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Pictured behind the scenes in 1933 - Ginger Rogers was an American actress, dancer, and singer, widely known for performing in films and RKO's musical films, partnered with Fred Astaire. She appeared on stage, as well as on radio and television, throughout much of the 20th century. Wikipedia
German postcard by Rüdel-Verlag, Hamburg-Bergedorf. Photo: Real / Deutsche Film Hansa. Maria Emo in Das Mädchen von Moorhof/The Girl of the Moors (Gustav Ucicky, 1958).
Austrian actress Maria Emo (1936) is a respected stage actress, who appeared on screen as Hitler's mistress Eva Braun and played leading roles in literary adaptations of the 1950s.
Maria Emo was born in Berlin in 1936. She was the daughter of Austrian director E.W. Emo, director of many light ’Viennese’ comedies often starring Hans Moser. Her mother was Anita Dorris, a popular film actress of the 1920s and early 1930s. Between 1952 and 1954 Maria studied at the Max Reinhardt Seminar in Vienna. She played young girls in love at the Theater in der Josefstadt and at the Wiener Volkstheater. Later the beautiful blonde actress became an often invited guest actor in classical plays on many stages in Europe and South America.
Maria Emo's film roles were relatively scarce. Her debut was in Ehesanatorium/Marriage sanatorium (Franz Antel, 1954) opposite Adrian Hoven. Next, she played leading roles in literary films like the Guy de Maupassant adaptation Bel Ami (Louis Daquin, 1954) starring Johannes Heesters, Das Mädchen vom Moorhof/The Girl of the Moors (Gustav Ucicky, 1958) based on a novel by Selma Lagerlöf, and Herr Puntila und sein Knecht Matti/Herr Puntila and His Servant Matti (Alberto Cavalcanti, 1955-1960). The latter was an adaptation of Bertolt Brecht's 1940 exile play of the same name. The famous author helped the director with the film, and Brecht later stated that it was the only adequate film of his work ever produced. Curt Bois, who played Puntila, acted under Brecht's own direction. Maria Emo next impersonated Eva Braun on the screen in the American production Hitler/Women of Nazi Germany (Stuart Heisler, 1961) about the private life of the dictator, played by Richard Basehart. In later years she only played incidentally in films like Der Weibsteufel/The She-Devil (Georg Tressler, 1966), and she also appeared in TV plays and series. Nowadays she lives in Hamburg, where she worked as a professor in performing arts at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg.
Sources: Filmportal.de, Wikipedia, and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
STEFANIA VISCONTI attrice, modella, actress, model, performer, trasformista, disponibile per collaborazioni artistiche di vario genere, teatro, cinema, tv, cortometraggi, shooting fotografici, esibizioni dal vivo. Disponibilità di spostamento in tutta Italia e all'Estero.
Per qualsiasi informazione ulteriore e collaborazione potete scrivere a viscontistefy@libero.it
STEFANIA VISCONTI is an Italian transgendered actress, model, chameleon-like performer, and activist. She is available for a variety of arts and entertainment projects, including theatrical performances, long and short films, TV programs, photo shootings, live performances. She is willing to travel anywhere in Italy and abroad. For further information, write to viscontistefy@libero.it. You will find other links to some of her personal pages below
Bain News Service,, publisher.
Actress
[no date recorded on caption card]
1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.
Notes:
Title from unverified data provided by the Bain News Service on the negatives or caption cards.
Forms part of: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress).
Format: Glass negatives.
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication. For more information, see George Grantham Bain Collection - Rights and Restrictions Information www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/274_bain.html
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Part Of: Bain News Service photograph collection (DLC) 2005682517
General information about the George Grantham Bain Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.ggbain
Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ggbain.38495
Call Number: LC-B2- 6415-4
Mamiya RZ67 proII. Film Kodak TMax 400. “I know the best moments can never be captured on film, even as I spend nearly half my life trying to do just that.”
Goldie Jeanne Hawn is an American actress, director, producer, and occasional singer. She rose to fame on the NBC sketch comedy program Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In. Wikipedia
This is a classifieds board located outside of the Art & Architecture building on campus at UTK. I warmified it and saturated it and played around a bit.
French postcard by Editions E.C., Paris.
Sylvia Sidney (1910-1999) was an American stage, screen, and film actress whose career spanned over 70 years. She rose to prominence in dozens of leading roles in the 1930s, such as An American Tragedy (1931), City Streets (1931), Alfred Hitchcock's Sabotage (1936), and Fritz Lang's Fury (1936) and You Only Live Once (1937). She later gained attention for her role as Juno, a caseworker in the afterlife, in Tim Burton's film Beetlejuice (1988), and she was nominated for the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams (1973).
