postcard, no. 1045.

Trini Lopez (1933-2020)
Vintage postcard.

A radio favourite for many years


His debut live album, 'Trini Lopez at PJ's', was released in 1963. The album included a smash rendering of the folk standard 'If I Had a Hammer', which reached number one in 36 countries (no. 3 in the United States), and was a radio favourite for many years. It sold over one million copies and was awarded a gold disc.

He also performed his own version of the traditional Mexican song 'La Bamba' on the album. It was later reissued as a single in 1966. Lopez knew how to make folk-pop swing. Another live album from PJ's was recorded later that same year under the title 'By Popular Demand More Trini Lopez at PJ's', which contains the song 'Green Green'.

His popularity led the Gibson Guitar Corporation to ask him in 1964 to design a guitar for them. He ended up designing two: the Trini Lopez Standard, a rock and roll model based on the Gibson ES-335 semihollow body, and the Lopez Deluxe, a variation of a Gibson jazz guitar designed by Barney Kessel. Both of these guitars were in production from 1964 until 1971, and are now highly sought-after among collectors.

Bill Dahl at AllMusic: "Lopez's hits capture the excitement of his live performances, and his driving renditions of 'Kansas City' (1963), 'Lemon Tree' (1965), and 'I'm Comin' Home, Cindy' (1966) were substantial sellers."

In total, Lopez scored 13 chart singles through 1968, including 'Sally Was a Good Old Girl' (1968). On the adult contemporary chart, he racked up 15 hits, including the top-10 singles 'Michael' (1964), 'Gonna Get Along Without Ya' Now' (1967), and 'The Bramble Bush' (1967). Beyond his success on record, he became one of the country's top nightclub performers of that era, regularly headlining in Las Vegas.

In 1968, he recorded an album in Nashville entitled 'Welcome to Trini Country'. In 1969, NBC aired a Trini Lopez variety special featuring surf guitar group The Ventures, and Nancy Ames as guests. The soundtrack, released as 'The Trini Lopez Show', has him singing his hits with The Ventures as his backing band.

Trini Lopez (1933-2020)
Dutch postcard by Gebr. Spanjersberg N.V., Rotterdam. Photo: Imperial.

The Dirty Dozen


During the 1960s and 1970s, Trini Lopez moved into acting, though his film career was not as successful as his music. Lopez's first film role was in Marriage on the Rocks (Jack Donohue, 1965) with Frank Sinatra, Deborah Kerr, and Dean Martin. Lopez made a cameo appearance in a nightclub scene. His soundtrack song, 'Sinner Man', became a hit single.

Next, he appeared in the thriller Poppies Are Also Flowers (Terence Young, 1966) with Senta Berger and Stephen Boyd. He was one of The Dirty Dozen (Robert Aldrich, 1967), but he walked off the set reportedly at the urging of Frank Sinatra who supposedly thought his music career would stall if he continued to work on the film, which had gone over its scheduled shooting date. Another version was that Lopez was fired by director Robert Aldrich for being disagreeable.

Later Lopez appeared as himself in The Phynx (Lee H. Katzin, 1970) and played the title role opposite Larry Hagman in Antonio (Claudio Guzman, 1973). Lopez hosted his own network TV variety program. He also made two appearances (playing different characters) on the television program Adam-12 (1971-1972). In 1977, he played the role of Julio Ramirez in The Mystery of the Silent Scream (John J. Dumas, 1977) which was part of The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries TV series.

Lopez continued his musical career with extensive tours of Europe and Latin America during this period; an attempt to break out by releasing a disco album in 1978 proved a flop. Lopez produced a single promoting the Coca-Cola soft drink Fresca in 1967. In 1993, a Golden Palm Star on the Palm Springs, California, Walk of Stars was dedicated to him.

In 2002, Lopez teamed with Art Greenhaw for 'Legacy: My Texas Roots'. The album used the Texas Roots Combo including Lopez, Greenhaw, and Lopez's brother, Jesse. Reviewer Steve Leggett on All Music Guide: "The album has an easygoing feel very similar to Lopez's classic live sets from the 1960s, only it rocks a good deal harder."

Thereafter, Lopez did charitable work and received honours such as being inducted into the International Latin Music Hall of Fame in 2003. Lopez was still recording and appearing live in the years leading up to his death. In 2013, he appeared as a guest performer in a number of shows held in Maastricht in the Netherlands with the Dutch violinist and composer André Rieu.

He continued to record. 'El Immortal' was released in 2010, and the following year he released his 65th album, 'Into The Future' Lopez remained a lifelong bachelor and had no children. His nephew, Trini Martinez, was the drummer for the Dallas indie rock band Bedhead.

Trini Lopez died in 2020, at Desert Regional Medical Center in Palm Springs, California. He was 83 and suffered from complications of COVID-19.


Trini Lopez performs 'If I Had A Hammer' (1963). Source: the rockabillie (YouTube).


Official Trailer Dirty Dozen (1967). Source: Movieclips Classic Trailers (YouTube).

Sources: Bill Dahl (AllMusic), Steve Leggett (All Music Guide), Jon C. Hopwood (IMDb), Les Gens du CinémaWikipedia, and IMDb.

Photo by Paul Boyer

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Today we highlight the French photographer Paul Boyer (1861-1953), located in Paris. He was also credited as Boyer, P. Boyer, and as part of Boyer & Bert. Boyer's name can be seen on many French postcards of stage stars of the Belle Epoque. Many of them, including the divine Sarah Bernhardt, would also act in silent films.

Sarah Bernhardt in Théroigne de Méricourt
French postcard. Sent by mail in 1906. Photo: Boyer, Paris. Sarah Bernhardt in the play Théroigne de Méricourt, by M. Paul Hervieu, produced at the Théâtre Sarah Bernhardt in 1902. Anne-Josèphe Théroigne de Méricourt (1762–1817) was a singer, orator, and organiser in the French Revolution.

Yvonne de Bray
French postcard in the Les Reines de la Mode series by Croissant, Paris, no. 3375. Photo: Paul Boyer. Yvonne de Bray (1887-1954) was a French stage and screen actress, famous for her role as Sophie in Jean Cocteau's film Les parents terribles (1948).

Jules Truffier
French postcard by PMM. Photo: Boyer, Paris. Jules Truffier (1856-1943) was a respected actor of the Comédie-Française. As far as known, he didn't act in a film, but as a teacher at the Conservatoire (from 1906 onward), he trained future screen actors such as Pierre Blanchar.

Polaire
French postcard by F.C. & Cie., no. 250. Photo: Boyer & Bert, Paris. French singer and actress Polaire (1874-1939) had a career in the entertainment industry which stretched from the early 1890s to the mid-1930s and encompassed the range from music-hall singer to stage and film actress. Her most successful period professionally was from the mid-1890s to the beginning of the First World War.

Régina Badet
French postcard by N.D. Photo., no. 267. Photo: P. Boyer. French actress and dancer Régina Badet (1876-1949) was a star of the Opéra-Comique in Paris. She also had a short career in the French silent cinema.

Paul Mounet
French postcard. Photo: Boyer, Paris. Paul Mounet (1847–1922), born Jean-Paul Sully, was a French actor of the Comédie Française, who also acted in various Film d'Art films around 1910.

Yvette Guilbert
French postcard by F C & Cie., no. 285. Photo: Boyer & Bert, Paris. Yvette Guilbert (1865-1944) was a French cabaret singer and actress of the Belle Époque. Her ingenious delivery of songs charged with risqué meaning made her famous. She also appeared in some classic silent films.

Flash


Paul Boyer (1861–1952) was born Paul-Anatole-Marie-Joseph Boyer in Toulon (Var), in 1861. He was the son of the architect Charles Boyer and Séraphine Grec.

Paul studied at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Later, he invented the use of magnesium for the flash-lamp in photography.

Boyer won many awards. He got the gold medal at the Exposition Universelle of 1889, a world's fair held in Paris. He also participated in the Moscow exhibition. In 1891, he was nominated Knight of the Legion of Honor.

He had a studio at 35 boulevard des Capucines in Paris. There he made numerous portraits of actors, actresses, and other personalities of his time. These were often published on cabinet cards and on postcards. Several of these postcards were published by F. C. & Cie. (Frederick Charles Cooper), located in Eastbourne, England.

At the Exposition Universelle of 1900, Boyer was a member of the awarding jury. He was also decorated as an officer des Palmes Académiques, officer of Nichan Iftikhar, and officer of Lion and Sun.

Paul Boyer was active until 1908. He passed away in Paris in 1952.

Mistinguett and Max Dearly
French postcard by F.C. & Cie, no. 283. Photo: Boyer & Bert. Collection: Didier Hanson. Max Dearly (1874-1943) was a French actor, famous for his parts in 1930s French sound film but also for his previous career in Parisian vaudeville. French actress and singer Mistinguett (1875-1956) captivated Paris with her risqué routines. She went on to become the most popular French entertainer of her time and the highest-paid female entertainer in the world. She appeared more than 60 times in the cinema.

Edouard de Max
French postcard by F.C. et Cie, no. 163. Photo: Paul Boyer. Actor Édouard de Max (1869-1924) was a leading man and monstre sacré of the French stage. He also appeared in silent films of the 1910s and the 1920s, including two versions of the The Three Musketeers.

Marguerite Moreno
French postcard, no. 1/11. Photo: Paul Boyer, Paris. Marguerite Moreno in 'La Sorcière' at the Theatre Sarah Bernhardt, Paris. Moreno performed in this play by Victorien Sardou in 1903.

Albert Lambert Fils
French postcard by F.C. et Cie, no. 166. Photo: Paul Boyer, Paris. Albert Lambert (1865-1941), aka Albert Lambert fils, was a French stage and screen actor, who was for a long time part of the Comédie-Française. He also played in several early French Film d’Art films, first of all, L'Assassinat du Duc de Guise/The Assassination of the Duke de Guise (1908).

Robinne
French postcard by F.C. & Cie, no. 244. Photo: Paul Boyer, Paris. Publicity still for the stage play 'Le Passant' by François Coppée (1869). Robinne played the role of Zanetto in travesty. Gabrielle Robinne (1886-1980) was a French stage and film actress, who had the peak of her film career in the 1910s.

Louis Ravet
French postcard, no. 7. Photo: Boyer. Louis Ravet (1870-1933) was a French stage and screen actor. Ravet, who first acted at the Théâtre des Bouffes du Nord and the Théâtre de l'Ambigu-Comique, was Pensionnaire of the Comédie-Française from 1899 to 1919, playing in the classics by Corneille, Hugo, and most often, Racine.

Pierre Laugier
French postcard by PMM. Photo: Boyer, Paris. Pierre Laugier (1864-1907) was an actor of the Comédie Française from 1885, becoming sociétaire in 1894. Memorable parts he had in 'Tartuffe' (Orgon), 'L'Avare' by Molière, 'Les Folies amoureuses' (Albert) by Jean-François Regnard, 'Le Gendre de M. Poirier' by Emile Augier and Jules Sandeau, 'Il ne faut jurer de rien' by Alfred de Musset, and 'Thermidor' by Victorien Sardou. He died, aged just 42, from scarlet fever at the bedside of one of his two daughters. As far as known he didn't act in films.

Sources: Wikipedia and The Cabinet Card Gallery.

Tom Mix

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American film actor Tom Mix (1880-1940) was the star of many Westerns between 1909 and 1935. He was Hollywood's first Western megastar and helped to define the genre for all cowboy actors who followed. Mix revolutionised the genre by eschewing realism in favour of more fantastical, lighthearted storylines and picturesque visual elements, like his clean, expensively tailored costumes. Mix appeared in 291 films, all but nine of which were silent.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1025/3, 1927-1928. Photo: Fox-Film.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 1025/4, 1927-1928. Photo: Fox-Film.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag Foreign, no. 3576/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Fox.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3904/2, 1928-1929. Photo: Fox.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4405/4, 1929-1930. Photo: Fox.

Earning and spending millions


Thomas Hezikiah Mix was born in Mix Run, Pennsylvania, in 1880. His parents were Edwin Mix and Elizabeth née Heistand. He grew up in nearby DuBois, Pennsylvania, where his father, a stable master for a wealthy lumber merchant, taught him to ride and love horses.

He spent time working on a local farm owned by John DuBois, a lumber businessman. He had dreams of being in the circus and was rumored to have been caught by his parents practicing knife-throwing tricks against a wall, using his sister as an assistant.

In April 1898, during the Spanish–American War, he enlisted in the Army under the name Thomas E. (Edwin) Mix. His unit never went overseas. In 1902, he deserted the army to marry his first wife, Grace Allin. The marriage was annulled a year later. The fact that he was a deserter did not come up until after his death.

Mix went to Oklahoma and lived in Guthrie, working as a bartender, a night marshall, and other odd jobs. From 1906 till 1909, he was in a series of Wild West shows, such as 'The Miller Bros. Wild West Show', with wife Olive Mix-Stokes in Seattle's 'Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition'; and Will A. Dickey's 'Circle D Ranch'.

The latter supplied the Selig Polyscope Company with cowboys and Indians for films and, in 1910, Mix was hired by Selig to provide and handle horses. His first film was Ranch Life in the Great Southwest (Francis Boggs, 1910) according to Ed Stephan at IMDb, or The Cowboy Millionaire (Francis Boggs, Otis Turner, 1910), according to Wikipedia.

However, he appeared as himself in Ranch Life in the Great Southwest, in which he displayed his skills as a cattle wrangler. Shot at the Selig studio in the Edendale district of Los Angeles (now known as Silver Lake), the film was a success, and Mix became an early motion picture star. Mix performed in more than 100 films for Selig, many of which were filmed in Las Vegas, New Mexico. Mix continued with Selig until 1917, writing and directing as well as acting.

While with Selig he co-starred in several films with Victoria Forde, and they fell in love. He divorced Olive Stokes in 1917. He and Victoria were signed by Fox Film Corporation, in 1917 and he remained with them until 1928, averaging five films a year.

His popularity eclipsed all other great cowboy stars, including Hoot Gibson and even the legendary William S. Hart, of the silent era.

He earned - and spent - millions. He loved sports cars, wild parties, and fancy clothes. He owned a huge Hollywood mansion that had his name emblazoned above it in neon lights and had numerous ex-wives to support.

Tom Mix
British postcard in the Cinema Stars Series by Lilywhite, no. C.M. 23. Photo: Fox.

Tom Mix
French postcard by A.N., Paris, no. 193. Photo: Fox Film.

Tom Mix
French postcard. Photo: Fox Film.

Tom Mix
French postcard by Cinémagazine-Edition, no. 183.

Tom Mix
French postcard by Cinémagazine-Edition, no. 568. Photo: Fox Film.

