12 December 2025

L'eclisse (1962)

Along with L’avventura, La notte, and Deserto rosso, L'eclisse is part of Michelangelo Antonioni’s ‘Great Tetralogy’, in which setting and environment are very important. In L'eclisse / The Eclipse (1962), Monica Vitti lives in EUR, a modernistic suburb of Rome. She meets Alain Delon, who plays a confident stockbroker in the old city centre. His materialistic nature eventually undermines their relationship. For the newest edition of the magazine Roma Aeterna, Ivo Blom wrote an article about the locations of L'eclisse. We updated our old post on Antonioni's masterpiece with pictures we took in 2010 when we followed his old footsteps in EUR.

Monica Vitti and Alain Delon in L'Eclisse
Romanian postcard by Casa Filmulu Acin. C.P.C.S. Photo: publicity still for L'eclisse / The Eclipse (Michelangelo Antonioni, 1962).

Monica Vitti and Alain Delon in L'eclisse (1962)
Romanian postcard by Casa Filmului Acin. Photo: publicity still for L'eclisse / The Eclipse (1962).

Alain Delon (1935-2024)
Spanish postcard by Archivo Bermejo, no. 322. Photo: Radio Film. Alain Delon in L'eclisse / The Eclipse (Michelangelo Antonioni, 1962).

Monica Vitti in L'eclisse
Dutch postcard by De Muinck en Co, Amsterdam, no. 809. Photo: publicity still for L'eclisse / The Eclipse (1962).

Monica Vitti and Alain Delon in L'eclisse (1962)
Romanian postcard by Casa Filmului Acin. Photo: publicity still for L'eclisse / The Eclipse (1962).

As long as their love will endure


By Michelangelo Antonioni’s own account, his ideas for films are born of visual epiphanies, fleeting but revealing glimpses of the world around him. Modern architecture is symptomatic of the problems facing modern Western man, and the locations play a significant role in L'eclisse.

Monica Vitti plays a young translator, Vittoria, who leaves her lover, the writer Riccardo (Francisco Rabal), and terminates their 4-year relationship. Following several sleepless nights, Vittoria visits her estranged mother (Lila Brignone) at the stock exchange. There, the dynamic young stockbroker Piero (Alain Delon) casts his romantic gaze in Vittoria's direction. Although they have little in common, Vittoria visits Piero in his office, and they make plans to meet again that night and every night thereafter - for as long as their love will endure.

L'eclisse caps off Michelangelo Antonioni's previous two films, L'avventura (1960) and La Notte (1961), in much the same style. A characteristic of Antonioni's films is the long, significant periods of silence. The people in his film just cannot seem to communicate with each other. Eleanor Mannikka at AllMovie: "There is much to appreciate in this man who is not overly intellectual and is blessedly free of complications, and the same can be said of Vittoria. Yet their innermost fears play upon both of them in ways that go against an honest expression of their love - and against a lasting relationship."

Antonioni’s Rome works as a mirror to the characters. EUR, the quarter where most of L'eclisse evolves, was then – and still is – a zone for the well-to-do, but for the modern ones; not the conservative rich who cling to the historic centre with its century-old palazzi and antiques. At the start of the film, Vittoria is suffocated by the heat and by her relationship and looks outside, but instead of nature, she sees a giant water tower. The tower, nicknamed ‘mushroom'(fungo), resembles the atomic bomb. When the film was shot, in 1961, the atomic arms race was a fact. We also notice the enormous Palazzo dello Sport, built by the architects Piero Nervi and Marcello Piacentini. Piacentini was the master architect of the whole quarter in the fascist era, when EUR was destined for the World Expo of 1942 or E42 (which never took place, of course), hence EUR (Esposizione Universale di Roma). The Sports Palace was built for the 1960 Olympic Games, like so many modern buildings in Rome.

Piero works at the Old Stock Exchange in the so-called Temple of Hadrian in Piazza di Pietra. The contrast with EUR cannot be bigger: the enormous noise of buyers and sellers at the stock exchange floor, the hysteria of Vittoria’s mother fixated on money, and the speedy Piero. Vittoria and Piero regularly meet in Vittoria’s quarter, at a crossroad near the Olympic Hippodrome. While they are there, Antonioni cherishes all the details of this location, such as trees, sprinklers, a nurse with a pram, a bus passing by, water running from a tree to a sewer, streetlamps, etc. This makes it their personal location and monumentalises it. All these details come back in the final scene. The place is rather disturbing. And still it is Vittoria’s place.

Rome, EUR
Rome, EUR, 2010.

Rome, Colosseo Quadrato
The most representative building of the 'Fascist' style at EUR is Palazzo della Civiltà Italiana (1938-1943), an iconic project which has since become known as the 'Colosseo Quadrato (Square Colosseum).

