03 May 2026

Joe Stöckel

Joe Stöckel (1894-1959) was a pioneer of Bavarian screen comedy alongside Karl Valentin, Weiß Ferdl, Josef Eichheim and Beppo Brem. He was celebrated for his hearty portrayals of rustic Bavarian characters and his contribution to regional comedy both in front of and behind the camera.

Joe Stöckel in IA in Oberbayern (1937)
German collector card in the Bunte Filmbilder series by Polo / Ross Verlag, Series II, no. 480. Photo: Bavaria. Joe Stöckel in IA in Oberbayern / 1A in Upper Bavaria (Franz Seitz, 1937).

Silent American-style Westerns in Munich landscapes


Josef 'Joe' Stöckel was born in 1894 in München (Munich), Germany. He was born into a family with architectural roots, but Joe's ambition was for the theatre. At just sixteen, he enrolled at the Staatliche Schauspielschule in Munich. After his studies, he embarked on stage engagements in Bayreuth and Landshut.

His early career saw him transition from serious theatre into comic turns in operettas and popular stage pieces at the Gärtnerplatz-Theater. There, his flair for humour and character work became apparent. In the late 1910s, his stage success translated to the screen when the blossoming film industry offered new opportunities.

His film career started in 1916, and he made his first films for the Ostermayr Brothers. Around this time, Stöckel adopted the Anglicised name 'Joe,' initially in contrast to his Bavarian identity but later inseparable from his on-screen persona.

After the first successes, Stöckel founded his own production company and went on to realise a string of films with Joe Marcco, both as a director and as an actor. Joe Marcco was a larger-than-life adventurer in films such as Marcco kennt keine Furcht / Marcco Knows No Fear (Joe Stöckel, 1922) and Marcco, der Ringer des Mikado / Marcco, the Wrestler of the Mikado (Joe Stöckel, 1922) with Lotte Lorring.

In these films, he blended local Munich landscapes with the tropes of American-style Westerns. These early films, though now largely lost to time, showcased his ambition to entertain and innovate, even before the transition to sound.

Joe Stöckel
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 8767/1, 1933-1934. Photo: Photola-Atelier.

Joe Stöckel
German postcard by Das Programm von heute, Berlin. Photo: Bavaria Filmkunst / Ross Verlag. Joe Stöckel in Das sündige Dorf / The Sinful Village (Joe Stöckel, 1940).

Light-hearted classic Bavarian village comedies and Heimatfilms with Alpine scenery


Sound film suited Joe Stöckel as a comedian. He appeared in the popular comedies Der Schützenkönig / The Champion Shot (Franz Seitz, 1932) and Der Meisterdetektiv / The Master Detective (Franz Seitz, 1933) starring Weiß Ferdl. Stöckel also wrote the script for S.A.-Mann Brand (Franz Seitz, 1933), the first feature-length film by the Nazis to cover the SA. It was filmed in Munich by Bavaria Film on a low budget. It was one of three Propaganda films about the rise of the Nazi Party, along with Hitlerjunge Quex and Hans Westmar, all made in 1933. A review in The New York Times noted the film's production value and the absence of any anti-Semitic message favourably, but also expressed contempt for its unsophisticated plot.

Joe Stöckel starred opposite Lucie Englisch in the crime comedy Der ahnungslose Engel / The Unsuspecting Angel (Franz Seitz, 1936). He co-starred in Es waren zwei Junggesellen / There Were Two Bachelors (Franz Seitz, 1936). He also started to direct films, including the drama Das Recht auf Liebe / The Right to Love (Joe Stöckel, 1939) starring Magda Schneider, Anneliese Uhlig and Viktor Staal.

During wartime, Joe Stöckel only took part in a few films. He directed and played the lead in Das sündige Dorf / The Sinful Village (Joe Stöckel, 1940) with Joseph Eichheim and Hansi Knoteck. It is based on the play 'Das sündige Dorf' by Max Neal. A remake was produced in 1954 with Stöckel reprising his role. Other films include Der Hochtourist / The Mountaineer (Adolf Schlyssleder, 1942) with Trude Hesterberg and Die keusche Sünderin / The Chaste Sinner (Joe Stöckel, 1943) starring Elise Aulinger.

Joe Stöckel experienced the height of his career after the war. He directed and starred in several films. His stock-in-trade was the crafty, indomitable Bavarian farmer or villager elder, invariably taking the mickey out of Prussians or city slickers, with a requisite amount of guile and sarcasm. Stöckel’s films like Der eingebildete Kranke/ The Imaginary Invalid (Hans H. König, 1953) and Oh, diese lieben Verwandten / Oh, Those Dear Relatives (Joe Stöckel, 1955) reflected a uniquely Bavarian spirit that resonated throughout Germany. His performances in light-hearted classic Bavarian village comedies and Heimatfilms with Alpine scenery helped shape a vernacular national cinema that audiences loved.