A horse called Tony


Tom Mix was the king of the cowboys during the 1920s. At Fox, he developed a comical style, emphasising fast action thrills to a greater extent than had been common in earlier Westerns, and he did his own stunts. These featured action-oriented scripts contrasted with the documentary style of his work with Selig.

In addition to Mix's riding and shooting skills, the films also showcased the talents of his intelligent and handsome horse, Tony. Heroes and villains were sharply defined and a clean-cut cowboy always saved the day. Millions of American children grew up watching his films on Saturday afternoons.

In 1932, he married his fifth wife, Mabel Hubbell Ward. Universal Pictures approached him that year with an offer to perform in 'talkies', which included script and cast approval. He acted in nine films for Universal, but because of injuries he received while filming, he was reluctant to do any more. Mix then appeared with the Sam B. Dill circus, which he reportedly bought two years later, in 1935.

Sound and encroaching middle age were not favourable to Mix. While Mix was a great showman, the combination of the Depression and the high overhead of his traveling shows conspired against his success.

He left the film industry after the 15-episode serial, The Miracle Rider (B. Reeves Eason, Armand Schaefer, 1935) made for Mascot Pictures. It was a huge hit for the small studio, grossing over $1 million.

Tom was married five times. His wives were Grace I. Allen (1902-1903; the marriage was annulled), Jewel 'Kitty' Perrine (1905-1907; divorced), Olive Mix (1909-1918; divorced), Victoria Forde (1918-1932; divorced) and Mabel Hubbell Ward (1932-1940; his death). He had two daughters, Ruth Mix with Olive Mix, and Thomasina Mix with Victoria Forde.

Tom Mix died in an auto accident in 1940. While driving his 1937 Cord Sportsman through the Arizona desert he took a turn too fast, a large aluminum suitcase broke loose and broke his neck and his car plunged into a ravine. He was 60 years old. The ravine was later named 'The Tom Mix Wash' in his honour.

At Tom Mix's funeral Rudy Vallee sang 'Empty Saddles'. His funeral took place at the Little Church of the Flowers in Glendale, California, and was attended by thousands of fans and Hollywood personalities. Mix was interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery.

Tom Mix had made over $6,000,000 during his career but an extravagant lifestyle had sharply reduced his estate to a modest amount by the time he died. Mix remained popular on radio and in comic books for more than a decade after his death. Of his 291 films, only about 10% were known to be available for viewing. The 1937 Fox vault fire lost most of the archive of his films made with Fox.

For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Mix has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1708 Vine Street. His cowboy boot prints, palm prints, and the hoof prints of his horse, Tony, are at Grauman's Chinese Theatre, at 6925 Hollywood Boulevard.

Tom Mix in The Canyon of Light (1926)
American postcard. Tom Mix on his horse Tony in The Canyon of Light (Benjamin Stoloff, 1926), shot in Glenwood Springs, Colorado. Photo: Fox Film. Co-actors were Barry Norton and Dorothy Dwan.

Tom Mix and Tony
Probably an American collectors card or postcard. Tom Mix and his horse Tony, posing.

Tom Mix
Italian postcard by Ed. G. Vettori, Bologna, no. 614.

Tom Mix
Spanish card by EFB (Editorial Fotografica, Barcelona), no. A-22. Photo: Zerkowitz.

Tom Mix
Spanish postcard. Photo: Albert Witzel.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 1025/5. Photo: Fox Film.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 3844/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Fox.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3844/3, 1928-1929. Photo: Fox Film.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4813/1, 1929-1930. Photo: Radio Pictures.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4813/2, 1929-1930. Photo: Radio Pictures Collection: Geoffrey Donaldson Institute.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 5026/1, 1930-1931. Photo: Radio Pictures.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 5026/2, 1930-1931. Photo: Radio Pictures.

Tom Mix
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 5202/1, 1930-1931. Photo: Radio Pictures.


Tom Mix in Amsterdam and Berlin in 1925. Source: Eye Filmmuseum (YouTube).

Sources: Ed Stephan (IMDb), Wikipedia, and IMDb.

The eldest film stars in the world

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Today my father has his 94th birthday. My old man survived cancer - twice -, heart failure and a grasshoppers storm when he was a young man at sea. Last May, he and my mom had their 65th wedding anniversary. They received dozens of letters, emails, video messages, and flowers. There were two letters in the name of the Dutch Royal family to congratulate the happy couple. For today's birthday post, Ivo Blom and Marlene Pilaete did some research on film stars who are even older than my father. Dad will be pleased that many of the stars in this post are beautiful women.

Renée Simonot
French postcard in the Nos artistes dans leur loges series, no. 25. Photo: Comoedia.

Renée Simonot was born as Renée-Jeanne Deneuve in Le Havre, France, on 10 September 1911. The French actress was married to actor Maurice Dorléac and is the mother of the actresses Catherine Deneuve and Françoise Dorléac, and grandmother of the actors Christian Vadim and Chiara Mastroianni. At the age of 7, Renée debuted at the Odeon Theatre in 1918. Primarily a stage actress, she remained there for 28 years, holding the post of 'leading lady'. Her daughter Catherine chose to use her maiden name, Deneuve, as her stage name. Simonot is Renée's stage name, which she took from an opera singer and family friend. Renée Simonot was one of the first French actresses to begin the dubbing of American films in France from the beginning of the talkies in 1929 through the 1930s. She was the voice of Olivia de Havilland in most of her films. She had her first daughter, Danielle, in 1936 with actor Aimé Clariond. While dubbing for MGM, she met Maurice Dorléac and they married in 1940. The couple had three daughters: Françoise (1942-1967), Catherine (1943), and Sylvie (1946). Simonot has been a widow since 1979 and lives in Paris at age 108.

Marsha Hunt
British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, no. W105. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Collection: Marlene Pilaete.

American retired actress, model, and activist Marsha Hunt was born on 17 October 1917. She had a career spanning 73 years and appeared in many popular films including Pride and Prejudice (1940), Blossoms in the Dust (1942), Cry 'Havoc' (1943), The Human Comedy (1943), and Raw Deal (1948). She was blacklisted by Hollywood film studio executives in the 1950s during McCarthyism. In her later years, she has aided homeless shelters, supported same-sex marriage, raised awareness of climate change, and promoted peace in Third World countries.

Marge Champion
American vintage postcard. Collection: Marlene Pilaete.

Marge Champion, born 2 September 1919, is an American dancer and actress. At 14, she was hired as a dance model for Walt Disney's for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937). Later, Champion formed a highly successfully dancing team with her husband Gower Champion in many MGM musicals of the 1950s, and in their own TV series. She also became a well-known choreographer.

Marge Champion and Gower Champion
British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, London, no. D. 225. Photo: Paramount.

Paola Veneroni
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1941. Photo: Vaselli.

Italian actress Paola Veneroni was born in Milan on 15 January 1922. She debuted as the spying pupil in Vittorio De Sica's Maddalena, zero in condotta (1940), starring Carla Del Poggio. Although it was her first film part, she immediately made an impact. With Del Poggio and Nina Paoli she was the protagonist of Signorinette (Luigi Zampa, 1942), on three girls of 15-16 years old. After this film, she mostly played supporting parts. Veneroni stopped film acting at the end of the 1940s. In the later 1940s and early 1950s, she was also a voice actor for many American films. Veneroni also had a parallel career on the stage. She retired from acting after her marriage.

Micheline Presle
French postcard by Collection Chantal, Paris. no. 637. Photo: Discina, Paris.

French actress Micheline Presle, born on 22 August 1922, is well-known for films like Le diable au corps/Devil in the Flesh (Claude Autant-Lara, 1947), in which she plays the Red Cross nurse Martha who has an adulterous love affair with a young man (Gérard Philipe) during the First World War.

Janis Paige
Dutch postcard by Van Leer's Fotodrukindustrie N.V., Amsterdam, no. 1250. Photo: Warner Bros.

American film, musical theatre, and television actress Janis Paige was born on 16 September 1922 in Tacoma, Washington. She moved to Los Angeles after graduating from high school and was hired as a singer at the Hollywood Canteen during World War II. She began co-starring in low budget musicals and later co-starred in adventures and dramas. Stardom came in 1954 with her role as Babe in the Broadway musical 'The Pajama Game'. Paige returned to Hollywood in Silk Stockings (1957), and the Doris Day comedy Please Don't Eat the Daisies (1960).

Rhonda Fleming
Italian postcard by Rotalcolor.

American film and television actress Rhonda Fleming was born on 10 August 1923 in Hollywood, Los Angeles. She acted in more than forty films, mostly in the 1940s and 1950s, and became renowned as one of the most beautiful and glamorous actresses of her day. She was nicknamed the 'Queen of Technicolor' because her fair complexion and flaming red hair photographed exceptionally well in Technicolor.

Glynis Johns
British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, London, no. D 36. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

Husky voiced Glynis Johns was born Glynis Margaret P. Johns, on 5 October 1923 in Pretoria, South Africa. Her roots are in West Wales, and she was born in Pretoria while her parents were performing on tour there. The stage and film actress, dancer, pianist, and singer is best known for her film roles as a mermaid in the British comedy Miranda (1948) and as suffragette mother Winifred Banks in Walt Disney's Mary Poppins (1964). On Broadway, she created the role of Desiree Armfeldt in A Little Night Music, for which she won a Tony Award.

Eva Marie Saint
French postcard by Editions P.I., offered by Les Carbones Korès 'Carboplane', no. 877. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

Eva Marie Saint, born 4 July 1924, is an American actress with a career spanning 70 years. She is best known for starring in Elia Kazan's On the Waterfront (1954), for which she won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress, and Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest (1959). She received Golden Globe and BAFTA Award nominations for A Hatful of Rain (1957) and won a Primetime Emmy Award for the television miniseries People Like Us (1990).

June Lockhart
American postcard.

American actress June Lockhart was born on 25 June 1925. She is primarily known for her roles on television in the 1950s and 1960s television, but she also acted on stage and in films. Lockhart played mother roles in the TV series, Lassie (1958-1964) and Lost in Space (1965-1968), and also portrayed Dr. Janet Craig on the sitcom Petticoat Junction (1968–1970). She is a two-time Emmy Award nominee and a Tony Award winner.

Rosita Quintana in Serenata en México (1956)
German postcard by ISV, no. K 1. Photo: Deutsche Cimex / Jack Draper. Rosita Quintana in Serenata en México/Serenade in Mexico (Chano Urueta, 1956).

Argentine-Mexican actress, singer, and songwriter Rosita Quintana was born as Trinidad Quintana Nuñez de Kogan on 16 July 1925 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. She was one of the top stars of the Golden Age of the Mexican cinema. Quintana starred in Luis Buñuel's Susana (1951) and musical films such as Serenata en México (1956) and Cuando México canta (1958). As a singer, she is remembered in notable tangos and boleros, such as 'Bendita mentira'.

Arlene Dahl in Desert Legion (1953)
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano, no. 559. Photo: Universal International. Arlene Dahl in Desert Legion (Joseph Pevney, 1953).

Elegant American actress Arlene Dahl was born Arlene Carol Dahl in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on 11 August 1925. She is one of the last surviving stars from the Golden Age of Hollywood. The former MGM star achieved notability during the 1950s. She has three children, the eldest of whom is actor Lorenzo Lamas.

Angela Lansbury in The Red Danube (1949)
Belgian collectors card by Kwatta, Bois-D'Haine, no. C 238. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Publicity still for The Red Danube (George Sidney, 1949).

Strawberry blonde and blue-eyed Angela Lansbury was born as Angela Brigid Lansbury in Regent Park, London on 16 October 1925. She began her career as a teenager in the American films Gaslight (1944) and The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945). She was later known for her mother roles in films like The Manchurian Candidate (1962). In the 1980s, she obtained her greatest fame on TV as Jessica Fletcher in the mystery series Murder, She Wrote (1984).

Dick Van Dyke in Mary Poppins (1964)
French postcard by Les Presses de Belville, Paris, no. 103. Photo: Walt Disney Productions. Publicity still for Mary Poppins (Robert Stevenson, 1964).

Dick Van Dyke was born Richard Wayne Van Dyke in West Plains, US, on 13 December 1925. He is best remembered for his roles in a series of successful TV series and for his parts in family films of the 1960s, including Bert the chimney-sweep in the classic Mary Poppins (Robert Stevenson, 1964).

Jane Withers
British Real Photograph postcard, no. 122. Photo: Fox Films.

Jane Withers
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. A 2909/1, 1939-1940. Photo: 20th Century Fox. Collection: Marlene Pilaete.

Jane Withers, born 12 April 1926, is an American actress, model, and singer. She is known for being one of the most popular child film stars of the 1930s and early 1940s. Jane Withers is still around and has the high age of 94 years old.

Happy 94, dad! We keep our fingers crossed that everybody in this post lives in good health.

Mary Astor

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American film actress Mary Astor (1906–1987) was famous for her part as femme fatale Brigid O'Shaughnessy in The Maltese Falcon (1941), opposite Humphrey Bogart. She also won an Oscar as Best Supporting Actress for The Great Lie (1941). In an acting career that already started in the silent era, she made over 100 films.

Mary Astor
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4996/2, 1929-1930. Photo: Fox.

Mary Astor
Austrian postcard by Iris-Verlag, no. 5428. Photo: Fox.

The young girl with the haunting eyes and long auburn hair


Mary Astor was born as Lucile Vasconcellos Langhanke in Quincy, Illinois, in 1906. She was the only child of Otto Ludwig Langhanke and Helen Marie de Vasconcellos. Both of her parents were teachers. Astor's father taught German at Quincy High School until the U.S. entered World War I. Later on, he took up light farming. Astor's mother, who had always wanted to be an actress, taught drama and elocution.

Lucille was home-schooled in academics and was taught to play the piano by her father, who insisted she practice daily. Her piano talents came in handy when she later played piano in her films The Great Lie (Edmund Goulding, 1941) and Meet Me in St. Louis (Vincente Minnelli, 1944).

In 1919, Lucille sent a photograph of herself to a beauty contest in Motion Picture Magazine, becoming a semifinalist. The family moved to Chicago, Illinois, with her father teaching German in public schools. Lucille took drama lessons and appeared in various amateur stage productions. The following year, she sent another photograph to Motion Picture Magazine, this time becoming a finalist and then runner-up in the national contest.

Her father then moved the family to New York City, in order for his daughter to act in films. He managed her affairs from September 1920 to June 1930. A Manhattan photographer, Charles Albin, saw her photograph and asked the young girl with the haunting eyes and long auburn hair to pose for him. The Albin photographs were seen by Harry Durant of Famous Players-Lasky and Astor was signed to a six-month contract with Paramount Pictures. Her name was changed to Mary Astor during a conference among Paramount Pictures chief Jesse Lasky, film producer Walter Wanger, and gossip columnist Louella Parsons.