Sylvia Sidney was born Sophia Kosow in 1910 in the Bronx, New York. She was the daughter of Rebecca (née Saperstein), a Romanian Jew, and Victor Kosow, a Russian Jewish immigrant who worked as a clothing salesman. Her parents divorced by 1915, and she was adopted by her stepfather Sigmund Sidney, a dentist. Her mother became a dressmaker and renamed herself, Beatrice Sidney. Now using the surname Sidney, Sylvia became an actress at the age of 15 as a way of overcoming shyness. She became a student of the Theater Guild's School for Acting. One school production was held at a Broadway theatre and in the audience, there was a critic from the New York Times who had nothing but rave reviews for the young Miss Sidney. On the strength of her performance in New York, Sylvia appeared in a play at the famed Poli Theater in Washington, D.C. More stage productions followed. In 1926, she was seen by a Hollywood talent scout in the production 'Crime' and made her first film appearance later that year in Broadway Nights (1927). During the Depression, she appeared in a string of films, often playing the girlfriend or sister of a gangster. 1931 saw her appear in five films, of which, City Streets (Rouben Mamoulian, 1931), made her a star. The sad-eyed Sylvia made a tremendous impact and her screen career was off a running. Among her other films, that year were: An American Tragedy (Josef von Sternberg, 1931), and Street Scene (King Vidor, 1931). She co-starred with Fredric March in Merrilly We Go To Hell (1932). Her other films included Alfred Hitchcock's Sabotage (1936), Fritz Lang's Fury (1936) and You Only Live Once (1937), Dead End (William Wyler, 1937), and The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (Henry Hathaway, 1936), an early three-strip Technicolor film. She appeared with Gary Cooper, Spencer Tracy, Henry Fonda, Joel McCrea, Fredric March, George Raft, and Cary Grant. During this period, she developed a reputation for being difficult to work with. At the time of making Sabotage with Alfred Hitchcock, Sidney was one of the highest-paid actresses in the industry, earning $10,000 per week—earning a total of $80,000 for Sabotage.
During the 1940s, the career of Sylvia Sidney diminished somewhat. In The Searching Wind (William Dieterle, 1946), Sidney played a newspaper reporter with convictions who was the alter ego of playwright Lillian Hellman. The film was based on a Broadway play but it just didn't transfer well onto the big screen. The film was widely considered to be too serious and flopped. The following year, she appeared in another flop, Love From A Stranger (Richard Whorf, 1947). In 1949, exhibitors voted her "box-office poison". In 1952, she played the role of Fantine in Les Misérables (Lewis Milestone, 1952), and her performance was praised and allowed her opportunities to develop as a character actress. Only three more films followed that decade. There were no films throughout the 1960s. On TV, she appeared three times on the anthology drama series Playhouse 90 (1956-1960). In 1957, she appeared as Lulu Morgan, mother of singer Helen Morgan in the episode The Helen Morgan Story (George Roy Hill, 1957) featuring Polly Bergen. Four months later, Sidney rejoined her former co-star Bergen on the premiere of the short-lived The Polly Bergen Show (1957-1958). She also worked in television during the 1960s on such programs as Route 66 (1961-1964), The Defenders (1962), and My Three Sons (1969). In 1973, Sylvia returned to the big screen in Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams (Gilbert Cates, 1973), starring Joanne Woodward. She received an Academy Award nomination for her supporting role. As an elderly woman, Sidney continued to play supporting screen roles and was identifiable by her husky voice, the result of cigarette smoking. She was the formidable Miss Coral in the film version of I Never Promised You a Rose Garden (Anthony Page, 1977) and later was cast as Aidan Quinn's grandmother in the television production of An Early Frost (John Erman, 1985) for which she won a Golden Globe Award. She played Aunt Marion in Damien: Omen II (Don Taylor, 1978) opposite William Holden and Lee Grant. Sidney also had key roles as Juno in the mega-hit Beetlejuice (1988) directed by longtime Sidney fan Tim Burton, and Used People (Beeban Kidron, 1992). Her final role was in Mars Attacks! (1996), another film by Tim Burton, in which she played an elderly woman whose beloved records by Slim Whitman help stop an alien invasion from Mars.