Joe Stöckel died in 1959 at the age of only 64 in a Munich hospital and was buried in Munich's Ostfriedhof cemetery. His main achievement was bringing Bavarian stage comedies to the big screen. As a screenwriter and director, he adapted stage classics such as 'Die drei Dorfheiligen' (The Three Village Saints), 'Das sündige Dorf' (The Sinful Village), 'Der scheinheilige Florian' (The Hypocritical Florian) and 'Der verkaufte Großvater' (The Sold Grandfather) for the cinema. He was also probably the first to use the contrast between Bavarians and other German ethnic groups, especially the ‘Prussians’, for comedy.

Joe Stöckel
German postcard by Film-Foto-Verlag, no. A 3493/1, 1941-1944. Photo: Bavaria Filmkunst.

Joe Stöckel
West German postcard by Kolibri-Verlag. Photo: Carlton-Film / Meroth.

Sources: Wikipedia (German and English) and IMDb.

02 May 2026

Carmel Myers

Carmel Myers (1899-1980) was a famous American actress of the silent screen. Her most memorable role was as the seductive Egyptian courtesan Iras in the super-production Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925). During the rest of the 1920s, she had a high-flying career and was ranked among the screen's most glamorous and enticing vamps.

Carmel Myers in Ben-Hur
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 64/7. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Publicity still for Ben-Hur (Fred Niblo, 1925).

Carmel Myers
Austrian postcard by Iris-Verlag, no. 549. Photo: Fanamet-Verleih.

Carmel Myers in Prowlers of the Sea (1928)
Austrian postcard by Iris-Verlag, no. 5292. Photo: D.B.O. / Wiener Lichtbildnerei. Publicity still for Prowlers of the Sea (John G. Adolfi, 1928).

Carmel Myers
French postcard by Editions Cinémagazine, no. 180.

Carmel Myers
French postcard by Editions Cinémagazine, no. 372.

The harem favourite in Babylon


Carmel Myers was born in San Francisco in 1899 as the daughter of an Australian rabbi and an Austrian Jewish mother.

Her father, who had close connections with the world of cinema, introduced her to pioneering film director D.W. Griffith. The famous director entrusted the young novice actress with a small role in his blockbuster Intolerance (D.W. Griffith, 1916), where she played the harem favourite in the Babylonian episode.

Myers also managed to get Carmel's brother, Zion, to work in the film industry, becoming a Hollywood director and screenwriter.

After this experience, Carmel left New York, where she had worked at the theatre for two years and signed a contract with Universal, where she soon made herself known by playing vamp roles.

Of that period, probably her best-known film remains All Night (Paul Powell, 1918), where she acted alongside Rodolfo Valentino, then still little-known.

Carmel Myers in The Dream Lady (1918)
Spanish cromo by Chocolat Imperiale, Barcelona, no. 5 of 6 cards. Photo: Transatlantic Film / Exclusivas Verdaguer SA, Barcelona. Carmel Myers in the romantic comedy The Dream Lady (Elsie Jane Wilson, 1918), based on the novel 'Why Not?' by Margaret Widdener. Spanish title: ¿Por qué no..?

Carmel Myers in A Daughter of the Law
American postcard. Photo: Universal. Carmel Myers in A Daughter of the Law (Jack Conway, 1921), based on the novel 'The Black Cap' by Wadsworth Camp. This card uses the book title for the film title, so maybe the film was originally published with this title.

Carmel Myers in Garragan 1924
Croatian postcard. Photo: Pan-Film Zagreb. Carmel Myers in Garragan (Ludwig Wolff, 1924), starring Edward Burns and Myers. Ludwig Wolff also produced and scripted the film, while the script was based on a novel by Wolff himself. Garragan treats one of Wolff's favourite themes, that of reincarnation. Baron Garragan, who has been rightly condemned to ten years in prison for the murder of a man he believed to be his wife's lover, is released...

Who's this Lady? Part 14
Italian postcard, no. 41. Carmel Myers in The Devil's circus (1926), in which she co-starred with Anna Q. Nilsson.

A formidable boost to her career


From 1924, Carmel Myers worked for MGM. She went to Italy for the super-production Ben-Hur, which was started by director Charles Brabin and months later finished by his colleague Fred Niblo. The waiting took so long that in the meantime, Myers could act in a German film in Berlin, Garragan (Ludwig Wolff, 1924), also with Edward Burns and Julanne Johnston.

However, Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925) gave a formidable boost to her career. She played the role of Iras, an Egyptian courtesan who, on the instigation of Messala (Francis X. Bushman), tries - in vain - to seduce Prince Judah Ben Hur (Ramon Novarro). The memorable POV shot of Iras eyeing Ben-Hur from bottom to top well shows that classic Hollywood was not only about the male gaze and female objectification.

From that moment on, Myers played major roles throughout the 1920s, sometimes in female leads as in The Careless Age (John Griffith Wray, 1929) with Douglas Fairbanks Jr., but mostly as the mundane and less chaste antagonist to the better-behaved female leads such as Norma Shearer, Marceline Day, Anna Q. Nilsson, and Joan Crawford.

The advent of sound did not affect her career. She continued to act even though, due to her age, she saw herself entrusted with supporting roles. At the end of the Second World War, Myers retired from the scene for a few years She returned there in 1951, working for television. She also conducted a TV program called The Carmel Myers Show, but the series was unsuccessful. From then on, she devoted herself mainly to her real estate investments and to her perfume distribution company.

The last film she acted in was Won Ton Ton, The Dog That Saved Hollywood (Michael Winner, 1976). She appeared along with dozens of other former Hollywood stars who took part in the film in small cameos. Carmel Myers died in 1980, at the age of 81 and was buried at the Home of Peace Cemetery in Los Angeles next to her parents.

Ramon Novarro and Carmel Myers in Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 73/2. Photo: MGM / ParUfaMet. Ramon Novarro and Carmel Myers in Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (Fred Niblo, 1925).

Carmel Myers and Ramon Novarro in Ben-Hur (1925)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 133/6. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Carmel Myers and Ramon Novarro in Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (Fred Niblo, 1925).

Carmel Myers and Ramon Novarro in Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925)
French postcard by J.R.P.R, Paris. no. 69. Photo: MGM. Carmel Myers and Ramon Novarro in Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (Fred Niblo, 1925).

Carmel Myers
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 1039/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Phoebus-Film.

Carmel Myers
French postcard in the Les Vedettes de Cinéma series by A.N., Paris, no. 231. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn Production.

Sources: Wikipedia and IMDb.

01 May 2026

New record: 375,772 views in April

No. Its not getting boring, yet. EFSP had ágain a new record in April 2026: 375,772 views. In the last months, EFSP broke this record several times: in September 2025 we counted 267,964 views, in November 288,011, in January 318,734 and in March 353,773 views. We can only say: Thanks for visiting us! And please, come back! Ivo, Marlene and Paul.

Cicely Courtneidge in Aunt Sally (1934)
Dutch postcard for Passage Theater, Den Haag (The Hague). Photo: Gaumont British / F.H. Film. Cicely Courtneidge in Aunt Sally (Tim Whelan, 1934). The Dutch title was Tante Sally. Collection: Geoffrey Donaldson Institute.

Directed by Gaston Ravel

Gaston Ravel (1878–1958) was a French actor, screenwriter and film director. At Gaumont, he directed Musidora in various silent shorts. Later, he co-directed with Tony Lekain several films, including the historical film Le Collier de la reine / The Queen's Necklace. Ravel made over sixty films, in France, Italy and Germany.

Madame Récamier (1928)
French journal La Petite Illustration, no. 385, 9 June 1928. A special on the French silent film Madame Récamier (Gaston Ravel, Tony Lekain, 1928). Here are the two directors, photos by Maniezzi and G.L. Manuel.

Maria Carmi in Forse che forse che no (1921)
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano, no. 35. Maria Carmi as Isabella Inghirami in the Italian silent film Forse che sí, forse che no / Maybe Yes, Maybe No (Gaston Ravel, 1921), based on Gabriele d'Annunzio's eponymous novel (1910).

Saracinesca (1921)
Italian postcard. Photo: Unione Cinematografica Italiana / Medusa Film. Carlo Gualandri in the Italian period piece Saracinesca (Gaston Ravel, 1921), based on the novel by Frances Marion Crawford. Caption: Don Giovanni Saracinesca.

Idillio tragico
Italian postcard. Photo: Medusa Film / Unione Cinematografica Italiana. Helena (Elena) Makowska and Guido Trento in the Italian silent film Idillio tragico (Gaston Ravel, 1922), based on a novel by Paul Bourget. Caption: Jealousy.

Madame Récamier (1928)
Picture from the French journal La Petite Illustration, no. 385, 9 June 1928. Special on the French silent film Madame Récamier (Gaston Ravel, Tony Lekain, 1928), starring Marie Bell as Juliette Récamier and Françoise Rosay as Madame de Staël.