Rome, EUR
Rome, EUR, Fungo (water tower).

Rome, San Pietro e San Paolo church
San Pietro e San Paolo church, Via Ostiense, EUR, Rome, Italy. Architect: Arnoldo Foschini. This church is directly inspired by (the other) Michelangelo’s plan for St. Peter’s, which was based on a Greek cross shape. It was built from 1935 to 1955.

Rome, EUR
Rome, EUR, 2010.


A form of poetry


With her wild blond hair, Monica Vitti is perfect as the confused Vittoria. She displays just enough emotion to realise the character, but is malleable enough for Antonioni to illustrate his theme through her. Alain Delon never looked more handsome than in L'eclisse. He conveys emotions easily with just the flick of an eyebrow. Delon portrays the materialistic, spiritually empty stockbroker quite effectively.

L'eclisse rejects action in favour of contemplation. Images and design are more important than character and story. The long takes and elegant compositions, filmed by Gianni De Venanzo, and the elongated views on a building or a streetlight, manage to create a form of poetry.

Antonioni shows us a very different Rome in L’eclisse than the one we are used to. The empty, new EUR, a sleekly designed neighbourhood, then still without patina, contrasts with the chaos, noise and traffic of the city centre, where a trade fair is housed in an antique Roman building.

In another Roman classic, Roman Holiday (1953), director William Wyler imagined Rome as a compressed city where monuments are emphasised, and everyone seems to know each other. Michelangelo Antonioni emphasises the suburbs, the new housing estate, a very different kind of Rome than we are used to. Antonioni's Rome is a city where people struggle to maintain relationships and are mainly preoccupied with themselves or materialistic matters. Antonioni seems to say to Vittoria: 'Living here has got to make you unhappy, the city seems as empty as your heart. But if you take enough time to look around you, listen and pay attention to meaningful details, there is much to discover even in an empty new housing estate like this.'

L'eclisse won the Special Jury Award at the 1962 Cannes Film Festival and was nominated for the Palme d'Or. Although the film won several more awards, L'eclisse was never a commercial success, and many people seem to find the film boring. It is not. Go and watch it closely and let yourself be hypnotised by Antonioni.


Monica Vitti and Alain Delon in L'eclisse, 1962
Small Romanian collector card by Casa Filmului Acin. Photo: publicity still for L'eclisse / The Eclipse (1962).
Alain Delon in L'eclisse (1962)
Romanian postcard by Casa Filmului Acin. Photo: Alain Delon in L'eclisse / The Eclypse (Michelangelo Antonioni, 1962).

Alain Delon (1935-2024)
Spanish postcard by Archivo Bermejo, no. 7643. Photo: Radio Film. Alain Delon in L'eclisse / The Eclipse (Michelangelo Antonioni, 1962).

L'eclisse (1962)
French poster postcard by Éditions Zreik, Paris, in the Collection Télérama, la mémoire du cinéma, no. 74. French affiche for L'eclipse / L'eclisse / The Eclipse (Michelangelo Antonioni, 1962) starring Monica Vitti and Alain Delon.


Original trailer for L'eclisse / The Eclipse (1962) with the title song by Mina. Source: xx999xx999 (YouTube).


Trailer L'eclisse / The Eclipse (1962). Source: moviolamagics (YouTube).

Sources: Ivo Blom (Cinematic City: L'Eclisse and Rome), Eleanor Mannikka (AllMovie - page now defunct), TCM (page now defunct), Wikipedia and IMDb.

And please check out Roma Aeterna.

11 December 2025

Triboulet (1923)

Triboulet (1923) is an Italian period piece directed by actor Febo Mari for the Società Italiana Cines and the UCI. Achille Vitti played King Francis I of France, Umberto Zanuccoli played the title role, the historical jester of the kings Louis XII and Francis I of France, and Elena Sangro played Giletta. G.B. Falci in Milano was the publisher of this series of black and white postcards for the film.

Triboulet (1923)
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Fotominio. Giovanni Schettini as Manfred in Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923), 1st and 2nd episode.

Elena Sangro in Triboulet
Elena Sangro. Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Cines / UCI. Publicity still for Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923)

Triboulet
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Cines / UCI. Publicity still for Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923), 3rd and 4th episode.

Triboulet
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Cines / UCI. Publicity still for Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923), 3rd and 4th episode.

Delirium of love



Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923) was based on the novel 'Triboulet'(1910) by Michele Zévaco. Triboulet was a historical figure. His real name was Nicolas Ferrial (1479-1536), and he was a jester of the kings Louis XII and Francis I of France. He appears in Book 3 of François Rabelais' Pantagrueline chronicles.

Triboulet also appears in Victor Hugo's 'Le Roi s'amuse' and its opera version, Giuseppe Verdi's 'Rigoletto', a blend of 'Triboulet' and French rigoler (to laugh), intended to deflect the censorship that Hugo's work had received. Verdi also turned Triboulet more into a tragic figure.