Mary Astor's first screen test was directed by Lillian Gish, who was so impressed with her recitation of William Shakespeare that she shot a thousand feet of her. She made her debut either in the Buster Keaton comedy The Scarecrow (Edward F. Cline, Buster Keaton, 1920) - according to IMDb, or in Sentimental Tommy (John S. Robertson, 1921) according to Wikipedia.

She then appeared in some short films with sequences based on famous paintings. She received critical recognition for the two-reeler The Beggar Maid (Herbert Blaché, 1921) with Reginald Denny. Her first feature-length film was John Smith (Victor Heerman, 1922), followed that same year by The Man Who Played God (F. Harmon Weight, 1922) starring George Arliss. In 1923, she and her parents moved to Hollywood. After appearing in several larger roles at various studios, she was again signed by Paramount, this time to a one-year contract at $500 a week.

After she appeared in several more films, John Barrymore saw her photograph in a magazine and wanted her cast in his upcoming film. On loan-out to Warner Bros., she starred with him in Beau Brummel (Harry Beaumont, 1924). The older actor wooed the young actress, but their relationship was severely constrained by Astor's parents' unwillingness to let the couple spend time alone together. Mary was seventeen and legally underage. It was only after Barrymore convinced the Langhankes that his acting lessons required privacy that the couple managed to be alone at all. Their secret engagement ended largely because of the Langhankes' interference and Astor's inability to escape their heavy-handed authority, and because Barrymore became involved with Astor's later fellow WAMPAS Baby Star Dolores Costello, whom he married.

In 1925, Astor's parents bought a Moorish style mansion with 1 acre (4,000 m2) of land known as Moorcrest in the hills above Hollywood. The Langhankes not only lived lavishly off of Astor's earnings but kept her a virtual prisoner inside Moorcrest. The following year when she was 19, Astor, fed up with her father's constant physical and psychological abuse as well as his control of her money, climbed from her second-floor bedroom window and escaped to a hotel in Hollywood, as recounted in her memoirs. She returned when Otto Langhanke gave her a savings account with $500 and the freedom to come and go as she pleased. Nevertheless, she did not gain control of her salary until she was 26 years old, at which point her parents sued her for financial support. Astor settled the case by agreeing to pay her parents $100 a month. Otto Langhanke put Moorcrest up for auction in the early 1930s, hoping to realise more than the $80,000 he had been offered for it; it sold for $25,000.

Mary Astor and Douglas Fairbanks in Don Q, Son of Zorro (1925)
Austrian postcard by Iris Verlag, no. 5205. Photo: United Artists. Mary Astor and Douglas Fairbanks in Don Q Son of Zorro (Donald Crisp, 1925).

Gilbert Roland and Mary Astor in Rose of the Golden West (1927)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3407/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Defina / First National. Gilbert Roland and Mary Astor in Rose of the Golden West (George Fitzmaurice, 1927).

Suffering delayed shock over her husband's death


Mary Astor continued to appear in films at various studios. When her Paramount contract ended in 1925, she was signed at Warner Bros. Among her assignments was another role with John Barrymore, this time in Don Juan (Alan Crosland, 1926). She was named one of the WAMPAS (Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers) Baby Stars in 1926, along with Mary Brian, Dolores Costello, Joan Crawford, Dolores del Río, Janet Gaynor, and Fay Wray.

On loan to Fox, Astor starred in Dressed to Kill (Irving Cummings, 1928), which received good reviews, and the sophisticated comedy Dry Martini (Harry d'Abbadie d'Arrast, 1928). When her Warner Bros. contract ended, she signed a contract with Fox for $3,750 a week. In 1928, she married director Kenneth Hawks (brother of Howard Hawks) at her family home, Moorcrest. He gave her a Packard automobile as a wedding present and the couple moved into a home high up on Lookout Mountain in Los Angeles above Beverly Hills.

As the film industry made the transition to talkies, Fox gave her a sound test, which she failed because the studio found her voice to be too deep. Though this result was probably due to early sound equipment and inexperienced technicians, the studio released her from her contract and she found herself out of work for eight months in 1929. Astor took voice training and singing lessons in her time off with Francis Stuart, an exponent of Francesco Lamperti, but no roles were offered. Her acting career was then given a boost by her friend, Florence Eldridge (wife of Fredric March), in whom she confided. Eldridge, who was to star in the stage play 'Among the Married' at the Majestic Theatre in Los Angeles, recommended Astor for the second female lead. The play was a success and her voice was deemed suitable, being described as low and vibrant.

In early 1930, while filming sequences for the Fox film Such Men Are Dangerous, Kenneth Hawks was killed in a mid-air plane crash over the Pacific. Astor had just finished a matinee performance at the Majestic when Florence Eldridge gave her the news. Astor remained with Eldridge at her apartment for some time, then returned to work. Shortly after her husband's death, she debuted in her first talkie, Ladies Love Brutes (Rowland V. Lee, 1930) at Paramount, in which she co-starred with George Bancroft and her friend Fredric March.

While her career picked up, her private life remained difficult. After working on several more films, she suffered delayed shock over her husband's death and had a nervous breakdown. During the months of her illness, Mary Astor was attended to by Dr. Franklyn Thorpe, whom she married in 1931. That year, she starred as Nancy Gibson in Smart Woman (Gregory La Cava, 1931), playing a woman determined to retrieve her husband from a gold-digging flirtation.

In 1932, the Thorpes purchased a yacht and sailed to Hawaii. Astor was expecting a baby in August but gave birth in June in Honolulu. The child, a daughter, was named Marylyn Hauoli Thorpe: her first name combined her parents' names and her middle name is Hawaiian. When they returned to California, Astor freelanced and gained the pivotal role of Barbara Willis in Red Dust (Victor Fleming, 1932) with Clark Gable and Jean Harlow. In late 1932, Astor signed a featured player contract with Warner Bros. Meanwhile, besides spending lavishly, her parents invested in the stock market, which often turned out unprofitable. While they remained in Moorcrest, Astor dubbed it a "white elephant", and she refused to maintain the house. She had to turn to the Motion Picture Relief Fund in 1933 to pay her bills.

She appeared as the female lead, Hilda Lake, niece of the murder victims, in The Kennel Murder Case (Michael Curtiz, 1933), co-starring with William Powell as detective Philo Vance. Soon unhappy with her marriage, due to Thorpe having a short temper and a habit of listing her faults, Astor wanted a divorce by 1933. At a friend's suggestion, she took a break from film-making in 1933 and visited New York alone. While there, enjoying a whirlwind social life, she met the playwright George S. Kaufman, who was in a strong but open marriage. She documented their affair in her diary. Thorpe, by now making use of his wife's income, had discovered Astor's diary. He indicated her liaisons with other men, including Kaufman, would be used to claim she was an unfit mother in any divorce proceedings.

Thorpe divorced Astor in April 1935. A legal battle drew press attention to Astor in 1936 when a custody battle resulted over their four-year-old daughter, Marylyn. Astor's diary was never formally offered as evidence during the trial, but Thorpe and his lawyers constantly referred to it, and its notoriety grew. Astor admitted that the diary existed and that she had documented her affair with Kaufman, but maintained that many of the parts that had been referred to were forgeries, following the theft of the diary from her desk. The diary was deemed inadmissible as a mutilated document because Thorpe had removed pages referring to himself and had fabricated content. The trial judge, Goodwin J. Knight, ordered it sealed and impounded.

News of the diary became public when Astor's role in Dodsworth (William Wyler, 1936), as Edith Cortwright, was beginning to be filmed. Producer Samuel Goldwyn was urged to fire her, as her contract included a morality clause, but Goldwyn refused. With Walter Huston in the title role, Dodsworth received rave reviews on release, and the public's acceptance assured the studios that casting Astor remained a viable proposition. Ultimately, the scandals caused no harm to Astor's career, which was actually revitalised because of the custody fight and the publicity it generated. In 1952, by court order, Astor's diary was removed from the bank vault where it had been sequestered for 16 years and destroyed.

Mary Astor
Spanish postcard by Editorial Grafica, Barcelona, in the Estrellas del Cine series, no. 126. Photo: First National.

Mary Astor
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3135/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Defina / First National.

Humdrum mothers for Metro


In 1937, Mary Astor returned to the stage in well-received productions of Noël Coward's 'Tonight at 8.30', 'The Astonished Heart', and 'Still Life'. She also began performing regularly on the radio. Over the next few years, she had roles in The Prisoner of Zenda (John Cromwell, 1937), John Ford's The Hurricane (1937), Midnight (Mitchell Leisen, 1939) and Brigham Young (Henry Hathaway, 1940), starring Tyrone Power. In John Huston's The Maltese Falcon (1941), Astor played scheming temptress and murderer Brigid O'Shaughnessy. The film also starred Humphrey Bogart and featured Peter Lorre and Sydney Greenstreet.

For her performance in The Great Lie (Edmund Goulding, 1941) she won an Oscar as Best Supporting Actress. As Sandra Kovak, the self-absorbed concert pianist who relinquishes her unborn child, her intermittent love interest was played by George Brent, but the film's star was Bette Davis. Davis wanted Astor cast in the role after watching her screen test and seeing her play Tchaikovsky's 'Piano Concerto no. 1'. She then recruited Astor to collaborate on rewriting the script, which Davis felt was mediocre and needed work to make it more interesting. Astor further followed Davis's advice and sported a bobbed hairdo for the role. The soundtrack of the film in the scenes where she plays the concerto, with violent hand movements on the piano keyboard, was dubbed by pianist Max Rabinovitch. Davis deliberately stepped back to allow Astor to shine in her key scenes. In her Oscar acceptance speech, Astor thanked Bette Davis and Tchaikovsky. Astor and Davis became good friends.

Astor was not propelled into the upper echelon of movie stars by these successes, however. She always declined offers of starring in her own right. Not wanting the responsibility of top billing and having to carry the picture, she preferred the security of being a featured player. She reunited with Humphrey Bogart and Sydney Greenstreet in John Huston's Across the Pacific (1942).

Though usually cast in dramatic or melodramatic roles, Astor showed a flair for comedy as The Princess Centimillia in the screwball comedy, The Palm Beach Story (Preston Sturges, 1942) with Claudette Colbert and Joel McCrea. In February 1943, Astor's father, Otto Langhanke, died in Cedars of Lebanon Hospital as a result of a heart attack complicated by influenza. His wife and daughter were at his bedside.

That same year, Astor signed a seven-year contract with MGM, a regrettable mistake. She was kept busy playing what she considered mediocre roles she called "Mothers for Metro". After Meet Me in St. Louis (Vincente Minnelli, 1944), the studio allowed her to debut on Broadway in 'Many Happy Returns' (1945). The play was a failure, but Astor received good reviews. On loan-out to 20th Century Fox, she played a wealthy widow in Claudia and David (Walter Lang, 1946). She was also loaned to Paramount to play Fritzi Haller in Desert Fury (Lewis Allen, 1947) playing the tough owner of a saloon and casino in a small mining town. In 1947 Helen Langhanke died of a heart ailment. Back at MGM, Astor continued being cast in undistinguished, colorless mother roles. One exception was when she played a prostitute in the Film Noir Act of Violence (Fred Zinnemann, 1948) with Van Heflin and Robert Ryan.

The last straw came when she was cast as Marmee March in Little Women (Mervyn LeRoy, 1949). Astor found no redemption in playing what she considered another humdrum mother and grew despondent. She later described her disappointment with her cast members and the shoot in her memoir 'A Life on Film'. The studio wanted to renew her contract, promising better roles, but she declined the offer. At the same time, Mary Astor's drinking was growing troublesome. She admitted to alcoholism as far back as the 1930s, but it had never interfered with her work schedule or performance. She hit bottom in 1949 and went into a sanitarium for alcoholics.

In 1951, she made a frantic call to her doctor and said that she had taken too many sleeping pills. She was taken to a hospital and the police reported that she had attempted suicide, this being her third overdose in two years, and the story made headline news. She maintained it had been an accident. That same year, she joined Alcoholics Anonymous and converted to Roman Catholicism. She credited her recovery to a priest, Peter Ciklic, also a practicing psychologist, who encouraged her to write about her experiences as part of therapy. She also separated from her fourth husband, Thomas Wheelock (a stockbroker she had married on Christmas Day 1945), but did not actually divorce him until 1955.

Mary Astor
Dutch postcard, no. 648. Photo: Warner Bros.

Mary Astor, Donald Cook and Gordon Westcott in The World Changes (1933)
British postcard in the Film Shots series by Film Weekly. Photo: Warner. Mary Astor, Donald Cook, and Gordon Westcott in The World Changes (Mervyn LeRoy, 1933).

A little old lady, waiting to die


In 1952, Mary Astor was cast in the leading role of the stage play 'The Time of the Cuckoo', which was later made into the film Summertime (David Lean, 1955) with Katharine Hepburn, and subsequently toured with it. After the tour, Astor lived in New York for four years and worked in the theatre and on television. During the 1952 presidential election, Astor, a lifelong Democrat, supported the campaign of Adlai Stevenson.

Her TV debut was in The Missing Years (1954) for Kraft Television Theatre. In 1954, she also appeared in the episode Fearful Hour of the Gary Merrill NBC series Justice in the role of a desperately poor and aging film star who attempts suicide to avoid exposure as a thief. She also played an ex-film star on the Boris Karloff-hosted Thriller, in an episode titled Rose's Last Summer (1960). During these years, she appeared on many big shows of the time, including Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1958-1959), Rawhide (1961), and Dr. Kildare (1963-1963).

She starred on Broadway again in 'The Starcross Story' (1954), another failure, and returned to Southern California in 1956. She then went on a successful theatre tour of 'Don Juan in Hell' directed by Agnes Moorehead and co-starring Ricardo Montalbán. Astor's memoir, 'My Story: An Autobiography', was published in 1959, becoming a sensation in its day and a bestseller. It was the result of Father Ciklic urging her to write. Though she spoke of her troubled personal life, her parents, her marriages, the scandals, her battle with alcoholism, and other areas of her life, she did not mention the film industry or her career in detail. In 1971, a second book was published, 'A Life on Film', where she discussed her career. It, too, became a bestseller.

Astor also tried her hand at fiction. She appeared in several films during this time, including A Kiss Before Dying (Gerd Oswald, 1956) with Robert Wagner, and A Stranger in My Arms (Helmut Käutner, 1959). Mary Astor made a comeback in Return to Peyton Place (José Ferrer, 1961) playing Roberta Carter, the domineering mother who insists the 'shocking' novel written by Allison Mackenzie should be banned from the school library and received good reviews for her performance.