Ernst/ Edmond Van Duren in Figaro (1929)
French postcard by J.R.P.R., Paris, no. 301. Ernst Van Duren in the French silent film Figaro (Gaston Ravel, 1929), based on the play by Pierre Beaumarchais. Van Duren played the title role. Location shooting was done at the Château de Rochefort-sur-Yvelines.

Ernst/Edmond Van Duren and Marie Bell in Figaro
French postcard by J.R.P.R., Paris, no. 309. Ernst Van Duren and Marie Bell in the French silent film Figaro (Gaston Ravel, 1929), based on the play by Pierre Beaumarchais.

Diana Karenne and Marcelle Jefferson-Cohn (a.k.a. Marcelle Chantal) in Le collier de la reine (1929)
Spanish postcard by Dümmatzen, no. 74. Diana Karenne and Marcelle Jefferson-Cohn (a.k.a. Marcelle Chantal) in Le Collier de la reine / The Queen's Necklace (Tony Lekain, Gaston Ravel, 1929). Collection: Marlene Pilaete.

Gaumont's collaborative team


Gaston Pierre Achille Ravel was born in 1878 in Paris, France. Ravel began his career as an actor at the turn of the century and turned to silent film on the eve of the First World War. One of his first films was Sainte-Odile (Gaston Ravel, 1914) with Musidora and Gabriel Signoret. He again directed Musidora in La petite réfugiée / The Little Refugee (Gaston Ravel, 1914) and La bouquetière des Catalans (Gaston Ravel, 1914), both with Claude Mérelle.

He joined the Gaumont filmmaking team after the construction of the Buttes Chaumont studios. This team often worked collaboratively, and Gaston Ravel co-directed numerous films. He quickly demonstrated his talent for directing. Jacques Feyder was his assistant director on Des pieds et des mains (1915) and Monsieur Pinson policier (1916) before directing his first feature, L'Atlantide.

Shortly after the war, he also filmed in Italy. He directed the divas Elena Lunda and Francesca Bertini in Il Nodo / The Knot (Gaston Ravel, 1921). Back in France, he directed the French serial Tao' (Gaston Ravel, 1923) starring Joë Hamman as an Asian villain. Achille Brunet at IMDb: "A French serial made in the direct aftermath of Louis Feuillade's celebrated movies. Just as Les Vampires or Tih-Minh, it's action-packed, full of twists, and if not perfect by any means, it ranks easily among the best serials of the time."

He directed the drama Ferragus (Gaston Ravel, 1923) starring René Navarre, Elmire Vautier and Stewart Rome. It is an adaptation of the 1833 novel of the same title by Honoré de Balzac. The film's sets were designed by the art director Tony Lekain, who also played a supporting part in the film. The two continued to work together. Then followed the dramas L'avocat / The Advocate (Gaston Ravel, 1925), based upon the play by Eugène Brieux and starring Rolla Norman, Mirales and Sylvio De Pedrelli, and Jocaste (Gaston Ravel, 1925), based on the novel by Anatole France and starring Thomy Bourdelle, Claude Mérelle and Sandra Milowanoff.

In 1926, Gaston Ravel accepted an offer to make three films in Germany. He worked for the small Berlin company Alga-Film with artists such as Eduard von Winterstein, Maly Delschaft, and Erna Morena. The first was the German-French coproduction Fräulein Josette - Meine Frau / Mademoiselle Josette ma femme / Mademoiselle Josette, My Woman (Gaston Ravel, 1926) starring Dolly Davis, Livio Pavanelli and Ágnes Eszterházy. It was shot at the Staaken Studios in Berlin and on location in Nice and at Lake Geneva. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Tony Lekain and Hermann Warm.

Saracinesca (1921)
Italian postcard. Photo: Unione Cinematografica Italiana / Medusa Film. Carlo Gualandri (left) in the Italian period piece Saracinesca (Gaston Ravel, 1921), based on the novel by Frances Marion Crawford. Caption: The day he hears that the young Prince Saracinesca wants to marry Donna Tullia Mayer, the cardinal doesn't hide his disapproval.

Saracinesca (1921)
Italian postcard. Photo: Unione Cinemagrafica Italiana / Medusa Film. Carlo Gualandri (here on the right) in the Italian period piece Saracinesca (Gaston Ravel, 1921), based on the novel by Frances Marion Crawford. Caption: Before the duel, Saracinesca gives his last will to his notary.

Maria Carmi in Forse che si, forse che no
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano, unnumbered. Maria Carmi as Isabella Inghirami in the Italian silent film Forse che sí, forse che no (Gaston Ravel, 1921), based on Gabriele d'Annunzio's eponymous novel (1910).