Triboulet (1923) by Febo Mari was originally released as a six-part serial, then reduced to a three-part serial, and finally just one single feature film of 2.500 metres. The six episodes were titled: 1) The King's Buffoon, 2) The King of the Misers, 3) The Mysteries of the Louvre, 4) The Cour des Miracles, 5) The Revenge of the Nameless, and 6) Delirium of Love.

Umberto Zanuccoli played Triboulet, the king's jester, but in reality, he is a nobleman called Ferrial. Achille Vitti played King Francesco (or Francis I), who dedicates himself to peace after the defeat of Pavia. However, the king does not disdain his notorious love life. At the age of 50, he is tired of Mme de Ferron ('la belle Ferronière') and gets interested in young Gillette, played by film diva Elena Sangro.

Triboulet is a true melodrama with many secret identities. Triboulet raised Gillette, who loves Manfred (Giovanni Schettini), the king of the Cour des Miracles, the Paris slums. Manfred saves Gillette from the clutches of Francis. Francis is, in true melodrama style, in reality Gilette's father by a former mistress, Margentina (Tina Ceccaci Renaldi), now a mad and visionary woman. Hurt in one of his actions, Manfred is saved and cured by an Italian couple, who travel with their servant Spadacappa. Manfred later discovers that the Italian couple are his parents, who have come to France to find him.

Triboulet
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Cines / UCI. Publicity still for Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923), 3rd and 4th episode.

Triboulet (1923)
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Fotominio / Cines / UCI. Achille Vitti as King Francis/ François I of France, Umberto Zanuccoli in the title role, Giovanni Schettini as Manfred, and Elena Sangro as Gillette in Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923), 3rd and 4th episode.

Triboulet
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Cines / UCI. Publicity still for Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923).

Triboulet
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Cines / UCI. Publicity still for Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923).

6 episodes


1. After the defeat of Pavia (1525) and his subsequent imprisonment, the French King Francis I (Achille Vitti) dedicates himself to peace, though not disdaining his notorious love life. At the age of 50, he is tired of Mme de Ferron ('la belle Ferronière'), and gets interested in young Gillette (Elena Sangro), an orphan raised by Triboulet (Umberto Zanuccoli), the king's buffoon, but in reality a nobleman called Ferrial. Mme de Ferron won't stand to have a rival. Gillette instead loves Manfred (Giovanni Schettini), the king of the Cour des Miracles. Manfred fights off all the king's swordsmen but cannot rescue Gillette. Gillette finds refuge at the printer Etienne Dolet (Carlo Gualandri). Francis, in reality is her father by a former mistress, Margentina (Tina Ceccaci Renaldi), now a mad and visionary woman, and asks her to join him at the Louvre. Manfred liberates the locked-up de Ferron, who otherwise would have died, so she is ever so grateful. He himself is then imprisoned, but he manages to escape.

2. Hurt, Manfred is saved and cured by an Italian aristocratic couple, the Count of Ragastens (Totò Majorana) and his wife, who travel with their servant Spadacappa, and are looking for their lost son. Manfred finds Gillette again at the house of the editor Dolet. Instead of the splendour of the Louvre, Gillette selects the modest house of Fleurial, aka Triboulet, the King's buffoon. She thus has two fathers. When she publicly prefers the buffoon, the latter is tortured and imprisoned. Manfred declares his love for Gillette in the King's throne room, causing an enormous sword fight, from which he is rescued at the last moment by Lanthenay (Alfredo Menichelli), his fellow in arms. A huge fire breaks out at the Louvre, caused by Lanthenay and his gang, which Maddalena de Ferron, the scorned ex-mistress of the King, views with mixed feelings, as the King may thus escape her revenge. But the King is still alive.

3. Maddalena de Ferron is set on revenge and has herself become a leper to contaminate the King and his beloved. Having mistaken Gillette for a rival in love, the Duchess of Etampes, royal favourite, hands her over to Margentine, who has descended into madness and almost manages to disfigure her own daughter with acid. Yet, Spadacappa saves Gillette right on time. Manfred is about to be cornered by three cronies from the King, but Maddalena saves him at the last moment. After Manfred has left, Maddalena still swears to avenge herself on the King.

4. Manfred and Lanthenay, both raised in the Paris slums, The Court of Miracles, are the foster sons of Mama Gypsy, who, after her own son was condemned to death by the Provost Monclar (Gino Viotti), stole his son and raised him as a bandit, Lanthenay. Ordered by the King, the provost raids the slums with his army and has Manfred and Lanteney arrested.

