
Emmy Hennings, Lugano, 1919

images that haunt us


Immediately after the First World War and the founding of the Weimar Republic, Joe May set up a gigantic project in his “Filmstadt” in Woltersdorf. Following the example of American and Italian monumental films and serials à la The Count of Monte Cristo, he brought out a series of eight consecutive, largely self-contained feature films at the end of 1919. His wife, the former operetta diva Mia May, played the leading role of the world traveler Maud Gregaard, who wants to take revenge on her father’s murderer and experiences all sorts of love and other adventures about it. The 5th part, in which Maud and her companion find the mysterious city of Ophir in the heart of Africa, is an adventure film that was staged with great effort – and May’s colleague Fritz Lang may have had to thank her for a few suggestions for Metropolis. [Deutsches Historisches Museum]

The large-scale film series about the adventuress Maud Gregaard, who becomes a modern »Countess of Monte Cristo« in eight parts, was produced in May 1919 and screened at weekly intervals at the end of the year. In Part 5, Maud, having just escaped from the natives of the Makombe tribe with her companion Madsen, ends up in the mysterious city of Ophir in Central Africa. There they mistake the high priests for the goddess Astarte, while Madsen is thrown to the slaves. With the help of the engineer Stanley, who is also enslaved, the trio finally finds the legendary treasure of the Queen of Sheba – and prepare their breakneck escape … A few kilometers outside of Berlin, in a gigantic studio recordings: Joe May’s “Filmstadt”, almost 30,000 people participated. [Film Archiv Austria]





Otto Sarony :: Olive Thomas (1894-1920) was no stranger to the Alexandria Hotel. In 1919, she starred in The Spite Bride that used the hotel as a location. | original source: Bizarre LA initially posted in hauntedbystorytelling
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“Hearts and Flowers” (1919) ~ Louise Fazenda and Phyllis Haver are after the same guy… the smarmy, yet smooth, band leader, Ford Sterling. | src
catskewl
![Edward Weston :: [Margrethe Mather], 1919. Palladium print. Arizona Board of Regents, Center for Creative Photography. | src The J. Paul Getty Trust](https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52227573719_4ec6523759_o.png)
![Edward Weston :: [Margrethe Mather], 1919. Palladium print. Arizona Board of Regents, Center for Creative Photography. | src The J. Paul Getty Trust](https://unregardoblique.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/mather-by-weston-1919.png)

“Mack Sennett Girl,” circa 1919. Actress Marvel Rea, one of film producer Mack Sennett’s well-rounded “bathing girls”, in somewhat mouldy National Photo glass negative. From a series of pictures using cars and tires as props. 1 src and hi-res Shorpy
Probably edited from this photograph. [zoom in detail of hands’ retouching]

“Mack Sennett girls in costume”, circa 1919. Sennett, an early producer of silent films, was known as the King of Comedy for his slapstick reels. National Photo Company Collection. | src and hi-res Shorpy

Clarence H. White :: Alla Nazimova, New York, 1919 / src: Library of Congress
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