Maria Carmi and Ettore Piergiovanni
Italian postcard by Ed. Vettori, Bologna, no. 2008. Maria Carmi and Ettore Piergiovanni in Forse che sì forse che no (Gaston Ravel, 1921), an adaptation of the novel by Gabriele D'Annunzio.

Maria Carmi in Forse che si, forse che no (1921)
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano, unnumbered. Photo: Unione Cinematografica Italiana. Maria Carmi and Ettore Piergiovanni as Isabella Inghirami and Paolo Tarsis in the Italian silent film Forse che sí, forse che no (Gaston Ravel, 1921), based on Gabriele d'Annunzio's eponymous novel (1910). The maddened Isabella does not understand Paolo's pleas anymore.

Helena (Elena) Makowska
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Medusa Film / UCI. Helena/ Elena Makowska and possibly Guido Trento in the Italian silent film Rabagas (Gaston Ravel, 1922), based on a play by Victorien Sardou.

Idillio tragico (1922)
Italian postcard. Photo: Medusa Film / UCI. Dolly Morgan, Helena/ Elena Makowska and Guido Trento in the Italian silent film Idillio tragico (Gaston Ravel, 1922), based on a novel by Paul Bourget. Caption: Start of the idyll between Ely and Oliviero.

Idillio tragico
Italian postcard. Photo: Medusa Film / Unione Cinematografica Italiana. Guido Trento (right) in the Italian silent film Idillio tragico (Gaston Ravel, 1922), based on a novel by Paul Bourget. Caption: Pietro finds the dying Oliviero.

Co-directing with Tony Lekain


Back in France, Gaston Ravel co-directed with Tony Lekain the historical film Madame Récamier (1928) starring Marie Bell, Françoise Rosay, and Edmond Van Daële. The film portrays the life of Juliette Récamier, a French society figure of the Napoleonic Era.

In his later years, Gaston Ravel directed several sound films, often in collaboration with co-director Tony Lekain. The first was the synchronised sound French historical drama Le Collier de la reine / The Queen's Necklace (1929) starring Marcelle Chantal, Georges Lannes and Diana Karenne. While the film has no audible dialogue, it was released with a synchronised musical score with sound effects. The film is an adaptation of Alexandre Dumas's novel 'The Queen's Necklace', which portrays 'the Affair of the Diamond Necklace', which occurred before the French Revolution. Like many films from the early sound era, the film was shot as a silent film and then was synchronised with a musical score and sound effects soundtrack.

That same year, Lekain and Ravel made the historical comedy Figaro (1929) starring Ernst Van Duren, Arlette Marchal and Marie Bell. It is an adaptation of the 1778 Pierre Beaumarchais play 'The Marriage of Figaro', with material also used from its two sequels. It was released in 1929 in the US as a silent film, then reissued there in 1932 with an added music track, under the title Il Barbiere di Siviglia.

In the French historical drama Fanatisme (Gaston Ravel, Tony Lekain, 1934), he directed Hollywood diva Pola Negri, who was visiting Paris. That same year, he and Lekain made Le rosaire / The Rosary (Tony Lekain, Gaston Ravel, 1934) starring Louisa de Mornand, André Luguet and Hélène Robert. It is based on the 1909 novel 'The Rosary' by British writer Florence L. Barclay and its stage adaptation by Alexandre Bisson.

These were his final films. Gaston Ravel died in 1958 in Cannes, France. He was 79.

Marie Bell in Madame Récamier
French postcard by J.R.P.R., Paris, no. 81. Photo: Franco-Film. Marie Bell de la Comédie-Française in Madame Récamier (Gaston Ravel, Tony Lekain, 1928).

François Rozet in Madame Récamier (1928)
French postcard by J.R.P.R., Paris, no. 95. François Rozet as the Prince of Prussia in Madame Récamier (Tony Lekain, Gaston Ravel, 1928).

Marie Bell in Figaro
French postcard by J.R.P.R., Paris, no. 303. Marie Bell, sociétaire of the Comédie Française, as Suzanne in the French silent film Figaro (Gaston Ravel, 1929), based on the play by Pierre Beaumarchais.

Arlette Marchall, Marie Bell, and Edmond Van Duren in Figaro (1929)
French postcard by J.R.P.R., Paris, no. 307. Photo: Roger Forster. Ernst/ Edmond Van Duren, Arlette Marchal and Marie Bell in the French silent film Figaro (Gaston Ravel, 1929), based on the play by Pierre Beaumarchais.