After a trip around the world in 1964, Astor was lured away from her Malibu, California home, where she was gardening and working on her third novel. She was offered the small role as a key figure, Jewel Mayhew, in the murder mystery Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte (Robert Aldrich, 1964), starring her friend Bette Davis. In 'A Life on Film', she described her character as "a little old lady, waiting to die". Astor decided it would serve as her swan song in the film business. She only appeared in the drama Youngblood Hawke (Delmer Daves, 1964), which premiered before Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte. After 109 films in a career spanning 45 years, she turned in her Screen Actors Guild card and retired.

Astor later moved to Fountain Valley, California, where she lived near her son, Anthony del Campo (from her third marriage to Mexican film editor Manuel del Campo), and his family, until 1971. That same year, suffering from a chronic heart condition, she moved to a small cottage on the grounds of the Motion Picture & Television Country House, the industry's retirement facility in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, where she had a private table when she chose to eat in the resident dining room.

She appeared in the television documentary series Hollywood: A Celebration of the American Silent Film (1980), co-produced by Kevin Brownlow, in which she discussed her roles during the silent film period. Astor died in 1987, at age 81, of respiratory failure due to pulmonary emphysema while in the hospital at the Motion Picture House complex. She is interred in Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California. Astor has a motion pictures star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6701 Hollywood Boulevard.

Mary Astor
Belgian postcard. S.A. Cacao et Chocolat Kivou, Vilvoorde / N.V. Cacao en Chocolade Kivou, Vilvoorde.

Mary Astor
British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, London, no. 240b.

Sources: Wikipedia and IMDb.

Lucie Englisch

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Popular Austrian folk-actress Lucie Englisch (1902-1965) played both leading and supporting roles on stage, in films, and on television. As the native girl with the loose tongue, she was seen in countless comedies, in both leading and supporting parts.

Lucie Englisch
German collectors card in the Unsere Bunten Filmbilder series by Cigarettenfabrik Salem, Dresden, no. 221 (of 275). Photo: Albö-Film.

Lucie Englisch
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4889/1, 1929-1930. Photo: Alex Schmoll, Berlin.

Lucie Englisch
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 6944/1, 1931-1932. Photo: Becker & Maass, Berlin.

Lucie Englisch in Die kalte Mamsell (1933)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 7951/1, 1932-1933. Photo: Albö-Film. Lucie Englisch in Die kalte Mamsell/The Sandwich Girl (Carl Boese, 1933).

The starting shot of a great film career


Lucie Englisch was born as Aloisia Paula Englisch in 1902 in Leesdorf, Austria. She was the daughter of merchant Ernst Englisch and his wife Theresia, born Huemer.

Already as a schoolgirl, she worked as an extra at the Stadttheater of Baden near Wien (Vienna). In 1923 she made her stage debut at the Kurtheater in Baden. Engagements at the stages of Vienna followed.

From 1926 till 1928 she worked at the Neuen Theater in Frankfurt am Main. Since 1928 she worked in theatres in Berlin. She made her film debut in Die Nacht gehört uns/Night Is Ours (Carl Froelich, 1929) with Hans Albers. It marked the starting shot of a great film career.

In the following decades, Lucie Englisch appeared in more than 130 film roles. The 1930s were a very busy decade where she normally played naive employees in support roles. To her well-known films of the era belong Drei Tage Mittelarrest/Three Days in the Guardhouse (Carl Boese, 1930), Dienst ist Dienst/Duty Is Duty (Carl Boese, 1931), Die Gräfin von Monte Christo/The Countess of Monte Cristo (Karl Hartl, 1932) with Brigitte Helm, Meine Frau, die Schützenkönigin/My Wife the Champion Shot (Carl Boese, 1934), and Der lachende Dritte/The Laughing Third Party (Georg Zoch, 1936).

During the war the role offers were scarce but she did appear in productions like Der ungetreue Eckehart/Unfaithful Eckehart (Hubert Marischka, 1940) starring Hans Moser, So ein Früchtchen/What A Sweetie (Alfred Stöger, 1942) with Paul Hörbiger, and Fahrt ins Abenteuer/Trip Into Adventure (Jürgen von Alten, 1943).

Lucie Englisch
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 723, 1925-1926. Photo: Becker & Maass, Berlin.

Lucie Englisch
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 5701/1, 1930-1931. Photo: Atelier Fayer, Wien.

Lucie Englisch
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 6051/1, 1931-1932. Photo: Albo-Film.

Lucie Englisch
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. A 2730/1, 1939-1940. Photo: Sandau.

Shallow comedies and Heimatfilms


Lucie Englisch often appeared in comedies, both in leading and in supporting roles. Before the war, she had starred in comedies like Um eine Nasenlänge/By the Skin of His Teeth (Johannes Guter, 1931) with Siegfried Arno, and Pat und Patachon im Paradies/Long and Short in Paradise (Carl Lamac, 1937) opposite the Danish comedy team Fy og Bi (aka Long & Short).

The post-war film offered Lucie Englisch a lot of work again, but her roles were reduced to two-dimensional figures, and the quality of the films left much to be desired. Shallow comedies and Heimatfilms became her new field of activity.

To her comedies belong Der Theodor im FussballtorTheodore the Goalkeeper(E. W. Emo, 1950) with Theo Lingen and Hans Moser, Tante Jutta aus Kalkutta (Karl Georg Külb, 1953) with Ida Wüst, Seine Tochter ist der Peter/His Daughter Is Peter (Gustav Fröhlich, 1955), and Der letzte Fußgänger/The Last Pedestrian (Wilhelm Thiele, 1960) with Heinz Erhardt.

She also appeared in the vehicles for the Bavarian comedians Joe Stöckel and Beppo Brem, Wildwest in Oberbayern (Ferdinand Dörfler, 1951), Zwei Bayern in St. Pauli/Two Bavarians in St. Pauli (Hermann Kugelstadt, 1956), and Zwei Bayern im Urwald/Two Bavarians in the Jungle (Ludwig Bender, 1957).

Her Heimatfilms include Schwarzwaldmädel/The Black Forest Girl (Hans Deppe, 1950) with Sonja Ziemann, and Hubertusjagd (Hermann Kugelstadt, 1959) with Willy Fritsch. In the 1960s she moved over to television.

Lucie English died in 1965 in Erlangen, Germany, of liver disease. She was married to director Heinrich Fuchs (1896-1961) and had a son, Peter Fuchs (1933).

Lucie Englisch
German postcard by Film-Foto-Verlag, no. A 3481/1, 1939-1940. Photo: Baumann / Ufa.

Lucie Englisch
German postcard by Film-Foto-Verlag, no. A 3801/1, 1941-1944. Photo: Binz / Berlin-Film.

Lucie Englisch
German postcard by Ross Verlag. Published for "Das Programm von Heute" für Film und Theater G.m.b.H, Berlin. Photo: Vogelsang, Berlin.

Lucie Englisch in Die Fiakermilli (1953)
German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin W, no A 726. Photo: Schönbrun-Film / Constantin-Film. Lucie Englisch in Die Fiakermilli (Arthur Maria Rabenalt, 1953).

Sources: Thomas Staedeli (Cyranos), Wikipedia, and IMDb.

The Thief of Bagdad (1924)

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Douglas Fairbanks was the star of the magical adventure The Thief of Bagdad (1924), directed by Raoul Walsh. This Arabian Nights fantasy tells the story of a recalcitrant thief who falls in love with the beautiful daughter of the Caliph of Baghdad. The imaginative special effects, including a flying carpet, a magic rope, and fearsome monsters and the massive Arabian-style sets are still amazing. The Thief of Bagdad was a box-office failure in 1924, but now it is seen as one of the great silent Hollywood films and one of Fairbanks's greatest works.

Douglas Fairbanks in The Thief of Bagdad (1924)
French postcard by Cinémagazine-Edition, no. 168. Sent by mail in Belgium in 1925. Photo: United Artists. Douglas Fairbanks in The Thief of Bagdad (Raoul Walsh, 1924).

The Thief of Bagdad (1924)
Dutch poster by Frans Bosen for The Thief of Bagdad (Raoul Walsh, 1924) starring Douglas Fairbanks.

Douglas Fairbanks
Swedish postcard by Stenders Kunstforlag, no. 37. Douglas Fairbanks in The Thief of Bagdad (Raoul Walsh, 1924).

The thief and the princess


The Thief of Bagdad (1924) opens and closes with a Holy Man (Charles Belcher) who raises his arm towards the glittering stars in the heavens spelling out "Happiness Must Be Earned." In between these words, the moral of the story is told to a young lad how The Thief earned his happiness.

Douglas Fairbanks plays The Thief, who robs as he pleases in the crowded city of Bagdad. Bare-chested and sporting baggy pants, he lives up to his title picking pockets and stealing food from the ledge of a balcony. Wandering into a mosque, he tells the holy man he disdains his religion; his philosophy is, "What I want, I take."

That night, he sneaks into the palace of the caliph using a magic rope he stole during ritual prayers. All thoughts of plunder are forgotten when he sees the sleeping princess (Julanne Johnston), the caliph's daughter. The princess's Mongol slave (Anna May Wong) discovers him and alerts the guards, but he gets away.

When his evil associate (Snitz Edwards) reminds the disconsolate Ahmed that a bygone thief once stole another princess during the reign of Haroun al-Rashid, Ahmed sets out to do the same. The next day is the princess's birthday. Three princes arrive, seeking her hand in marriage and the future inheritance of the city. Another of the princess's slaves foretells that she will marry the man who first touches a rose-tree in her garden.

The princess watches anxiously as first the glowering Prince of the Indies (Noble Johnson), then the obese Prince of Persia (Mathilde Comont in travesty), and finally, the Prince of the Mongols (Sôjin Kamiyama) pass by the rose-tree. The mere sight of the Mongol fills the princess with fear, but when Ahmed appears (disguised in stolen garments as a suitor), she is delighted. The Mongol slave tells her countryman of the prophecy, but before he can touch the rose-tree, Ahmed's startled horse tosses its rider into it.

That night, following ancient custom, the princess chooses Ahmed for her husband. Out of love, Ahmed gives up his plan to abduct her and confesses all to her in private. The Mongol prince learns from his spy, the princess's Mongol slave, that Ahmed is a common thief and informs the caliph. Ahmed is lashed mercilessly, and the caliph (Brandon Hurst) orders that he is torn apart by a giant ape, but the princess has the guards bribed to let him go.

When the caliph insists that she select another husband, her loyal slave advises her to delay. She asks that the princes each bring her a gift after "seven moons"; she will marry the one who brings her the rarest. In despair, Ahmed turns to the holy man. He tells the thief to become a prince, revealing to him the peril-fraught path to a great treasure.

The Prince of the Indies obtains a magic crystal ball from the eye of a giant idol, which shows whatever he wants to see, while the Persian prince buys a flying carpet. The Mongol prince leaves behind his henchman, telling him to organise the soldiers he will send to Bagdad disguised as porters. The potentate has sought all along to take the city; the beautiful princess is only an added incentive. After he lays his hands on a magic apple that has the power to cure anything, even death, he sends word to the Mongol slave to poison the princess. After many adventures, Ahmed gains a cloak of invisibility and a small chest of magic powder which turns into whatever he wishes when he sprinkles it. He races back to the city.

The three princes meet as agreed at a caravansary before returning to Bagdad. The Mongol asks the Indian to check whether the princess has waited for them. They discover that she is near death, and ride the flying carpet to reach her. Then the Mongol uses the apple to cure her. The suitors argue over which gift is rarest, but the princess points out that without anyone's gift, the remaining two would have been useless in saving her life. Her loyal slave shows her Ahmed in the crystal ball, so the princess convinces her father to deliberate carefully on his future son-in-law. The Mongol prince chooses not to wait, unleashing his secret army that night and capturing Bagdad.

Ahmed arrives at the city gate, shut and manned by Mongols. When he conjures up a large army with his powder, the Mongol soldiers flee. The Mongol prince is about to have one of his men kill him when the Mongol slave suggests he escape with the princess on the flying carpet. Ahmed liberates the city and rescues the princess, using his cloak of invisibility to get through the Mongols guarding their prince. In gratitude, the caliph gives his daughter to him in marriage.

Douglas Fairbanks in The Thief of Bagdad (1924)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 40/1. Photo: IFA / United Artists. Douglas Fairbanks in The Thief of Bagdad (Raoul Walsh, 1924).

Douglas Fairbanks in The Thief of Bagdad (1924)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 40/2. Photo: IFA / United Artists. Douglas Fairbanks in The Thief of Bagdad (Raoul Walsh, 1924).

Almost every frame is a work of art


With The Thief of Bagdad, Douglas Fairbanks sought to make an epic. The film was lavishly staged on a Hollywood studio set, at a reputed cost of $1,135,654.65. It was one of the most expensive films of the 1920s.

The Thief of Bagdad (1924) was made when Fairbanks was halfway through the heyday of that part of his career. He already had The Mark of Zorro (Fred Niblo, 1920), The Three Musketeers (Fred Niblo, 1921), and Robin Hood (Allan Dwan, 1922) behind him. The Thief was something of a departure, for it depended less on Fairbanks's ability to dance his way through physical stunts than it did on the Arabian Nights tableau which is presented on the screen.

Art director William Cameron Menzies was largely responsible for the production design. He closely followed the requirements laid down by Fairbanks, who acted as writer, producer, and star. Fairbanks' meticulous attention to detail, as well as complex visual imagery, required the use of state-of-the-art special effects, featuring a magic rope, a flying horse, a flying carpet, underwater sea monsters, and full-scale palace sets. Almost every frame is a work of art and amazingly, this was done long before computer animation.

Lugonian at IMDb: "The Thief of Bagdad is Douglas Fairbanks' finest hours on screen. Aside from being in a faraway land, Doug resumes his athletic skills as in previous films, ranging from visual stunts to his trademark smile. It's unlike anything he has ever done before and something that could only be accomplished on the screen once. Reportedly the first million-dollar production, every penny of it shows on screen."

Janiss Garza at AllMovie: " Fairbanks stole some of the special effects for his film from Fritz Lang's Der Müde Tod, which he had purchased for American distribution. The Thief of Baghdad, with its look of unrealistic beauty (courtesy of art director William Cameron Menzies), was not fully appreciated in its day. Because of its huge cost (two million dollars -- a real fortune in those days), it made little money. After that, Fairbanks stuck closer to the swashbuckling persona he felt his audience wanted."

