

images that haunt us


‘How You Can Keep Fit’. An exercise book written by Rudolph Valentino with photographs of the silent film star doing the exercises. It was published in 1923 by MacFadden Publications (NY).


I’ve always been curious about the above photo when it appears online or in books: it’s clearly an entirely different outfit to the black sequinned one Dietrich wears onscreen in “Hot Voodoo.” Is this shot a “wardrobe test” of a potential costume that got rejected? In his book, Bach provides a clue: production of Blonde Venus was a long rancorous ordeal with Sternberg (and Dietrich) feuding with studio heads. (At one point Paramount threatened to sack Sternberg and replace him with another director). There were so many script re-shuffles that “major sequences (including the “Hot Voodoo” number) were completely recostumed and reshot.” So, the famous version of “Hot Voodoo” we’re all familiar with is actually the second reshot version. This pic above was presumably what Dietrich wore in the original scrapped number that was resigned to the cutting room floor. / source: graham-russell
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Eugene Robert Richee ::
Marlene Dietrich as Shanghai Lily in Shanghai Express, directed by Josef von Sternberg, 1932 / src: Alice Japan
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John Engstead :: Marlene Dietrich as Christine Helm Vole in a promotional shoot for Witness for the Prosecution, 1957 / src: Alice Japan
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Ross Verlag :: Anglo-German postcard of Lilian Harvey in her outfit of Der Kongress tanzt (1931). British born, German actress and singer Lilian Harvey (1906 – 1968) was Ufa’s biggest star of the 1930’s. With Willy Fritsch she formed the ‘Dream Team of the European Cinema’. Their best film was the immensely popular film operetta Der Kongress tanzt / The Congress Dances (1931, Erik Charell). / src: Truus, Bob & Jan
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Paola Barbara. Italian postcard by Rizzoli, Milan, 1936. 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 (1940) by Amleto Palermi./ src: Truus, Bob & Jan

Katharine Hepburn (RKO, 1930′s).
A
casually beautiful portrait of the young star in a striped art deco
bathing suit, ready for a day at the beach. Just a tremendous Golden Age
of Hollywood artifact that appears to have been published in an issue
of Motion Picture Magazine. The exact year is unknown, but handwritten
text to verso seems to link this to a publicity campaign for a Hepburn
movie that never completed filming, “Three Came Unannounced.” original source: eBay / via
gmgallery

Ruth Harriet Louise :: Joan Crawford in the set of Dream of Love, 1928 / via
silent–era
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by this photographer

Charles Gates Sheldon
:: Portrait of Norma Talmadge, 1910’s
/ src: theRedList
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