5-6. In episodes 5 and 6, other adventures follow, in which Manfred discovers the Italian couple are his parents, who have come to France to find him. Triboulet and Manfred join forces to free Etienne Dolet, accused of having printed heretical works and imprisoned in the Conciergerie, where the executioner awaits him. The trio intends at the same time to defend the Cour des Miracles, whose Grand Provost is preparing to attack it, and to find Gillette, whom the king has taken to Fontainebleau. Through countless twists and turns, Dolet perishes at the stake, Manfred turns out to be the lost son of the Count of Ragastens, and Lanthenay that of the Grand Provost. Margentine regains her sanity and recognises Gillette, with whom Manfred disputes with the king, with his sword. Triboulet sacrifices himself to save Gillette. Broken, François I returns to the Château de Rambouillet and dies there, under the vengeful gaze of Madeleine Ferron, known as the Beautiful Ferronnière.

Triboulet (1923)
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Fotominio. Left, Umberto Zanuccoli as Triboulet in Triboulet (Febo Mari 1923), 5th and 6th episode.

Triboulet (1923)
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Fotominio. Umberto Zanuccoli in the title role of the period piece Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923), 5th and 6th episode.

Triboulet (1923)
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Fotominio. Elena Sangro as Gillette in Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923), 5th and 6th episode.

Triboulet
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Cines / UCI. Publicity still for Triboulet (Febo Mari, 1923), 5th and 6th episode.

Sources: Vittorio Martinelli (Il cinema muto italiano, 1923-1931 - Italian), Herve Dumont, Wikipedia and IMDb.

10 December 2025

Georgia Hale

Georgia Hale (1900-1985) was an actress of the silent film era. Hale rose to film stardom in 1925 under the auspices of directors Josef von Sternberg in The Salvation Hunters and Charlie Chaplin in The Gold Rush. Hale retired from acting in 1931 after appearing in about a dozen silent and sound films.

Georgia Hale
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 1171/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Paralta / Ifa / United Artists.

A dance-hall girl who wins Charlie's heart


Georgia Theodora Hale was born in 1900 in St. Joseph, Missouri. Her parents were George Washington Hale and Laura Imbrie, and she had two older sisters, Eugenia and Helen. Her father worked as a telephone company operations manager. The family moved to a suburb of Englewood, Illinois, in 1903, where Hale would graduate from high school. In 1918, her yearbook reports that Hale, in performing the role of Ralph Rackstraw in Gilbert and Sullivan’s light opera, 'H. M. S. Pinafore', had "made her justly famous" on campus.

An aspiring singer, Hale attended a Chicago musical college in 1920, appearing in the 'Chicago Winter Follies' - her first theatrical engagement. In 1922, she won a beauty contest in Chicago, and despite strong disapproval from her father, she used the award money to go to New York City to break into the film business. Hale performed uncredited supporting roles in a number of features over the next several months.

After a brief visit to her ailing mother in Chicago in 1923, Hale left for Hollywood, California. She immediately found work as a bit player and appeared as a 'bathing beauty' in such films as The Temple of Venus (1923). As a bit player, she also acted in By Divine Right (Roy William Neill, 1924), and she danced in the chorus of Vanity's Price (Roy William Neill, 1924) starring Ann Q. Nilsson.

Josef von Sternberg was an assistant director on both of these films, and he gave Georgia her first break when he cast her for the film that he directed, The Salvation Hunters (Josef von Sternberg, 1925), opposite George K. Arthur. Though not a box office success, The Salvation Hunters was ranked among the top 10 films for 1925 by trade paper Film Mercury.

Then Charles Chaplin hired her to play the dance-hall girl Georgia, who wins Charlie's heart, in The Gold Rush (Charles Chaplin, 1925). Hale was friends with Chaplin's wife at the time, 16-year-old Lita Grey, who was originally cast in the role. When Lita became pregnant and had to drop out, Hale was handed the lead of The Gold Rush. The very successful film won Georgia instant star status.

Georgia Hale and Charlie Chaplin in The Gold Rush (1925)
Vintage postcard. Georgia Hale and Charlie Chaplin in The Gold Rush (Charles Chaplin, 1925).

Georgia Hale
Italian postcard by G. Vettori, Bologna, no. 3085. Photo: United Artists.

Highly personal and professional insights into Hollywood directors Chaplin and von Sternberg


Georgia Hale was signed by Paramount Pictures. Her big film with Paramount was The Great Gatsby (Herbert Brenon, 1926), based on F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic novel, where she played the role of Myrtle Wilson alongside Warner Baxter as Jay Gatsby.

But her career never went anywhere, and her last silent picture would be the film The Last Moment (Pál Fejös, 1928). Deemed unsuitable for talkies, she was one of the first to be released in 1931. Her final film was The Lightning Warrior (Benjamin H. Kline, Armand Schaefer, 1931), a Mascot serial starring Rin Tin Tin, also in his last role.