Jean Weber
French postcard by A.N., Paris, no. 441. Photo: Engberg. Jean Weber as the Chevalier Marc Rétaux de Villette in Le Collier de la reine (Gaston Ravel, Tony Lekain, 1929).

Marcelle Chantal
French postcard by Editions Cinémagazine, no. 722. Marcelle Chantal, aka Marcelle Jefferson-Cohn in Le Collier de la reine / The Queen's Necklace (Gaston Ravel, Tony Lekain, 1929), which was inspired by Alexandre Dumas's tale.

Diana Karenne in Le Collier de la reine (1929)
Spanish illustration by Films selectos, Supplemento Artistico. Photo: Films Artistica Barcelonesa. Diana Karenne in Le Collier de la reine / The Queen's Necklace (Tony Lekain, Gaston Ravel, 1929).

Diana Karenne in Le Collier de la reine (1929)
Picture from the Spanish magazine Films selectos, Supplemento Artistico. Photo: Films Artistica Barcelonesa. Photo: Diana Karenne in Le Collier de la reine / The Queen's Necklace (Tony Lekain, Gaston Ravel, 1929).

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

30 April 2026

La Collectionneuse: Clara Kimball Young

A woman of character hid behind Clara Kimball Young’s screen image of a serene beauty. In her youth, she led an unconventional love life and was involved in several lawsuits. In the second half of the 1910s, she rebelled against being simply an actress and expressed the desire to be in charge of artistic and business decisions as far as her career was concerned. She was one of the major female film stars of the 1910s. In the 1920s, her career went into decline, mostly due to changing tastes, financial mismanagement and unfortunate professional choices. At the end of the 1930s, she was reduced to bit roles and supporting parts. But, despite all this, Clara Kimball Young never emerged as a vain, pathetic, bitter or ever-complaining figure. She remained cheerful, optimistic, engaging and emotionally healthy.

Clara Kimball Young
French postcard issued by the Paris subsidiary of The Vitagraph Co., no. 34. Photo: Stacy / Vitagraph. French postcard. Caption: Artist of the Vitagraph Co.

Clara Kimball Young
British postcard. Early Vitagraph portrait. Photo: Stacy.

A theatrical family


Clara Kimball Young was born on the 6th of September 1890 in Illinois, U.S.A.

The 1890 U.S. Census lists her first name as Clarisa.

Her parents, Edward Kimball and Pauline Garrett, were travelling stock actors. Later, they would occasionally appear in their daughter’s films. Edward Kimball claimed descent from legendary British actress Sara Siddons (née Kemble), but genealogy research doesn’t seem to confirm this.

At age three, Clara made her stage debut and played child parts for some time. Thereafter, she spent several years at St. Francis Xavier Academy in Chicago to get formal schooling.

She then came back on stage and, at one point, married actor James Young.

Clara Kimball Young in My Official Wife (1914)
American Octochrome postcard by Commercial Colortype Company, Chicago, no. M64. Photo: Vitagraph. Clara Kimball Young in My Official Wife (James Young, 1914).

One of Vitagraph’s most popular female stars


Clara Kimball Young and James Young soon showed interest in working in films and signed with Vitagraph. Several sources refer to their movie debut as early as 1909, but 1912 is a more plausible year. In his 1952 autobiography, Albert E. Smith, one of the owners of Vitagraph, wrote: "Clara Kimball Young was a natural for films and, before long, she was making $1000 a week".

She reminisced in 1922: "I began to see the motion picture industry with new eyes, and it dawned upon me that this was not a profession to use as a stop-gap until something on the legitimate stage loomed up, but was a tremendously important profession in itself".

Clara quickly became one of Vitagraph’s most popular female stars and showed great versatility by appearing in comedies as well as dramas. She was featured in numerous shorts such as Half a Hero (1912), The Picture Idol (1912), A Vitagraph Romance (1912), Lord Browning and Cinderella (1912), The Little Minister (1913), When Mary Grows Up (1913), Delayed Proposals (1913), The Wrath of Osaka (1913), The Hindoo Charm (1913), The Lonely Princess (1913), Cupid Versus Women’s Rights (1913), Goodness Gracious (1914), Her Husband (1914), The Violin of M’sieur (1914), … In several of these, she acted opposite her husband, who also successfully took the helm in directing.

Maybe inspired by rival Kalem studios’ trips to Ireland and the Middle East, Vitagraph sent her in December 1912, along with some other Vitagraph performers such as Maurice Costello, on a 6-month marathon expedition to countries such as Japan, China, Egypt, India, and Italy to star in pictures displaying exotic settings. At the time, it was rather innovative for an American movie company to film in multiple overseas locations. They came back in the very beginning of June 1913.