On television, Sylvia Sidney appeared in the pilot episode of WKRP in Cincinnati (1978) as the imperious owner of the radio station, and she appeared in a memorable episode of Thirtysomething (1989) as Melissa's tough grandmother, who wanted to leave her granddaughter the family dress business, though Melissa (Melanie Mayron) wanted a career as a photographer. She also was featured on Starsky & Hutch (1976), The Love Boat (1981), Magnum, P.I. (1983), and Trapper John, M.D.(1984). Her Broadway career spanned five decades, from her debut performance as a graduate of the Theatre Guild School in 1926 at age 15, in the three-act fantasy Prunella to the Tennessee Williams play Vieux Carré in 1977. In 1982, Sidney was awarded the George Eastman Award by George Eastman House for distinguished contribution to the art of film. In 1998 she appeared as the crotchety travel clerk Clia at the beginning of each episode in the short-lived revival of the classic TV series Fantasy Island. Sylvia Sidney died in 1999, from esophageal cancer at the Lenox Hill Hospital in Manhattan, a month before her 89th birthday. Her remains were cremated. Sidney was married three times. She first married publisher Bennett Cerf in 1935, but the couple divorced six months later in 1936. She later married actor and acting teacher Luther Adler in 1938, by whom she had her only child, a son Jacob (1939–1987), who died of Lou Gehrig's disease while his mother was still alive. Adler and Sidney divorced in 1946. In 1947, she married radio producer and announcer Carlton Alsop. They divorced in 1951.
Sources: Wikipedia and IMDb
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
Italian film star Sophia Loren, who will begin her first American film called “The Pride and the Passion,” in which she will costar with Cary Grant and Frank Sinatra, is shown March 27, 1956 in Rome, Italy. (AP Photo/Stanley Kramer Unit/Sam Shaw)
Tamil movie Actress hot navel images, hot bikini images, latest wallpapers and more updates.
pics-bucket.blogspot.com/2018/06/tamil-actress-hot-navel-...
STEFANIA VISCONTI attrice, modella, actress, model, performer, trasformista, disponibile per collaborazioni artistiche di vario genere, teatro, cinema, tv, cortometraggi, shooting fotografici, esibizioni dal vivo. Disponibilità di spostamento in tutta Italia e all'Estero.
Per qualsiasi informazione ulteriore e collaborazione potete scrivere a viscontistefy@libero.it
STEFANIA VISCONTI is an Italian transgendered actress, model, chameleon-like performer, and activist. She is available for a variety of arts and entertainment projects, including theatrical performances, long and short films, TV programs, photo shootings, live performances. She is willing to travel anywhere in Italy and abroad. For further information, write to viscontistefy@libero.it. You will find other links to some of her personal pages below
3 x 17 inches. Rapidograph pen on Canson XL Bristol Board (96 lb)
20 October 2017
Actress Roosa Söderholm as the character Raisa from the 2014 film "He ovat paenneet".
"He ovat paenneet on Jukka-Pekka Valkeapään ohjaama 17. lokakuuta 2014 ensi-iltansa saanut suomalainen draamaelokuva. Sen käsikirjoittivat Valkeapää ja Pilvi Peltola. Elokuva kertoo ongelmalaitoksen nuorten ongelmallisimman nuoren Raisan (Roosa Söderholm) ja siviilipalvelusmies Jonin (Teppo Manner) pakomatkasta halki kesäisen Suomen. Elokuva oli mukana kaksilla arvostetuilla elokuvafestivaaleilla: Venetsian elokuvajuhlilla ja Toronton elokuvajuhlilla. Kuvaaja Pietari Peltola palkittiin helmikuussa 2015 Göteborgin elokuvajuhlilla kuvauksestaan Sven Nykvist -palkinnolla. Tuomariston mukaan elokuvan kieli oli uskaliasta rikkoen klassisen elokuvakerronnan sääntöjä. " (wikipedia)
The massive black eye shadow and pale skin and dandelion-like fluff of platinum hair gives her an almost animal quality of a forest spirit. In fact at one point in the film she wraps herself in a bear skin and becomes the bear in an almost shamanistic way. ( asemablogi.files.wordpress.com/2015/01/hop-karhu.jpg )
IMDB lists only 4 credits to her name ( He ovat paenneet, Pienet illanistujaiset, Lunastus, Apeiron ) and does not say much more about her than that.
I made this as a banner illustration for an online javascript game. I distorted the face a bit to fit the space but it seems to work well.
(This is the second version of an image I posted a few days ago. I fixed some of the inking issues on this improved version. And I am reposting this in the place of the earlier one.)