In 1940, am excellent Technicolor remade was made under the same name, The Thief of Bagdad (Ludwig Berger, Michael Powell, Tim Whelan, Alexander Korda, Zoltan Korda, William Cameron Menzies, 1940) with June Deprez as the Princess and Conrad Veidt as Jaffar. The title character was played by Sabu, who was a sidekick for a handsome prince, John Justin as Prince Ahmad, rather than the leading man. The Fairbanks version doesn't include a genie from the magic lamp granting three wishes, but this version does.

A little more than thirty-five years later, M.G. Ramachandran assumed the role of Ali, the thief of Baghdad in the Indian production Baghdad Thirudan/Baghdad (T.R. Sundaram, 1960). The 1924 film was directly remade in Europe as Il Ladro di Bagdad/Thief of Bagdad (Bruno Vailati, Arthur Lubin, 1961), with Steve Reeves in the lead and Giorgia Moll as Princess Amina. In 1978, a made-for-television film, The Thief of Baghdad (Clive Donner 1978) starring Kabir Bedi and Roddy McDowall as Hasan the Thief, combined plot elements of these with others from the Sabu version.

Douglas Fairbanks in The Thief of Bagdad (1924)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 40/3. Photo: IFA / United Artists. Douglas Fairbanks in The Thief of Bagdad (Raoul Walsh, 1924).

Douglas Fairbanks and Julanne Johnston in The Thief of Bagdad (1924)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 40/4. Photo: IFA / United Artists. Douglas Fairbanks in The Thief of Bagdad (Raoul Walsh, 1924). Julanne Johnston played the Princess.

Sources: Lugonian (IMDb), Janiss Garza (AllMovie), Wikipedia, and IMDb.

Anneliese Kaplan (1933-2020)

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On 11 August 2020, German actress Anneliese Kaplan (1933-2020) passed away. She played supporting parts in several films during the 1950s. Kaplan was married to the prolific film composer Martin Böttcher. She was 87.

Anneliese Kaplan (1933-2020)
West-German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin, no. A 1054. Photo: CCC / Allianz / Grimm. Anneliese Kaplan in Der Raub der Sabinerinnen/The Robbery of the Sabine Women (Kurt Hoffmann, 1954).

Ten films in two years


Anneliese Herta (some sources say Berta) Kaplan was born in 1933 in Hamburg. She was the daughter of the painter Martin Richard Kaplan.

After attending the master school for fashion, she studied acting with Gisela von Collande. From 1953 she worked in various West-German film productions.

She started in such films as the musical Käpt'n Bay-Bay/Captain Bay-Bay (Helmut Käutner, 1953) with Hans Albers, the Operetta film Der letzte Walzer/The Last Waltz (Arthur Maria Rabenalt, 1953) with Eva Bartok and Curd Jürgens, and the comedy Der Raub der Sabinerinnen/The Robbery of the Sabine Women (Kurt Hoffmann, 1954) with Paul Hörbiger, Fita Benkhoff, and Gustav Knuth.

Anneliese Kaplan played the female lead in the musical Sonne über der Adria/Sun Over the Adriatic (Karl Georg Külb, 1954) opposite Joachim Brennecke. It was made as a co-production between West-Germany and Yugoslavia.

Then followed smaller parts and in 1955, she made her final film, the Heimatfilm Der Fischer vom Heiligensee/The Fisherman from Heiligensee (Hans H. König, 1955) with Edith Mill, Lil Dagover and Albert Lieven. The sources give no clue why her career stopped after two years and ten films.

Kaplan was married to the film composer Martin Böttcher, who composed the score for ten of the Karl May films and also many Edgar Wallace thrillers. The couple lived in a house in Westerrönfeld until Martin Böttcher's death in 2019. They had two daughters together, one of whom died of leukemia at the age of 26.

Annelies Kaplan passed away on 11 August 2020 in Westerrönfeld, Germany, at the age of 87.

Anneliese Kaplan (1933-2020)
West-German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin, no. A 996. Photo: Carlton / NF / Brünjes. Anneliese Kaplan in Meines Vaters Pferde/My Father's Horses (Gerhard Lamprecht, 1954).

Anneliese Kaplan in Zwischenlandung in Paris (1955)
West-German postcard by Franz Josef Rüdel, Filmpostkartenverlag, Hamburg-Bergedorf, no. 1287. Photo: Corona / Schorchtfilm. Anneliese Kaplan in Zwischenlandung in Paris/Danger Flight 931 (Jean Dréville, 1955).

Sources: Wikipedia (German and English), and IMDb.

Photo by Pinto

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All the stars of the silent Italian cinema seemed to visit Studio Pinto in Rome. Their portraits by Pinto graced many postcards by Ed. A. Traldi in Italy, but can also be found on several Ross Verlag postcards. Little is known about the studio.

Francesca Bertini
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 306. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

During the first quarter of the twentieth century, Francesca Bertini (1892-1985) was a majestic diva of the Italian silent cinema. She often played the 'femme fatale', with men devouring eyes, glamorous attire, clenched fists, and in opulent settings...

Livio Pavanelli
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 5. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Livio Pavanelli (1881-1958) was an Italian actor of the Italian and in particular German silent cinema. He also worked in Italian sound cinema as an actor and as a production manager. He directed four Italian films, both in the silent and the sound era.

Mario Parpagnoli
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 35. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Mario Parpagnoli (?-?) was an Italian actor and director, whose career peaked in the Italian silent cinema of the late 1910s and early 1920s.

Tilde Kassay
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 313. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Tilde Kassay(1887-1964), was an Italian silent film actress. Between 1915 and 1921 she played in 17 films directed by the greatest directors of the time, in particular Camillo De Riso, Gustavo Serena, and Giulio Antamoro.

Claretta Rosaj
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 314, Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Claretta Rosaj aka Clarette Rosaj and Claretta Rosay (1893-?) was an Italian actress, who peaked in Italian silent cinema between 1918 and 1923.

Bianca Stagno Bellincioni
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 318. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Bianca Stagno Bellincioni (1888-1980) was an Italian actress and soprano.

Vera Vergani
Italian postcard by Edizione A. Traldi, Milano, no. 321. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Vera Vergani (1894-1989) was an Italian stage and film actress. She not only performed in the first stagings of Luigi Pirandello’s plays but in 1916-1921 she also knew a career as an actress in the Italian silent cinema.

Mina D'Orvella
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 336. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Mina d'Orvella (?-?) is a little known actress who had a short but intense career in the Italian silent cinema in the years 1919-1921.

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 377. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Fascinating and enigmatic Pina Menichelli (1890-1984) was the most bizarre Italian diva of the silent era. With her contorted postures and disdainful expression, she impersonated the striking femme fatale.

Cecyl Tryan
Italian postcard bt Ed. A Traldi, Milano, no. 399. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Cecyl Tryan (1897-?) had a prolific career in the Italian silent cinema, from 1913 until the late 1920s. She first starred at Cines, later also at companies like Gladiator Film and Fert.

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 409. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 410. Photo: Pinto.

Fascinating and enigmatic Pina Menichelli (1890-1984) was the most bizarre Italian diva of the silent era. With her contorted postures and disdainful expression, she impersonated the striking femme fatale.

Elena Sangro
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 437. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Elena Sangro (1896-1969) was one of the main actresses of the Italian cinema of the 1920s. In spite of the general film crisis then, she made one film after another. She was also one of the first female directors and she had a famous affair with the poet and writer Gabriele D'Annunzio.

Edy Darclea
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 609. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Edy Darclea (1895-?) was an Italian actress who was active in Italian and foreign silent cinema in the late 1920s and early 1920s.

Maria Roasio
Italian postcard by Ed. Traldi, no. 634. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Maria Roasio (?-?) was an Italian actress, who acted in the late 1910s and early 1920s in Italian silent cinema, in particular at Ambrosio.

Rina de Liguoro
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 865. Photo: Pinto, Roma. Rina De Liguoro as Anita Garibaldi in Anita/Il romanzo d'amore dell'eroe dei due mondi (Aldo De Benedetti, 1926).

Rina De Liguoro
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 882. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Rina De Liguoro(1892-1966) had her breakthrough with the epic Messalina (1924). It was the start of a prolific career in Italian silent cinema in the 1920s with Quo vadis? (1924) and Gli ultimi giorni di Pompeii (1926). In the late 1920s, she also performed in Germany and France, e.g. in Casanova (1927). Invited to Hollywood in 1930, she had only minor parts there, but she pursued a career as a piano player. She returned to Italy in 1939. Her last role was that of Burt Lancaster's table companion at the ball in Luchino Visconti'Il Gattopardo (1963).

Hesperia
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Roma. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Hesperia (1885-1959), was one of the Italian divas of the silent screen. She often worked with director Baldassarre Negroni, who later became her husband.

Alfonso Cassini
Italian postcard by Ed. Traldi, Milano. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Alfonso Cassini (1858-1921) was an Italian actor of theater and silent cinema.

André Habay
Italian postcard by Ed. Vettori, Bologna, no. 352. Photo Pinto, Roma. André Habay is misspelled here as 'Kabaj'.

André Habay aka Andrea Habay (1883-1941) was an actor in Italian silent cinema, mainly in modern dramas and diva films such as Sangue blu (1914) and Rapsodia satanica (1917), but also in epics such as Quo vadis? (1925).

Leda Gys
Italian postcard by Ed. Vettori, Bologna, no. 402bis. Foto: Pinto, Roma.

Leda Gys(1892-1957) was an Italian actress of the silent screen. Often she played pathetic roles of the romantic and innocent young woman, the victim of loose mothers, unfaithful husbands, adventurers, etc. Her claim to fame came in particular with the film Christus (Giulio Antamoro, 1916), shot in Egypt and Palestine, where Gys performed the Madonna.

Rina de Liguoro
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3902/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Pinto, Rome.

Rina De Liguoro (1892-1966).

Evi Maltagliati

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Evi Maltagliati (1908–1986) was an Italian stage and screen actress, who worked in Italian cinema between the later 1930s and the early 1970s.

Evi Maltagliati
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1938. Photo: Manenti Film.

Evi Maltagliati in Il nemico (1943)
Italian postcard by ASER, no. 322. Photo: Vaselli / Juventus Film. Evi Maltagliati in Il nemico/The enemy (Guglielmo Giannini, 1943).

A midsummer night's dream


Evi, originally Evelina, Maltagliati was born in Florence on 11 August 1908.

She made her debut on the stage at the age of fifteen in the company of Dina Galli. With a strong dramatic temperament, she also stood out for her eclecticism and worked with the biggest names in the theatre: from Maria Melato to Max Reinhardt.

In 1933, Max Reinhardt entrusted her with the role of Titania in his Italian staging of 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' with a.o. Carlo Lombardi, Cele Abba, Giovanni Cimara, Nerio Bernardi, Rina Morelli, Luigi Almirante, and Memo Benassi at the Boboli Gardens in Florence.

On stage, Maltagliati also worked with Gino Cervi, Sergio Tofano, and Carlo Ninchi. She set up a company of young talents: Vittorio Gassman, Tino Buazzelli, and Nino Manfredi.

She often acted in films and later on also for television, playing in several television dramas including Il romanzo di un giovane povero/The novel of a poor young man (Silverio Blasi, 1957) and La figlia del capitano/The captain's daughter (Leonardo Cortese, 1965). She was also active as a voice actress.

Evi Maltagliati in I promessi sposi (1941)
Italian postcard by S.A. Grafitalia, Milano (Milan). Photo: Film Lux. Evi Maltagliati as the Nun of Monza in I promessi Sposi/The Spirit and the Flesh (Mario Camerini, 1941), adapted from the classic novel 'I promessi sposi' (The Betrothed) by Alessandro Manzoni.

Dina Sassoli in I promessi sposi (1941)
Italian postcard by S.A. Grafitalia, Milano (Milan), no. 10. Photo: Film Lux. Publicity still for I Promessi Sposi/The Spirit and the Flesh (Mario Camerini, 1941). Dina Sassoli as Lucia Mondella and Eva Maltagliati as the Nun of Monza.

The nun of Monza


In 1934 Evi Maltagliati debuted on the silver screen in La fanciulla dell'altro mondo/The Girl from the Other World (Gennaro Righelli, 1934).

In Alessandro Blasetti's Aldebaran (1935), she is the frivolous wife of a navy commander (Gino Cervi), who must choose between duty and his wife's jealousy. The film was an attempt by Blasetti to make a more commercial film after the badly received propaganda film Vecchia Guardia.

In I due sergenti/The Two Sergeants (Enrico Guazzoni, 1936), Maltagliati is the British femme fatale who seduces a French soldier (Antonio Centa) to steal an important document from his superior (Gino Cervi).

In Jeanne Doré (Mario Bonnard, 1938), she is a married woman whose lover (Leonardo Cortese) has killed a man for her. In the Manzoni adaptation, I promessi sposi/The Spirit and the Flesh (Mario Camerini, 1941), she played the Nun of Monza.

In Sissignora (Ferdinando Maria Poggioli, 1941), she plays a widow who leaves her child in the custody of a young girl (Maria Denis), not telling her the child has chickenpox, thus infecting the girl, who eventually dies of it.

Sissignora
Italian postcard for the Italian sound film Sissignora (Ferdinando Maria Poggioli, 1941), starring Maria Denis. Here with Evi Maltagliati and Silverio Pisu.

Evi Maltagliati and Filippo Scelzo in Cesare
Italian photo. There are a few possibilities here: either this is Evi Maltagliati opposite Filippo Scelzo in 'Cesare' by Gioacchino Forzano  in 1939 or 1949.

Buried alive


After the war, Evi Maltagliati, now of mature age, often played mothers in films, e.g. the mother of Milly Vitale in the tearjerker La sepolta viva/Buried Alive (Guido Brignone, 1949), the mother of Yvonne Sanson in Brignone's melodrama Noi peccatori/We sinners (Guido Brignone, 1953), and the mother of Franco Interlenghi in Michelangelo Antonioni's I vinti/The Vanquished (1953),

Later, she was also the mother of Ulysses (Kirk Douglas) in Ulisse/Ulysses (Mario Camerini, 1954), and the mother of Virna Lisi in Il padrone delle ferriere/The master of ironworks (Anton Giulio Majano, 1959).

In the early sixties, Maltagliati was still visible in various films, including a return to her former role of the nun of Monza. However, this time she was the abbess in La monaca di Monza/The Nun of Monza (Carmine Gallone, 1962), while the title role was for Giovanna Ralli.

Maltagliati played her final film role in the French film L'affaire Dominici/The Dominici Affair (Claude Bernard-Aubert, 1972), starring Jean Gabin.

Evi Maltagliati died in Rome in 1986, at the age of 77. She was married to comedian Eugenio Cappabianca.
Evi Maltagliati
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C. Milano, 1937. Photo: Barzacchi.