At Vitagraph, she probably had her greatest success in the feature My Official Wife (1914), as a Russian nihilist trying to assassinate the Czar. That same year, a poll conducted by Motion Picture Magazine named her the most popular film actress, just ahead of Mary Pickford.

Clara Kimball Young
Swedish postcard by Förlag Nordisk Konst, Stockholm, no. 943.

Clara Kimball Young
American promotional postcard for the screening of The Common Law (Albert Capellani, 1916) at the Stambaugh Opera House on the 9th and 10th of December 1916. Photo: Lewis J. Selznick Productions.

Lewis J. Selznick


Lewis J. Selznick, vice-president of World Film Company, soon showed great interest in Clara Kimball Young and signed her in 1914. They also became romantically involved.

Her first film for World was James Young’s Lola (1914), in which a gentle young girl who dies in a car accident is brought back to life by her scientist father and, in the process, unexpectedly transforms into a heartless adventuress. It was followed by The Deep Purple (1915), Hearts in Exile (1915), Marrying Money (1915), Trilby (1915), The Heart of the Blue Ridge (1915), Camille (1915), The Yellow Passport (1916), The Feast of Life (1916), The Dark Silence (1916) and The Heart of Susan (1916).

Of these eleven films, she made for World, five were directed by James Young. By early 1916, he sued Selznick for alienation of affection.

In 1916, Selznick was ousted from World by its board and left to create his own production company. He also took Clara with him.

He soon founded the Clara Kimball Young Film Corporation, with Clara as vice-president and famous filmmaker Albert Capellani as director general. So, she starred in four films, all distributed by Selznick’s company: The Foolish Virgin (1916), The Common Law (1916), The Price She Paid (1917) and The Easiest Way (1917).

Clara Kimballl Young
British postcard in the Famous Cinema Stars series by Beagles, no. 104-A.

Craving for creative control


But things were going sour as Clara Kimball Young had found a new love interest, a Detroit exhibitor named Harry Garson, who soon took charge of her business affairs.

James Young, still obviously unhappy with Clara’s infidelities, attacked Garson with a penknife in February 1917. Clara boldly declared at the time: "I have no use for my husband". The Youngs’ divorce became final in 1919.

In June 1917, Clara sued Selznick, considering that he dominated her namesake company and that she had no authority over it. He countersued. Later that year, Adolph Zukor bought a half share of the Selznick Pictures Company and renamed it Select Pictures, with Selznick remaining as head of the studio.

A new C.K.Y. Film Corporation was created: Clara would produce her movies under her company but would distribute them through Select. It was said that she selected her own stories and plays, her own directors and her own supporting company. She could now exercise the most creative control she ever had up to that time.

She starred in, for example, Magda (1917), Shirley Kay (1917), The Marionettes (1918), The House of Glass (1918), The Savage Woman (1918), Cheating Cheaters (1919), The Better Wife (1919), …

Clara Kimballl Young
British postcard in the Famous Cinema Stars series by Beagles, no. 104-B.

The end of the C.K.Y. Film Corporation and the birth of Garson Productions


In January 1919, Clara Kimball Young announced that she had served notice upon the C.K.Y. Film Corporation for flagrant violations of the terms of the contract.

Nevertheless, Selznick pointed out that Select owned all the stock in the C.K.Y. Film Corporation and that her contract ran until mid-1921.

In April 1919, Selznick bought out Zukor’s half share in the Select Company.

An agreement was reached in June 1919: Clara was released from her contract but had to pay Selznick $25.000 for each of her next 10 pictures. She started to work under a new banner, Harry Garson Productions, named after her paramour, and her films would be distributed by Equity Pictures, which was run by Herbert K. Somborn, who was Gloria Swanson’s husband from 1919 to 1923.

It all began well: Eyes of Youth (1919) was released in November 1919 and was a hit. The sexual magnetism Rudolph Valentino displayed in this movie, in a small part as a seductive con-man hired to compromise Clara, allegedly brought him to the attention of screenwriter June Mathis, who campaigned to get him his breakthrough role in The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921).

Clara Kimballl Young
French postcard in the 'Collection des vedettes de la Select Pictures' series.

Decline


Unfortunately, Harry Garson decided to turn to directing.

He took the helm of Clara’s next eight pictures: The Forbidden Woman (1920), For the Love of Rafael (1920), Mid-Channel (1920), Hush (1921), Straight from Paris (1921), Charge It (1921), What No Man Knows (1921 and The Worldly Madonna (1922).

