Beautiful like Kaloma

“Beautiful like Kaloma“. A semi-nude woman scantily clad in a see-through silk veil. The model, like Kaloma, is standing with both hands in front of her. Original 1910-1920s French Real Photo Postcard. | src eBay

Nude in acrobatic pose

French or German nude dancer in acrobatic pose, 1920-1930s. Original photo postcard. (Künstler foto stamp on lower right margin) | src eBay

Musidora (French card)

Musidora, 1915, France. Series: Portrait de Stars. French collectors card. L'encyclopédie du Cinéma'. Collection Cinémathèque Française. | src eBay
Musidora, 1915, France. Series: Portrait de Stars. French collectors card. L’encyclopédie du Cinéma’. Collection Cinémathèque Française. | src eBay
Portrait of Musidora (Jeanne Roques) | src Librairie Le Pas Sage
Portrait of Musidora (Jeanne Roques) | src Librairie Le Pas Sage

Maud Allan dancing, 1908

Foulsham & Banfield :: Maud Allan dancing to ‘Mendelssohn’s Spring Song’, 1908. Bromide postcard print, published by Rotary Photographic Co. Ltd. | src NPG

Stacia Napierkowska by Sobol

[Ruben] Sobol :: Stacia Napierkowska. French postcard in the Les Vedettes de Cinéma series by A.N. (Alfred Noyer), Paris, nº 50. Photo by [Ruben] Sobol. | src Truus, Bob & Jan on Flickr

Musidora (Le Tréport)

Musidora. French postcard, nº 67. Caption: Le Tréport – Le Repos de la Pêcheuse de Crevettes. (Le Tréport – The Rest of the Shrimp Fisherwoman). Collection: Marlène Pilaete. | src Truus, Bob & Jan on Flickr | more like this

Who is Musidora?

Photographie publicitaire de Musidora revêtue de son collant noir devenu iconique grâce au film Les Vampires de Louis Feuillade, ca. 1915 | Musidora, qui êtes-vous?
Who is Souricette? Musidora with her dog, Lacsalé. French cigarette card by Cigarettes Le Nil, nº 38. Photo by Henri Manuel | src flickr

In this cigarette card […] she is dressed in her famous costume from Les vampires. It’s a typical outfit worn by the thieves operating in hotels. […] In French, those thieves are called ‘souris d’hôtel’. ‘Souricette’ being a kind of diminutive form of ‘souris’, maybe that’s where the publishers got their idea.” Quoted from Flickr