Evi Maltagliati
Italian postcard by Bromostampa, Milano.

Sources: Wikipedia (Italian), and IMDb.

The World of Rizzoli, Part 1: 1936

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During the dictatorship of Benito Mussolini, Rizzoli in Milan was one of the most prominent publishers of film star postcards in Italy. Director was Angelo Rizzoli, who also was a film producer. Through the years, Ivo Blom collected many of the Rizzoli cards with their glamorous portraits and remarkable colours. Ivo is not only interested in the cards because of their beauty, but also because they illustrate the story of the Italian film industry between 1936 and 1943 in an original way. In a series of posts, Ivo chooses his favourite Rizzoli cards and describes what happed in Italy in this turbulent period.

Gloria Stuart
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936. Photo: Fox - 20th Century.

American actress Gloria Stuart (1910-2010) was initially known for her roles in Pre-Code films, including James Whale's horror films The Old Dark House (1932) and The Invisible Man (1933). Later in life, she would garner renewed fame for her portrayal of Rose DeWitt Bukater in James Cameron's Titanic (1997). In 1935, she had success with Busby Berkeley's Gold Diggers of 1935 and the following year, she co-starred with Shirley Temple in Poor Little Rich Girl (Irving Cummings, 1936).

Irene Dunne
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936. Photo: Radio Pictures (RKO).

American actress and singer Irene Dunne (1898-1990) was a top Hollywood star between the 1930s and the early 1950s. During her career, she got five Oscar nominations but never won one. In 1936, Dunne was the star of the musical Show Boat (James Whale, 1936).

Barbara Stanwyck
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936. Photo: Fox - 20th Century.

Barbara Stanwyck (1907-1990) was an American film and television star, known during her 60-year career as a consummate and versatile professional with a strong, realistic screen presence. By 1944 Stanwyck had become the highest-paid woman in the United States. She was a favourite of her directors including Cecil B. DeMille, Fritz Lang, and Frank Capra. After a short but notable career as a stage actress in the late 1920s, she made 85 films in 38 years in Hollywood, before turning to television.

Wallace Beery
Italian postcard by Rizzoli, 1936. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Wallace Beery in Westpoint of the Air (Richard Rosson, 1935).

American actor Wallace Beery (1885-1949) is best known for his portrayal of Bill in Min and Bill opposite Marie Dressler, as Long John Silver in Treasure Island, as Pancho Villa in Viva Villa!, and his titular role in The Champ, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Actor. Beery appeared in some 250 films in a 36-year career. He and Barbara Stanwyck co-starred in 1936 in A Message to Garcia (George Marshall, 1936).

Janet Gaynor
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

Petite Janet Gaynor (1906-1984) was the innocent-eyed, round-faced Hollywood star who won the first Academy Award for best actress for her roles in three silent films. She went on to become a popular leading lady in talking pictures. By 1934 she was receiving a yearly salary of $252,583 from Fox, making her Hollywood's most highly paid actress. Her films in these years include Change of Heart (John G. Blystone, 1934), The Farmer Takes a Wife (Victor Fleming, 1935), and Small Town Girl (William A. Wellman, 1936).

The publishers


In the 1920s and 1930s two Milanese editorial companies, Rizzoli and Mondadori, took the lead in founding a series of women magazines, using the new technique of the rotogravure.

In particular, Rizzoli made its mark with illustrated magazines such as Novella, afterward taken over by Mondadori, and becoming one of the leading women’s magazines.

To Rizzoli’s new magazines were added Cinema Illustrazione (with later merged with Cinema Illustrato), Lei (which became Annabella in 1938), Omnibus, and Oggi. In the 1930s Rizzoli also took over another important film magazine, Cine-Romanzo (founded in 1929).

Cine-Romanzo and Cine-Illustrazione had a strong focus on Hollywood and the life of the stars, both on the set and in private life.

Maurice Chevalier
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

Maurice Chevalier (1888-1972) was a French actor, singer, and entertainer. His trademark was a casual straw hat, which he always wore on stage with a cane and a tuxedo. In 1934, he appeared in the MGM musical The Merry Widow (Ernst Lubitsch, 1934) opposite Jeanette MacDonald. The two repeated their roles in the French version, La Veuve joyeuse (Ernst Lubitsch, 1935). For other studios, he appeared in the multi-language films Folies Bergère de Paris/L'homme des Folies Bergère (Roy Del Ruth, Marcel Achard, 1935), and The Beloved Vagabond/Le vagabond bien-aimé (Kurt (Curtis) Bernhardt, 1936).

Jeanette MacDonald
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

Red-headed and blue-green eyed operatic singer Jeanette MacDonald (1903-1965) was discovered for the cinema by Ernst Lubitsch, who cast her opposite Maurice Chevalier in The Love Parade (1929) and later in The Merry Widow (1934). 'The Iron Butterfly' also co-starred with Nelson Eddy in a string of successful musicals including Naughty Marietta (W.S. Van Dyke, 1935) and Rose-Marie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1936). And she played opposite Clark Gable in San Francisco (W.S. Van Dyke, 1936).

Norma Shearer
Italian postcard by Rizzoli, 1936. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

American actress Norma Shearer (1902-1983) was the 'First Lady of MGM'. She won a beauty contest at age fourteen. Her first talkie was The Trial of Mary Dugan (Bayard Veiller, 1929). Four films later, she won an Oscar for The Divorcee (Robert Z. Leonard, 1930). In 1936 Shearer starred opposite Leslie Howard in Romeo and Juliet (George Cukor, 1936), for which she got her fifth Oscar nomination.

Merle Oberon
Italian postcard. Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1940. London Films.

Indian-born British actress Merle Oberon (1911-1979) had her breakthrough as Anna Boleyn in Alexander Korda's The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933). She played leading roles in such British films as The Scarlet Pimpernel (Alexander Korda, 1934), before she travelled to Hollywood to star in classics as The Dark Angel (Sidney Franklin, 1935) and Wuthering Heights (William Wyler, 1939). Oberon also starred in 1936 in These Three (William Wyler, 1936) and Beloved Enemy (H.C. Potter, 1936).

Marta Eggerth
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936. Photo: Universal.

Hungarian-born singer and actress Márta Eggerth (1912-2013) maintained a global career for over 70 years. She was the popular and talented star of 30 German and Austrian operetta films of the 1930s. Many of the 20th century's most famous operetta composers, including Franz Lehár, Fritz Kreisler, Robert Stolz, Oscar Straus, and Paul Abraham, composed works especially for her. In 1936, Eggerth starred in Das Hofkonzert/The Court Concert (Detlef Sierck a.k.a. Douglas Sirk, 1936). Later, she continued her career with her partner Jan Kiepura in the US.

The film industry


In the 1930s Hollywood reigned on the Italian screens, despite the revival of the Italian film industry in the early 1930s. The industry revived thanks to private initiative, mainly by producer Stefano Pittaluga, who revived the old Cines in 1930 and equipped it for sound cinema.

Gradually the Italian State stimulated the film industry as well, inspired by Hollywood and Germany. The Venice film festival was founded in 1932 (the oldest European film festival). In 1935, the new film school Centro Sperimentale was founded, the first film academy of Western Europe.

A separate section on film was founded at the Ministry of Press and Propaganda, stimulating national production but also strictly controlling the output by severe censorship of scripts and films. In Italy, there was state censorship instead of the auto-censorship of the major studios in the US under the Production Code.

Yet, the old Cines studio burned down in 1935, creating a big gap in film production. This was partly filled up by a film studio outside of Rome, between Pisa and Livorno, the so-called Pisorno Studios at Tirrenia, near the Tuscan coast. This complex was built 1933-1934 as a competitor to the Cines, supported by the fascist state.

In the mid-1930s, the Pisorno studios reigned, but after the opening of Cinecittà Studios in Rome (1937), also backed by the regime, and the founding of the Roman company Scalera (1938), they got fierce competition.

Joan Blondell
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936. Photo: Warner Bros.

American actress Joan Blondell (1906–1979) performed in more than 100 films and on television for five decades, often as the wisecracking blonde. Examples of her films are Dames (Ray Enright, Busby Berkeley, 1934), Bullets or Ballots (William Keighley, 1936) and Gold Diggers of 1937 (Lloyd Bacon, 1936).

Ann Sothern
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936. Photo: Columbia EIA.

American actress Ann Sothern (1909-2001) had a career on stage, radio, film, and television, that spanned nearly six decades. For Columbia, she starred in such films as the mystery Grand Exit (Erle C. Kenton, 1935), and the crime drama You May Be Next! (Albert S. Rogell, 1936).

Maria Denis
Italian postcard by Rizzoli, Milano, 1936.

María Denis (1916-2004) was one of the most popular stars of the Italian cinema under the Fascist rule. Very successful were her Telefoni Bianchi-films of the 1930s. Charges of collaboration tarnished her career after the war. Controversial are her claims that she had not been the mistress of Nazi police chief Pietro Koch and just used his infatuation with her to help anti-fascists get released, especially film director Luchino Visconti. In 1936, Denis appeared in Joe il rosso/Joe the Red (Raffaello Matarazzo, 1936).

Paola Barbara
Italian postcard by Rizzoli, Milan, 1936-XV.

Paola Barbara (1912-1989) was an Italian actress who acted in over 60 films but also worked on stage and for television. She is best known for the film La peccatrice (Amleto Palermi, 1940). Barbara started her film career in films such as Campo di maggio/100 Days of Napoleon (Giovacchino Forzano, 1936)

Elisa Cegani
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936.

Elisa Cegani (1911–1996) was one of the most representative actresses of Italian cinema of the 1930s and 1940s. Cegani co-starred with Amedeo Nazzari in Cavalleria/Cavalry (Goffredo Alessandrini, 1936).

A crucial year


1936 was a crucial year: the Spanish Civil War broke out, the Olympic Games took place in Germany: in Garmisch-Partenkirchen during the winter and in Berlin during the summer, countries started building up their navies, and Hitler occupied the Rhine territories.

Italy conquered Abyssinia and crowned the king to Emperor of Ethiopia, the German-Italian pact was signed, and Fiat launched its first 500 ‘Topolino’ car. And the Venice Film Festival used for the first time an International Jury, while the prestige of the event was consolidated with the presence of many important guests.

In Venice were such directors as Frank Capra who presented Mr. Deeds Goes to Town/È arrivata la felicità with Gary Cooper and John Ford who presented Mary of Scotland/Maria di Scozia with Katharine Hepburn, but also Max Ophüls with La tendre ennemie/La nostra compagna, René Clair with The Ghost Goes West/Il fantasma galante with Robert Donat and Jean Parker, Josef von Sternberg with The King Steps Out/Desiderio di re, and Marcel L'Herbier with Veille d’armes/Sacrifice of Honor with Annabella.

The greatest public success, however, was the result of the Italian star Amedeo Nazzari. The Mussolini Cup for the best Italian film was awarded to Augusto Genina's Lo squadrone bianco/The White Squadron, starring Nazzari. The cup for the best foreign film would see the triumph of Der Kaiser von Kalifornien by and with the Süd-Tirolian actor Luis Trenker.

The best actors of this edition were Paul Muni, awarded for The Life of Doctor Pasteur, and Annabella, the protagonist of Veille d’armes. That same year in Hollywood, the Oscars went to The Great Ziegfeld, Frank Capra, Paul Muni, and Luise Rainer, the star of The Great Ziegfeld.

Assia Noris
Italian postcard by Ed. Rizzoli, Milano, 1936.

Assia Noris (1912-1998) is best remembered as the female star of the 1930s romantic comedies by Mario Camerini. Noris had in 1935 success with Darò un milione/I'll Give a Million (Mario Camerini, 1935), and two years later again with Il signor Max/Mister Max (Mario Camerini, 1937). In both comedies, she co-starred with Vittorio De Sica.

Silvana Jachino
Italian postcard by Rizzoli, Milano, 1936.

Silvana Jachino (1916-2004) was an Italian stage and film actress, who was successful and popular in the 1930s and 1940s. She started her career in 1936 in such films as Cavalleria/Cavalry (Goffredo Alessandrini, 1936).

Vittorio de Sica
Italian postcard by Rizzoli S.C., Milano, 1936.

Italian director Vittorio De Sica (1901-1974) is well-known as a leading figure in the postwar Neorealist movement. De Sica directed 34 feature films, for which he won numerous international prizes including four Oscars. As an actor, he made more than 150 films and is best known for his bright and charming roles in earthy comedies opposite sex goddesses Gina Lollobrigida and Sophia Loren. In the 1930s De Sica started in film as a popular matinee idol, after a career in music-hall and on the radio.

Elsa Merlini
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & Co, Milano, 1936.

Elsa Merlini (1903-1983) was a star of the Italian cinema of the 1930s. She excelled in the so-called 'telefoni bianchi' (white telephone comedies). With Vittorio de Sica, she co-starred in 1936 in the musical comedy Non ti conosco più/I Don't Know You Anymore (Nunzio Malasomma, Mario Bonnard, 1936).

Hilda Springher
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936.

Little known Hilda Springher (1909-1978) was an actress who played in six Italian sound films from the 1930s, within the genre of the 'Telefoni Bianchi' comedies. She did also vaudeville with Macario, Dapporto, and Wanda Osiris.

Rochelle Hudson
Italian postcard by Rizzoli & C., Milano, 1936. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

American film actress Rochelle Hudson (1916–1972) appeared in Hollywood films from the early 1930s through the 1960s. Her roles went from ingenue to leading lady to character actress. She is best remembered for co-starring in the tense and gripping social drama Wild Boys of the Road (William A. Wellman, 1933), playing Cosette in Les Misérables (Richard Boleslawski, 1935), as the older sister of Shirley Temple in Curly Top (Irving Cummings, 1935), and as Natalie Wood's mother in Rebel Without a Cause (Nicholas Ray, 1955).

To be continued.

Leonardo DiCaprio

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American actor Leonardo DiCaprio (1974) has often played unconventional parts, particularly in biopics and period films. His role in the blockbuster Titanic (1998) cemented DiCaprio's reputation as a teen heartthrob. He became one of the biggest movie stars thanks to his films with the directors Martin Scorsese, Christopher Nolan, and Quentin Tarantino. He won an Oscar and a Golden Globe Award for The Revenant (2015) as well as two other Golden Globes for The Aviator (2004) and The Wolf of Wall Street (2013).

Leonardo DiCaprio
Vintage postcard by One. Photo: David LaChapelle, 1995.

Leonardo DiCaprio
British postcard by The Alternative Picture Co., no. RCL845. Photo: David LaChapelle, 1995.

Leonardo DiCaprio
Vintage postcard. Photo: David LaChapelle, 1995.