Garson was not the best of directors, but Clara was still in love and stood by him. However, for someone who had earlier worked with such experienced filmmakers as James Young, Maurice Tourneur, Albert Capellani, Emile Chautard, Robert G. Vignola and Allan Dwan, it didn’t bode well.

The suits were reactivated when, in November 1920, Selznick claimed that Clara and Harry Garson had not sent him $25,000 per picture per their agreement. The Judge ruled in his favour. That same year, a bank sued her to recover an overdue loan.

As the 1920s went by, Clara’s career went into decline. Her acting style gradually appeared old-fashioned. Her increasingly mature and matronly appearance didn’t help. Nor did Harry Garson’s uninspired handling of direction.

Clara Kimballl Young
British postcard in the Famous Cinema Stars series by Beagles, no. 104-D. Photo: Walturdaw Pictures.

Her last silent films


In 1922, Clara Kimball Young signed with independent producer Samuel Zierler. She starred for him in five films, all distributed by Metro: The Hands on Nara (1922), which was her last one under Harry Garson’s direction, Enter Madame (1922), The Woman of Bronze (1923), Cordelia the Magnificent (1923) and A Wife’s Romance (1923).

Metro did its best to promote them, but it was probably too late.

1925 saw the release of her last silent movie, Ivan Films Productions’ Lying Wives (1925), in a villainous role opposite Madge Kennedy.

She then appeared for some time in Vaudeville.

At some point, she finally separated from Garson and married dentist Arthur Fauman in 1928. Her husband would pass away in 1937.

Clara Kimballl Young
Spanish postcard in the Kursaal series. Photo: Witzel, L.A.

A comeback in talkies


In 1931, she came back to the screen in a Dorothy MacKaill vehicle, Kept Husbands (1931).

Then came offers from Poverty Row studios for leading roles in two movies: Mother and Son (1931) was distributed by Monogram, and Women Go on Forever (1931) by Tiffany. Those low-budget offerings didn’t relaunch her career. In 1932, she had to sell some of her belongings at an auction due to financial problems.

Thereafter, she played bit parts and supporting roles until 1941. She notably was Bela Lugosi’s sister in The Return of Chandu (1934), supported the Three Stooges in the short Ants in the Pantry (1936) and appeared opposite William Boyd in three Westerns from the Hopalong Cassidy series, Three on the Trail (1936), Hills of Old Wyoming (1937) and The Frontiersmen (1938). She was even a brothel madam in the cheaply made exploitation film The Wages of Sin (1938).

However, she didn’t complain and remained objective and philosophical about her plight. In 1934, she said: "Fame is fleeting, particularly so in the movies, and actresses must accept what Fate gives them. I had my share of glory".

She retired after Mr. Celebrity (1941), in which she played herself, opposite another old-timer, Francis X. Bushman. One critic said: "Many persons will be touched at seeing again the old favourites, Francis X. Bushman and Clara Kimball Young, who appear throughout the picture". About stopping working in films, she declared: "I think I deserve the chance to quit and just enjoy life".

Clara Kimball Young
British postcard in the Pictures Portrait Gallery series, no. A 21.

I’m living today. I’m in the rocket ship era


In the 1950s, Clara Kimball Young began to make the rounds of early film conventions. On such an event in Westhampton in 1956, publicist and author John Springer noticed: "Miss Young was tireless - the first to arrive, the saltiest conversationalist, and the last to leave".

Clara was never nostalgic. In 1955, she had declared: "I’m living today, I’m in the rocket ship era".

In 1956, she signed on as a Hollywood correspondent with Johnny Carson’s TV show on CBS. An enthusiastic and cheerful Clara stated, "I hope my reporting does more than entertain. Nobody has to be old at sixty, and I think senior citizens will get the idea when they see how full of pep I am. You have to keep your mind trained on the present and your eyes to the future if you want to stay young. I’ve seen my ups and downs, and I haven’t regretted a minute. I’ll be working with current stars and newcomers, so I don’t have to worry about getting old".

In 1960, she entered the Motion Picture Country Home. Among the other residents was Gareth Hughes, who had played her younger brother in Eyes of Youth (1919). Under the religious name of 'Brother David', he had become a Christian missionary to the Paiute Indians in 1946.

Clara Kimball Young died of a stroke on the 15th of October 1960, and Gareth Hughes co-officiated at the rites upon her funeral.

Clara Kimball Young
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 828/1, 1925-1926. Photo: Bafag (British-American Films A.G.).

Clara Kimball Young
Postcard probably produced for the Cuban market, stamped on the back 'Photo Cinema Star Co. Habana'. Photo: Witzel.

Text and postcards: Marlene Pilaete.