She found solace in Christian Science. She never married and remained loyal to Chaplin, who had her on his payroll on and off until 1953. She ran a dance school for a while. She also wrote her two versions of her autobiography in the 1960s, but couldn't find a publisher at the time. Hale eventually went into real estate, which made her wealthy.

She also found a companion, who had no idea of her film career, until she gave an interview about Charlie Chaplin in Kevin Brownlow and David Gill's magnificent documentary series Unknown Chaplin (Kevin Brownlow, David Gill, 1983). The documentary revealed that Hale was hired by Chaplin to replace actress Virginia Cherrill as the female lead in the film City Lights (Charles Chaplin, 1931) during a brief period after he had fired Cherrill, and before he re-hired her. Approximately seven minutes of test footage of Hale in the role survives.

Georgia Hale died in 1985 in Hollywood, at the age of 85. Her companion received most of her estate. Ten years after she died, a second version of her autobiography, which she had written in the 1960s, was more detailed than her first and would finally be published: 'Charlie Chaplin: Intimate Closeups' (1995). According to Wikipedia, it "is one of the few accounts that provide highly personal and professional insights into Hollywood directors Chaplin and von Sternberg."

Georgia Hale
Italian postcard by G. Vettori, Bologna, no. 3080. Photo: Paralta L.A. / United Artists.

Georgia Hale
Italian postcard by G. Vettori, Bologna, no. 3089. Photo: Paralta L.A. / United Artists.

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

09 December 2025

Ralph Fiennes

Ralph Fiennes (1962) is an English actor, film producer, and director. He first achieved success as an interpreter of Shakespeare's works onstage at the Royal National Theatre. His breakthrough in the cinema was as Nazi war criminal Amon Göth in Schindler's List (1993). Another notable success was his portrayal of Count Almásy in The English Patient (1996). Several other notable films and box office hits followed.

Ralph Fiennes in Quiz Show (1994)
Spanish collector card by Accion. Ralph Fiennes in Quiz Show (Robert Redford, 1994).

Ralph Fiennes and Kristin Scott Thomas in The English Patient (1996)
British postcard by Boomerang Media. Photo: Buena Vista International / Miramax. Ralph Fiennes and Kristin Scott Thomas in The English Patient (Anthony Minghella, 1996).

Closely connected to the stage


Ralph Nathaniel Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes was born in Ipswich, Suffolk, in 1962. He is the eldest of six children of photographer and illustrator Mark Fiennes and writer Jennifer Lash. The marriage also produced Magnus (composer and music producer), twins Joseph Fiennes (also an actor) and Jacob Mark (forester), as well as daughters Martha Maria (director) and Sophia Victoria (documentary film director).

His artistic talent was noticed at an early age by his mother, who encouraged him and his siblings intensively. After leaving school, Ralph Fiennes initially studied fine art at the Chelsea School of Art, but switched to acting after a year. He trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) and joined the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) in 1988. Fiennes remains closely connected to the stage to this day. Even after his international breakthrough, he continued to appear on stage on numerous occasions.

In 1995, Fiennes made his Broadway debut playing Prince Hamlet in the revival of 'Hamlet', for which he won the Tony Award for Best Leading Actor in a Play. In spring 2006, he played Frank Hardy in Brian Friel's 'Faith Healer' at the Gate Theatre in Dublin. The successful production moved to Broadway in New York in the summer. He was Tony-nominated for his role as a travelling faith healer.

In 2011, he played Prospero in William Shakespeare's 'The Tempest' at the Theatre Royal Haymarket. In 2016, he played the title role in Shakespeare's 'Richard III' at the Almeida Theatre in London, where he had previously played 'Hamlet' (1995), 'Richard II' (2000) and 'Coriolanus' (2010).

Ralph Fiennes met English actress Alex Kingston when they were both studying at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. After a ten-year relationship, they married in 1993 and divorced in 1997, following Fiennes' relationship with actress Francesca Annis. They met in 1995, during the production of 'Hamlet' in which Annis, who is eighteen years his senior, played Hamlet's mother. In 2006, this relationship ended due to Fiennes's affair with the Romanian singer Cornelia Crișan. In 2007, Fiennes had sex with a Qantas flight attendant on a flight from Darwin to Mumbai. After initial denials, it was established that they had sex in the plane's lavatory, and the flight attendant's employment was terminated by Qantas. The incident was referenced in the Australian sketch TV show Comedy Inc. Fiennes has been a national ambassador for UNICEF since 1999.

Ralph Fiennes, Angela Bassett and Juliette Lewis in Strange Days (1995)
Dutch postcard by Boomerang School Cards. Photo: UIP / Universal. Ralph Fiennes, Angela Bassett and Juliette Lewis in Strange Days (Kathryn Bigelow, 1995).