Handpicked by Robert De Niro out of 400 young actors


Leonardo Wilhelm DiCaprio was born in Los Angeles, in 1974. He is the only child of Irmelin (née Indenbirken), a legal secretary, and George DiCaprio, an underground comix writer, publisher, and distributor of comic books. His parents separated when he was a year old.

When his older stepbrother earned $50,000 for a television commercial, DiCaprio, fascinated with this, decided to become an actor. At age 14, he began his career by appearing in television commercials such as for Matchbox cars by Mattel, which he considered his first role.

In 1989, he played the role of Glen in two episodes of the television show The New Lassie. Leo played recurring roles in various television series, such as the sitcom Parenthood (1990-1991) based on the successful comedy film of the same name.

He made his film debut as the stepson of an evil landlord in the low-budget horror direct-to-video film Critters 3 (Kristine Peterson, 1991). He was handpicked by Robert De Niro out of 400 young actors to play the lead role in the biographical coming-of-age drama This Boy's Life (Michael Caton-Jones, 1993) with De Niro as his stepfather, and Ellen Barkin as his mother. Critic Roger Ebert in 1993: "Toby is played by Leonardo DiCaprio, a relative newcomer (he's done TV, and had the lead in Critters III). The movie is successful largely because he is a good enough actor to hold his own in his scenes with De Niro, so that the movie remains his story, and isn't upstaged by the loathsome but colorful Dwight."

In 1993, DiCaprio co-starred as the intellectually disabled brother of Johnny Depp's character in What's Eating Gilbert Grape (Lasse Hallström, 1993), a comic-tragic odyssey of a dysfunctional Iowa family. The film became a critical success, earning DiCaprio a National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actor and nominations for an Oscar and a Golden Globe.  The 19-years-old was hailed as an actor to watch.

His next films were the Western The Quick and the Dead (Sam Raimi, 1995) with Sharon Stone, the biopic The Basketball Diaries (Scott Kalvert, 1995) in which he played a teenage Jim Carroll as a drug-addicted high school basketball player and writer, and the erotic drama Total Eclipse (Agnieszka Holland, 1995), a fictionalised account of the homosexual relationship between Arthur Rimbaud (DiCaprio) and Paul Verlaine (David Thewlis).

In 1996, DiCaprio appeared opposite Claire Danes in Baz Luhrmann's Romeo + Juliet, an abridged modernisation of William Shakespeare's romantic tragedy of the same name. The project grossed $147 million worldwide and earned DiCaprio a Silver Bear for Best Actor at the 1997 Berlin International Film Festival.

DiCaprio then achieved international fame as a star in the epic romance Titanic (James Cameron, 1997), opposite Kate WinsletRoger Ebert in his review: "James Cameron's 194-minute, $200 million film of the tragic voyage is in the tradition of the great Hollywood epics. It is flawlessly crafted, intelligently constructed, strongly acted and spellbinding. If its story stays well within the traditional formulas for such pictures, well, you don't choose the most expensive film ever made as your opportunity to reinvent the wheel." Against expectations, Titanic went on to become the highest-grossing film to that point, eventually grossing more than $2.1 billion in box-office receipts worldwide. DiCaprio turned into a superstar, resulting in intense adoration among teenage girls and young women in general that became known as "Leo-Mania".

Leonardo DiCaprio in Romeo + Juliet (1996)
Vintage postcard. Leonardo DiCaprio in Romeo + Juliet (Baz Luhrmann, 1996).

Leonardo DiCaprio in Romeo + Juliet (1996)
Vintage postcard. Leonardo DiCaprio in Romeo + Juliet (Baz Luhrmann, 1996).

Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes in Romeo + Juliet (1996)
British postcard by Memory Card, no. 434. Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes in Romeo + Juliet (Baz Luhrmann, 1996).

Leonardo DiCaprio in Titanic (1997)
Vintage postcard by 7up, no DD 2079B. Photo: Twentieth Century Fox and Paramount. Leonardo DiCaprio in Titanic (James Cameron, 1997).

Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio in Titanic (1997)
German postcard by Sunburst Merchandising GmbH, Osnabrück / Ana Anakos AG, München. Photo: Paramount / Fox, 1998. Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet in Titanic (James Cameron, 1997).

A Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screen Couple


Leonardo DiCaprio played a self-mocking role as a badly behaved movie star in Woody Allen's caustic satire of the fame industry, Celebrity (1998). It was a small appearance. That year, he also starred in the dual roles of the villainous King Louis XIV and his secret, sympathetic twin brother Philippe in The Man in the Iron Mask (Randall Wallace, 1998). The film received mixed to negative response, but became a box office success, grossing $180 million internationally. DiCaprio was awarded a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screen Couple for both incarnations the following year. Also, his next film, The Beach (Danny Boyle, 2000), proved to be a disappointment both financially and artistically. However, DiCaprio soon bounced back.

In 2002, he starred in two successful features in which he demonstrated his range as an actor. The first was the biographical crime drama Catch Me If You Can (Steven Spielberg, 2002), based on the life of Frank Abagnale Jr., who before his 19th birthday committed check fraud to make millions in the 1960s. The film received favourable reviews and was an international success, becoming DiCaprio's highest-grossing release since Titanic with a total of $351 million worldwide.
The second was the historical drama Gangs of New York (Martin Scorsese, 2002) with Cameron Diaz and Daniel Day-Lewis. It is a sprawling tale of gangland violence in early America. The film marked his first of many collaborations with legendary director Martin Scorsese. Gangs of New York earned a total of $193 million worldwide and received mostly positive reviews.

DiCaprio played eccentric and reclusive billionaire genius Howard Hughes in The Aviator (Martin Scorsese, 2004), which DiCaprio also co-produced. Perry Seibert at AllMovie: "Though the film feels a bit overlong, it never loses the audience's interest, thanks in large part to DiCaprio's determined blue eyes. Those eyes are always able to communicate the intensity of Hughes' feelings -- be it his passion for women and aviation, or his fear of losing control." In 2005, DiCaprio was named the commander of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres for his contributions to the arts. He next played a mercenary in the political thriller Blood Diamond (Edward Zwick, 2006).

DiCaprio played an undercover cop opposite Jack Nicholson and Matt Damon in the crime saga The Departed (Martin Scorsese, 2006). Perry Seibert at AllMovie: "Leonardo DiCaprio deserves much praise for his excellent work in the film. He broods and goes for the big emotions when it is appropriate, but for the most part, he serves as the quiet center of this film. He delivers a monologue in the middle of the movie where he explains that no matter what tension surrounds him, no matter how fast his heart beats, his hands remain still. That remains true throughout the picture, but DiCaprio compensates for this control by letting his eyes do much of the work. During moments of openness, his bearing and his posture don't change, but his eyes convey just enough vulnerability for the audience to register his inner experiences, both with regard to the specific scene and to the double-life that is slowly eating him alive." Budgeted at $90 million, the film grossed $291 million and emerged as DiCaprio and Scorsese's highest-grossing collaboration to date.

He reunited with Kate Winslet in the romantic drama Revolutionary Road (Sam Mendes, 2008). DiCaprio is the founder of Appian Way Productions — a production company that has produced some of his films and the documentary series Greensburg (2008–2010) — and the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, a non-profit organisation devoted to promoting environmental awareness.

Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio in Titanic (1997)
German postcard by Sunburst Merchandising GmbH, Osnabrück / Ana Anakos AG, München. Photo: Paramount / Fox, 1998. Publicity still for Titanic (James Cameron, 1997).

Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio in Titanic (1997)
British postcard by Twentieth Century Fox / 7up, no. DD 2079A. Photo: Paramount / Fox. Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio in Titanic (James Cameron, 1997).

Leonardo DiCaprio in The Man in the Iron Mask (1998)
British postcard by the London Postcard Company, no. MG 2004 (Series 1 of 9), Portrait #6. Photo: United Artists. Leonardo DiCaprio as King Louis in The Man in the Iron Mask (Randall Wallace, 1998).

Gabriel Byrne, Leonardo DiCaprio, John Malkovich, Gérard Depardieu and Jeremy Irons in The Man in the Iron Mask (1998)
French postcard by Sonis, no. C. 854. Photo: United Artists. Gabriel Byrne, Leonardo DiCaprio, John Malkovich, Gérard Depardieu, and Jeremy Irons in The Man in the Iron Mask (Randall Wallace, 1998).

Leonardo DiCaprio and Anne Parillaud in The Man in the Iron Mask (1998)
Vintage postcard. Photo: United Artists. Leonardo DiCaprio and Anne Parillaud in The Man in the Iron Mask (Randall Wallace, 1998).

Scorsese - Nolan - Tarantino - Luhrmann


In the next decade, Leonardo DiCaprio continued to play challenging and even iconic roles. He collaborated for a fourth time with Martin Scorsese in the psychological thriller Shutter Island (Martin Scorsese, 2010), based on the novel of the same name by Dennis Lehane. The film was another commercial success, grossing $294 million worldwide.

DiCaprio then starred as Dom Cobb in the complex Science-Fiction thriller Inception (Christopher Nolan, 2010). Cobb enters the dreams of others to obtain information that is otherwise inaccessible. For his role, DiCaprio earned $50 million -  his highest payday yet. Perry Seibert at AllMovie: "Half the reason a director casts a powerful figure like DiCaprio is to help the viewer through all the information. Sure, DiCaprio has the chops to play a haunted man with magnetic vulnerability -- much as he did in Shutter Island -- and Inception is another chance to appreciate why he's on the short list of genuine movie stars. But his engaging presence also helps sell the movie's insanely intricate plot developments; since Cobb always seems like he knows exactly what's going on, we trust that it all makes sense."

He was an executive producer for George Clooney's political drama The Ides of March (George Clooney, 2011) with Ryan Gosling. This was an adaptation of Beau Willimon's play 'Farragut North'. In 2012, DiCaprio starred as a plantation owner, Calvin Candie, in Quentin Tarantino's Spaghetti Western, Django Unchained (2012). DiCaprio's next role was as the millionaire Jay Gatsby in Baz Luhrmann's The Great Gatsby (2013), an adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel of the same name.

That year he also starred in the biopic The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013), based on the life of stockbroker Jordan Belfort, who was arrested in the late 1990s for securities fraud and money laundering. Perry Seibert at AllMovie: "when Jordan, after taking too many powerful quaaludes, has a physical breakdown and must drive back home while suffering seizures. DiCaprio, as he does throughout the movie, throws himself into this scene with the commitment of a silent-era comic. It's hard to think of another A-list leading man so willing to make himself look ridiculous, and working with someone he trusts as much as Scorsese only inspires him to push even further. It's an outrageously funny sequence, one that few actor/director combinations would have the talent to execute this well."

The film earned him a Golden Globe and Oscar nominations for Best Actor and Best Picture. Next, DiCaprio was an executive producer on Virunga (Orlando von Einsiedel, 2014), a British documentary film about four people fighting to protect the world's last mountain gorillas from war and poaching. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.

In 2015, DiCaprio produced and played frontiersman and fur trapper Hugh Glass in Alejandro G. Iñárritu's survival drama The Revenant, situated in the 1820s. Daniel Gelb at AllMovie: "He's never been more committed to a role -- we see him bearded and bloodied, reserved and delirious -- and he delivers a stunning performance. Glass is pushed to the brink of physical and mental anguish, and DiCaprio makes us feel every shred of his pain."

Built on a budget of $135 million, the well-received film grossed $533 million worldwide. Di Caprio nabbed his sixth Oscar nomination for the film and finally landed his first win, for Best Actor. The film also earned him numerous other awards, including a Golden Globe, a BAFTA, a SAG and a Critic's Choice Award for Best Actor. For the next three years, DiCaprio narrated documentaries and served as a producer for films.

DiCaprio returned to acting following a break of four years in Quentin Tarantino's comedy-drama Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019), as a fading Hollywood actor opposite Brad Pitt as his stuntman. Taking place in 1969, the saga gives a great behind-the-scenes look at the end of Hollywood's Golden Age. For his leading role, DiCaprio received nominations for an Oscar, a Golden Globe, and a BAFTA Award for Best Actor. The film earned a total of $374 million against its $90-million budget.

Leonardo DiCaprio's personal life is the subject of widespread media attention. He rarely gives interviews and is reluctant to discuss his private life. Among his former girlfriends are Brazilian model Gisele Bündchen, Israeli model Bar Refaeli, and German model Toni Garrn. His current girlfriend is Argentine-born model Camila Morrone. Their age difference is 22 years.

Martin Scorsese, Leonardo DiCaprio and Cameron Diaz at the Cannes Film Festival 2002
French postcard by Forum Cartes et Collections, Nouaillé, no. 35. Cannes (06), 2003. Photo: Anne-Christine Poujoulat-STF. Caption: The director Martin Scorsese (middle), the actor Leonardo DiCaprio (left) and the actress Cameron Diaz pose for the photographers before a screening of Gangs of New York on 20 May 2002 during the 55th Cannes Film Festival.

Leonardo DiCaprio
British postcard by Heroes Publishing Ltd., London, no SFC 3025.

Leonardo DiCaprio
Vintage card.

Leonardo DiCaprio
Vintage postcard by Too much!

Leonardo DiCaprio in Romeo + Juliet (1996)
Vintage postcard. Photo: 20th Century Fox. Jamie Kennedy, Zak Orth, Leonardo DiCaprio, Dash Mihok, and Harold Perrineau in Romeo + Juliet (Baz Luhrmann, 1996). Caption: Montague. Quarrel I Will Back Thee.

Sources: Roger Ebert,  Perry Seibert (AllMovie), Biography.comWikipedia and IMDb.

Igo Sym

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Handsome and athletic Austrian-Polish actor Igo Sym (1896-1941) played classy gentlemen, aristocrats, and army officers in Polish, Austrian and German films of the 1920s. After the German Invasion of Poland, he co-operated with the Nazis and in 1941 he was killed by members of the Polish resistance movement.

Igo Sym
Austrian postcard by Iris Verlag, no. 5051. Photo: Sascha-Film.

Igo Sym
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3121/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Messtro-Sascha Film.

Igo Sym in Spelunke (1929)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4065/1, 1929-1930. Photo: SF (Strauss-Film). Igo Sym in Spelunke/Spunk (E.W. Emo, 1929).

Tailcoat and uniform


Karol Juliusz ‘Igo’ Sym was born in Innsbruck, Austria in 1896.

During World War I, he served in the Austrian Army, becoming a lieutenant. After the war, he served in the Polish infantry until 1921, then took up the job of a civil servant.

His film debut took place in 1925, in the horror film Wampiry Warszawa/The Vampires of Warsaw (Wiktor Bieganski, 1925) of which no copy has been saved.