Uma Thurman and Ralph Fiennes in The Avengers (1998)
German postcard by Edgar Medien. Photo: Vox. Uma Thurman and Ralph Fiennes in The Avengers (Jeremiah S. Chechik, 1998). Caption: Uns sendet die Queen.

Harry Potter's arch-enemy, the new M and a flirty and eccentric concierge


Ralph Fiennes made his screen debut in a small role in two episodes of the TV mini-series Prime Suspect (Christopher Menaul, 1991) starring Helen Mirren. Then he starred as T. E. Lawrence in the British television film A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After Arabia (Christopher Menaul, 1992). Fiennes made his film debut as Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights (Peter Kosminsky, 1992), opposite Juliette Binoche. He had a major role in Peter Greenaway's historical drama The Baby of Mâcon (1993) with Julia Ormond, which provoked controversy and was poorly received.

He gained international fame for his role as Amon Göth, the commander of the Płaszów concentration camp, in the Holocaust drama Schindler's List (Steven Spielberg, 1993). Fiennes was nominated for the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor and won the BAFTA Award in this category. In 1994, he portrayed the American academic Charles Van Doren in Robert Redford's drama Quiz Show, opposite John Turturro and Paul Scofield. His second Oscar nomination followed in 1997, this time in the Best Actor category, for his role as Count Laszlo Almasy in the World War II epic romance The English Patient (Anthony Minghella, 1996), in which he starred with Kristin Scott Thomas.

In 1998, he played John Steed in the remake of The Avengers (Jeremiah S. Chechik, 1998) alongside Sean Connery and Uma Thurman. However, the film was not a success at the box office and was nominated for nine Razzies at the 19th Golden Raspberry Awards. Again, Fiennes did not win the award. From the fourth instalment of the Harry Potter film series, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Mike Newell, 2005), onwards, Fiennes took on the role of the evil Lord Voldemort, Harry Potter's arch-enemy, in the Harry Potter films (2005-2011). He played the protagonist in The Reader (Stephen Daldry, 2008), adapted from the novel of the same name, alongside Kate Winslet, and co-starred in The Hurt Locker (Kathryn Bigelow, 2008), which was his third Best Picture Oscar-winning film.

In 2011, Fiennes made his feature film debut as a director with Coriolanus (2011), a modern interpretation of William Shakespeare's play, in which he also played the title character, opposite Gerard Butler and Vanessa Redgrave. Two years later, he directed his second film, The Invisible Woman (2013), about the affair between Charles Dickens and Nelly Ternan, which lasted for thirteen years until he died in 1870. In 2012, Fiennes played former secret agent Gareth Mallory in the James Bond film Skyfall (Sam Mendes, 2012) starring Daniel Craig. In the course of the film, Mallory became the new ‘M’, taking over the position of Judi Dench's character. He reprised the role in Spectre (Sam Mendes, 2015) and No Time to Die (Cary Joji Fukunaga, 2021). Fiennes was the narrator in numerous audiobook productions and a voice actor in animated films such as The Prince of Egypt (Brenda Chapman, Steve Hickner, Simon Wells, 1998) and the stop-motion animated film Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (Steve Box, Nick Park, 2005).

Ralph Fiennes made quite an impression with his farcical turn as a flirty and eccentric concierge, Monsieur Gustave, in The Grand Budapest Hotel (Wes Anderson, 2014), which won the Silver Bear at the 2014 Berlin Film Festival. He starred as a music producer in Luca Guadagnino's thriller A Bigger Splash (2015) alongside Dakota Johnson, Tilda Swinton and Matthias Schoenaerts, and played the fictional Laurence Laurentz, an acclaimed European film director, in Joel and Ethan Coen's comedy Hail, Caesar! (2016), which is set in 1950s Hollywood. In 2018, his third directorial effort, Nureyev – The White Crow, was released, based on a biography of the dancer Rudolf Nureyev. Fiennes himself took on the role of ballet master Alexander Pushkin. Fiennes starred alongside Carey Mulligan and Lily James in the British drama The Dig (Simon Stone, 2021), playing the Suffolk archaeologist Basil Brown. The film received positive reviews, with critics praising his performance. Last year, he received his third Oscar nomination for his leading role in the political thriller Conclave (Edward Berger, 2024). He played Cardinal Thomas Lawrence, who organises a conclave to elect the next pope and finds himself investigating secrets and scandals about the major candidates. This year, Ralph Fiennes starred in 28 Years Later (Danny Boyle, 2025), the third film in the series, which is set in a post-apocalyptic Britain.

Carey Mulligan and Ralph Fiennes in The Dig (2021)
Chinese postcard. Carey Mulligan and Ralph Fiennes in The Dig (Simon Stone, 2021).

The Grand Budapest Hotel
Swiss poster card. Poster: Collection Movie Art. American poster for The Grand Budapest Hotel (Wes Anderson, 2014).

Sources: Gustaf Molin and Pedro Borges (IMDb), Wikipedia (Dutch, German and English) and IMDb.

08 December 2025

J. Warren Kerrigan

J. Warren Kerrigan (1879-1947) was an American actor of the silent screen. From 1910, he had a most active career, first in shorts at Essanay, American at Victor, then in features at Universal. After a gap in the early 1920s, he came back with a bang in James Cruze's The Covered Wagon (1923), but stopped acting in 1924 after a car accident.

J. Warren Kerrigan
British postcard in the "Pictures" Portrait Gallery, no. 137.

Warren Kerrigan
American postcard by Flying A, no. 12. Photo: Flying A.

Warren Kerrigan
American postcard by Flying A, no. 15. Photo: Flying A.

Warren Kerrigan
French postcard by Cinémagazine-Edition, Paris, no. 150.

The Gibson Man


J. (Jack) Warren Kerrigan was born in New Albany, Indiana, in 1879. He worked as a warehouse clerk in his teens until a chance arrived to appear in a vaudeville production. He continued to act in travelling stock productions, though he took a brief time away from the stage to attend the University of Illinois.

By the time he was 30 years old, he started to act as a leading man in short films for Essanay Studios from 1910 onwards. In 1910, he already acted in some 20 short films at Essanay: Westerns, comedies, etc. Quite a few were directed by Gilbert ‘Broncho Billy' M. Anderson.

In the very same year, Kerrigan shifted to the American Film Corporation, where Kerrigan was often cast as a modern man of the age. His nickname was 'The Gibson Man'. Allan Dwan directed some of his films for American. The production at the studio must have had killing time schedules, as according to IMDb, some 90 short films were produced in 1911, almost 100 in 1912, and some 75 in 1913. So basically, two films were produced every week.

In 1913, both Dwan and Kerrigan shifted to the Victor company. In 1914, some 35 films were made at |Victor. Kerrigan made his first feature-length films that year as well, such as the six-reeler Samson (J. Farrell MacDonald, 1914), with Kerrigan’s sister Kathleen co-acting as Delilah, and he himself in the title role. The choreography, sets (based on Gustave Doré), and costumes were praised in The Moving Picture World, while the plot was criticised as ‘spineless’. About Kerrigan: “It would be hard to find a finer Samson than is Warren Kerrigan, who is more than the average in size, is perfect physically and is youthful and graceful.”

Far into 1916, Kerrigan would continue, however, to act mainly in shorts by Victor. In 1916, he officially went over to Universal - even if Victor, by 1913, had been bought by Universal - and started to appear in features regularly. Titles were a.o. The Silent Battle (Jack Conway, 1916) with Lois Wilson, The Beckoning Trail (Jack Conway, 1916), The Social Buccaneer (Jack Conway, 1916), and The Measure of Man (Jack Conway, 1916). Kerrigan continued to make shorts as well, at Mutual, but also at American, often with Allan Dwan as director.

J. Warren Kerrigan
American postcard by Ladies' World.

Warren Kerrigan
American postcard by Krauss Mfg. Co. New York. Photo: American Film Corporation.

J. Warren Kerrigan
British postcard, 1915. Photo: The Trans-Atlantic Film Co. / Victor / Universal. Publicity still for Value Received (dir. unknown, 1914).

J. Warren Kerrigan
French postcard by Editions Cinémagazine, no. 150.

A slump in popularity


In May 1917, J. Warren Kerrigan was nearing the end of a four-month-long personal appearance publicity tour that had taken him across the United States and into Canada. At one of the final stops, a reporter for The Denver Times asked Kerrigan if he would be joining the (First World) war. Kerrigan replied: 'I am not going to war. I will go, of course, if my country needs me, but I think that first, they should take the great mass of men who aren't good for anything else or are only good for the lower grades of work. Actors, musicians, great writers, artists of every kind—isn't it a pity when people are sacrificed who are capable of such things, of adding to the beauty of the world.'

Picked up and reprinted in newspapers across the country, this statement stunned his fans, and his popularity plummeted, never to fully recover. Family members later reported in 'Behind the Screen' (2001) by William J. Mann that his slump in popularity was more due to his living with his mother and his partner, silent movie actor James Vincent, in the same house, not wanting to marry, and not having a business manager to overcome the negative publicity, in contrast to the later protection of stars tied to the Hollywood majors.

What partly contradicts this controversy of 1917 is that Kerrigan had a relatively steady production up to 1920: six features in 1918, seven in 1919, seven in 1920. Only then, a gap in his career came in 1921-1922. However, when director James Cruze cast him as the rugged lead in The Covered Wagon (1923), Kerrigan found himself back on top. He aced in six more features the same year.