He also appeared in films like O czym sie nie mysli/That Which is Unthinkable (Edward Puchalski, 1926), and Kochanka Szamoty/Szamota's Mistress (Leon Trystan, 1927) starring diva Helena Makowska.

A handsome and athletic man, Sym usually played classy gentlemen, aristocrats, and army officers, dressed in tailcoat and uniform. In 1927 he left for Vienna, where he signed an exclusive contract with Sascha–Filmstudios AG.

To his well known silent Austrian films belong Pratermizzi (Karl Leiter, Gustav Ucicky, 1927) featuring Anny Ondra, Café Elektric/Cafe Electric (Gustav Ucicky, 1927) with Marlene Dietrich, and Erzherzog Johann (Max Neufeld, 1929) with Xenia Desni.

He then moved to Berlin where he featured in such films as Spelunke/Dives (E.W. Emo, 1929), Adieu Mascotte (Wilhelm Thiele, 1929) and Wenn du einmal dein Herz verschenkst/When You Give Your Heart Once (Johannes Guter, 1929), both opposite Lilian Harvey.

Henny Porten and Igo Sym in Die Herrin und ihr Knecht (1929)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 117/4. Photo Brix. Henny Porten-Froehlich-Produktion. Henny Porten and Igo Sym in Die Herrin und ihr Knecht (Richard Oswald, 1929), a drama taking place at the German-Russian border shortly before and during the First World War.

Igo Sym
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3826/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Kipho Production.

Igo Sym
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4540/1, 1929-1930. Photo: Harlip, Berlin.

Lilian Harvey and Igo Sym in Adieu Mascotte (1929)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4593/1, 1929-1930. Photo: Ufa. Lilian Harvey and Igo Sym in Adieu Mascotte (Wilhelm Thiele, 1929).

Singing Saw


At the beginning of the 1930s, Igo Sym starred in films like Gigolo/Handsome Gigolo, Poor Gigolo (Emmerich Hanus, 1930) opposite Anita Dorris, Das alte Lied/The Old Song (Erich Waschneck, 1930) with Lien Deyers, Kasernenzauber (Carl Boese, 1931) with Truus van Aalten and Ein Auto und kein Geld/An Auto and No Money (Jacob Fleck, Luise Fleck, 1932).

In 1932 he returned to Poland and settled in Warsaw. He appeared in the romance Palac na kólkach/Palace on wheels (Ryszard Ordynski, 1932), the entertaining cabaret thriller Szpieg w masce/The Spy in the Mask (Mieczyslaw Krawicz, 1933) starring famous singer Hanka Ordonówna, and the drama Przebudzenie/Awakening (Aleksander Ford, 1934).

Unexpectedly, he then concentrated on stage work in Warsaw’s theatres. He would play in revues and operettas, singing, dancing, and accompanying himself by playing the singing saw.

When the 'Deutsches Reich' invaded Poland in 1939, Sym signed the 'Reichliste' and took part as 'Volksdeutscher' in re-structuring the Polish theatre life. He became in charge of the German theatres in Warsaw.

In late 1939, Sym also became a Gestapo agent. According to preserved documents, the actor had been cooperating with Berlin before 1 September 1939. At the beginning of the war, he helped to organise a trap, in which Hanna ‘Hanka’ Ordonówna was caught.

Ordonówna had been Sym’s pre-war partner on the screen and his friend from Warsaw’s theatres. She was hiding for the Nazis but arranged one day to meet Sym at her old residence. There she was arrested by the waiting Gestapo. They put her in prison in Pawiak, but she would survive the war and died in 1950.

Polish resistance quickly found out about Sym’s involvement, and a group of agents, led by Teatr Komedia actor Roman Niewiarowicz, started to trace his activities.

Igo Sym
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4165/1, 1929-1930. Photo: Ufa.

Igo Sym
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4739/1, 1929-1930. Photo: Ufa.

Igo Sym
Austrian postcard by Iris Verlag, no. 625. Photo: Sascha.

Igo Sym
French postcard by Editions E.C. Paris, no. 782, 1929-1930. Photo: H. Casparius.

Collaborator


In 1940, Igo Sym successfully tried to win Polish actors to play in the German propaganda film Heimkehr/Homecoming (Gustav Ucicky, 1941). He didn’t appear in this production himself but he did play secondary roles in Zlota maska/The Golden mask (Jan Fethke, 1939) and Zona i nie zona/Wife and no wife (Emil Chaberski, 1939).

In early 1941, the headquarters of the underground Polish resistance group Związek Walki Zbrojnej (ZWZ) decided to liquidate the collaborator. Sym’s behaviour was loudly trumpeted by the Nazis, and his assassination would show the Poles that the underground movement was active, always ready to punish all traitors.

At first, the ZWZ planned to poison the actor but later decided to shoot him instead. On the morning of 7 March 1941, two Polish agents knocked at the door of Sym’s apartment in Warsaw. They told Sym that they were mailmen, carrying a dispatch. One of the agents shot Sym with a Vis pistol. Sym was struck in the heart and died on the spot. He was 44.

On the same day, German loudspeakers on the streets announced that hostages had been taken as revenge for Sym’s death. Then, posters appeared on the walls stating that more hostages would be taken and curfew would be enforced from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. The Nazis threatened to shoot all hostages unless those responsible for the assassination were found.

All theatres were closed, and about 120 people were arrested, including teachers, physicians, lawyers, and actors. The population of Warsaw was given three days to find Sym's murderers. As nobody was found, on 11 March, 21 hostages were executed in Palmiry. Several actors were also arrested and sent to Auschwitz, among them such notable figures as directors Stefan Jaracz and Leon Schiller.

Igo Sym
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 6506/1, 1931-1932. Photo: Film-Foto, Warszawa (Warsaw).

Igo Sym in Serenade (1937)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. A 1523/1, 1937-1938. Photo: Willi Forst-Film. Igo Sym in Serenade (Willi Forst, 1937).


Igo Sym sings 'Na całe życie' in Zona i nie zona/Wife and no wife (1939). Source: Stare Melodie (YouTube).


In 1927, Igo Sym learned Marlene Dietrich to play the Singing Saw (Singende Säge) while they worked together in Vienna. She played it in 1944 on the American radio with Paul Laval & his Band. Source: Rudi Polt (YouTube).

Sources: Thomas Staedeli (Cyranos), Wikipedia, and IMDb.

L'Occident (1928)

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The French silent film L'Occident/The West by Henri Fescourt premiered on 26 September 1928 at the Paris cinema Marivaux. The leading actors were Jaque Catelain, Claudia Victrix, and Lucien Dalsace. The film was part of a wave of French Orientalist films in the early 1920s. For the premiere at the Marivaux, Europe published a series of postcards, and the journal La Petite Illustration had a special issue with the same photos. We translated the photo captions and added them below in the card descriptions.

L'Occident (1927).
French postcard by Europe. Photo: still for L'Occident (Henri Fescourt, 1928). Europe. Caption: Hassina joins Taïeb in a deserted room.

L'Occident
French postcard for L'Occident (Henri Fescourt, 1928). Photo: Cinema Europe. Caption: The Escape of the Looters. The left side of the card was printed out of focus.

Her love for a Roumi is bigger than her desire for revenge


L'Occident/The West was based on the play by Henri Kistemaeckers who also scripted the film. The film was produced by Société des Cinéromans, and distributed by Pathé Consortium Cinéma. The sets were designed by Robert Gys.

A French squadron before the coast of Morocco tries to prevent rebel gangs from attacking the caravans but is afraid to kill loyal citizens by bombing. So Captain Jean Cadière (Lucien Dalsace), who knows the local language and customs, is sent on a secret mission. He also substitutes for his young protégé, lieutenant Arnaud de Saint-Guil (Jaque Catelain).

The next morning, Hassina (Claudia Victrix), a captive of the tribe of Zerreth-Hama, finds Cadière at a well, bitten by a snake. Because of an old prediction, she believes he is her chosen one, so she saves him by sucking out his poison, considers him her master, and brings his papers to the French vessel. Arnaud is impressed by the mysterious woman.

The tribe leader, Taïeb (Hugues de Bagratide), discovers his stallion has been used and female traces are found, but only Hassina's little sister Fathima (Andrée Rolane) is discovered. When Taïeb threatens to burn Fathima if Hassina and Cadière don't come out, and his men attack the couple, the marine starts to fire its guns. The tribe flees, but Taïeb manages to kidnap Fathima.

The wounded Hassina is taken away, while the French soldiers lift their guns in homage. Hassina is taken to Toulon, deplores the loss of her sister, and understands her lover is a 'roumi', a French soldier. Cadière takes Hassani to the vast villa of his aunt Aline (Jane Méa), who adopts her, learns her French and music, but Hassani remains quiet and unhappy.

She has gotten a note that the roumi killed her sister, so she is torn between her family and her new lover. Instead, Fathima is not dead but also in Toulon, forced by Taïeb to dance every night in a den. When one night he treats her brutally, sailors, among whom Le Goff, an aid of Cadière, defend her. Meanwhile, Arnaud is troubled, not only because he is fed up with the army, but also because he is passionately in love with Hassina and hates Cadière.

At the betrothal party of Cadière and Hassani, Taïeb appears in disguise and pushes Hassani to avenge her sister, but her love is bigger than her desire for revenge. Arnaud leaves the army. Cadière's aid Le Goff finds Fathima and Taïeb, and after a struggle, the Moroccan confesses his crimes. Cadière himself prevents Arnaud of abducting Hassani and appeals to his conscience, so the latter returns to the army and abstains from committing a crime. Cadière also renders Hassani her sister, so that all ends well.

L'Occident (1927).
French postcard by Europe, no. 41. Photo: still for L'Occident (Henri Fescourt, 1928). Caption: Taïeb forces young Fathima to dance in a den in Toulon.

L'Occident (1927).
French postcard by Europe. Photo: still for L'Occident (Henri Fescourt, 1928). Caption: The hour of prayer of the tribe of Zerrath-Hama.

A wave of French Orientalist films


Cinémagazine wrote about the first night in Le Marivaux: "It was a great first. Marivaux welcomed Tout-Paris in a brand new room, with new painting and armchairs. They presented L'Occident [The West]. This film, the first part of which was set in Morocco, had to be Moroccan, it was not only by its images but also by the Nuba and the trumpets of the 6th and the 24th regiment of Spahis who, on the stage, let us hear the most ardent marches of their vibrant repertoire, which thrilled all those who were cavaliers of spahis ... even when, like me, they became territorial.

In the armchairs, on the balcony, in the boxes, the Tout-Paris: artists, people of the world, journalists and writers - shimmering toilets, tuxedos or black clothes. Mr. Painlevé, Minister of War, and General Carence seemed to encourage all the directors of the West. to show our soldiers the 'wheat' in action while in his chair, Mr. Steeg, resident general of France in Morocco, continuator and director, talked about the fruits of the efforts by Drude, Amade, and Lyautey. General Decoin, commanding the division of Spahis at Compiegne, could not find any criticism for the charge of spahis carried on the screen, while Charles Pathé, in the box of M. Sapene, applauded the Provence in action. In short, a beautiful room, a chic room - a room of a grand first night."

On the film itself, Cinémagazine wrote: "Mr. Henry Kistemaeckers has somewhat modified the script of his play, 'The West', created by Suzanne Desprez, which was already shot by Capellani with Nazimova. (...) The film ends with a wedding or an American kiss, which could have been frankly ridiculous, but the last image fades on words of forgiveness and sweetness, heavy with fatality and love, a prelude to other words. (...)

Claudia Victrix played Hassina. A heavy task to be true. This artist, rich in intelligent sensitivity, succeeded in conveying the conflict of the Moroccan primitive torn between her love for the roumi, her conqueror, and the atavism of her race. Towards her, Jaque Catelain, a young lieutenant, proves to be tender, while Lucien Dalsace plays a bitter, violent officer, fearless, and without reproach.

H. de Bagratide, a past master in the art of make-up, deserves a special mention for his composition of the role of Taïeb. Paul Guidé was able to command the battleship Provence with authority and Renée Veller, one of the winners of the last contest of Cinémagazine, as a painful fiancee shows us an upset face - which is beautiful. The little Andrée Rolane, already so appreciated, embodies gracefully the character of Fathima, the young sister of Hassina. Let's also quote Mrs. Jeanne Méa, MM. Liévin, Terrore, Labry, Raymond Guérin. But among the performers of the film, it would be unfair not to mention our sailors, our spahis, the Senegalese riflemen, and the men of the foreign legion who, in an admirably settled fight, jostled Taieb's looters.

The staging is by Henri Fescourt, a master to whom we owe the Miserables. It deserves to be praised. The fight, as we have said, is admirable of truth, but the director also knew how to use the constructions of the fleet, their guns pointing in the sky, of their life finally to make intensely a work where those of the hinterland play such a beautiful role. Finally, in the first part, there are Moroccan landscapes that recall the most beautiful shots of Les Miserables."

Richard Abel was in his book French Cinema: The First Wave, 1915-1929 quite critical of the colonial, stereotypical and Western ideology of the film, in which one of the questions is whether an Oriental woman can become a Western woman, while the lead is played by a Western actress (and Abel wasn't convinced of Victrix' play). Years after, director Fescourt himself recognised that none of the directors of the climactic battle scene - filmed in "the best western-style" as Abel writes - asked themselves at the time whether the local extras playing the retreating Moroccan crowds might have been unhappy with their roles.

Abel situates L'Occident within the wave of French Orientalist films after the success of L'Atlantide/Lost Atlantis (Jacques Feyder, 1921), with examples such as Visages voilés... âmes closes/The Sheik's Wife (Henry Roussel, 1921), Le Sang d'Allah/Passions of Araby (Luitz-Morat, Alfred Vercourt, 1922), Sables/Sand (Dimitri Kirsanoff, 1929), and Maman Colibri/Mother Hummingbird (Julien Duvivier, 1929). He also notes that it is remarkable that - possibly led by the negative public reactions to the war - French silent filmmakers hardly treated the war between the French foreign legion and the Moroccans, ending with the surrender of the Riftians in 1926.

L'Occident (1927).
French postcard by Europe, no. 62. Photo: still for L'Occident (Henri Fescourt, 1928). Caption:: The caïd Taïeb has decided to burn alive young Fathima.

L'Occident (1928)
Cover of the French journal La Petite Illustration, no. 398, 8 September 1928. It was a special issue on L'Occident (Henri Fescourt, 1928).

Sources: Cinémagazine, no 40, 5 October 1928, Fondation- Jerome Seydoux - Pathe, Richard Abel (French Cinema: The First Wave, 1915-1929), and IMDb.
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