In the spring of 1924, after John Barrymore bowed out, Kerrigan was assigned the starring role in the Vitagraph production of Captain Blood. While the film was a moderate success, critics were unmoved. In December 1924, Kerrigan was injured in an automobile accident in Illinois. According to the Des Moines Tribune, his face was so badly scarred that he would not star in films again. Whatever happened, Captain Blood was Kerrigan’s last substantial film.

All in all, he had starred in over 300 films up to 1924. James Warren Kerrigan was homosexual, never married, and lived with his lover James Carroll Vincent from about 1914 to Kerrigan's death in 1947. After Kerrigan had died of pneumonia, Vincent married, but after nine months committed suicide. Both men were buried at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.

Warren Kerrigan,
Spanish card by La Novela Semanal Cinematográfica, no. 136.

Colecciones Amatller, J. Warren Kerrigan
Spanish collector card by Chocolate Amatller, Series G, Artist 10, no. 32.

J. Warren Kerrigan
British postcard.

J. Warren Kerrigan
British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, London, no. 147a.

Sources: Jim Beaver (IMDb), Wikipedia (English and German) and IMDb.

07 December 2025

Miiko Taka

Japanese American actress Miiko Taka (1925) is best known for co-starring with Marlon Brando in Sayonara (1957). She later also appeared in the British cinema.

Miiko Taka and Marlon Brando in Sayonara (1957).
Spanish postcard, no. 6330. Miiko Taka and Marlon Brando in Sayonara (Joshua Logan, 1957). Collection: Marlene Pilaete.

Miiko Taka
West German postcard by Franz Josef Rüdel, Filmpostkartenverlag, Hamburg-Bergedorf, no. 2324. Photo: Warner Bros. Publicity still for Sayonara (Joshua Logan, 1957).

Miiko Taka
Spanish postcard by Soberanas, no. 340.

Replacing Audrey Hepburn


Miiko Taka (高美以子) was born Betty Miiko Shikata in 1925 in Seattle, but she was raised in Los Angeles, California. Her parents had immigrated from Japan.

She is a Nisei, a Japanese-language term used in countries in North America and South America to specify the children born in the new country to Japanese-born immigrants (who are called Issei). In 1942, she was interned with her family at the Gila River War Relocation Center in Arizona.

After director Joshua Logan's first choice for the role of Hana-ogi, Audrey Hepburn, turned him down, he looked to cast an unknown actress in Sayonara (1957). Taka, who at the time was working as a clerk at a travel agency in Los Angeles, was discovered by a talent scout at a local Nisei festival.

Although she had no previous acting experience, Variety gave her a positive review: "Sayonara, based on the James A. Michener novel, is a picture of beauty and sensitivity. Amidst the tenderness and the tensions of a romantic drama, it puts across the notion that human relations transcend racial barriers. (...) Taka plays the proud Hana-ogi, the dedicated dancer, who starts by hating the Americans whom she sees as robbing Japan of its culture and ends up in Brando’s arms. Apart from being beautiful, she’s also a distinctive personality and her contribution rates high."

Nominated for ten Academy Awards, Sayonara won five, including Best Supporting Actor (Red Buttons) and Best Supporting Actress (Miyoshi Umeki). Warner Bros. gave Miiko Taka a term contract as a result of her performance in Sayonara.

Miiko Taka
Dutch postcard by Uitg. Takken, Utrecht, no. 3731. Photo: Warner Bros. Publicity still for Sayonara (Joshua Logan, 1957).

Marlon Brando and Miiko Taka in Sayonara (1957)
Dutch postcard by Uitgeverij Takken, Utrecht, no. 3734. Photo: Warner Bros. Publicity still for Sayonara (Joshua Logan, 1957) with Marlon Brando.

Miiko Taka and Marlon Brando in Sayonara (1957)
Dutch postcard. Photo: Warner Bros. Miiko Taka and Marlon Brando in Sayonara (Joshua Logan, 1957). Sent by mail in 1958.

Toshiro Mifune


After Sayonara, Miiko Taka worked in films with James Garner, Bob Hope, and Cary Grant. With Jeffrey Hunter and legendary American Japanese film star Sessue Hayakawa, she worked on the World War II film Hell to Eternity (Phil Karlson, 1960).

Her other films include Cry for Happy (George Marshall, 1961), in which she played a geisha opposite Glenn Ford, the comedy Walk, Don't Run (Charles Walters, 1966) starring Cary Grant, and the musical Lost Horizon (Charles Jarrott, 1973).

With Japanese star Toshiro Mifune, she appeared in the British film Paper Tiger (Ken Annakin, 1975) and the TV miniseries Shõgun (Jerry London, 1980). She also served as an interpreter for Mifune as well as director Akira Kurosawa when they visited Hollywood.

Miiko Taka married Dale Ishimoto in Baltimore in 1944, and they had one son, Greg Shikata, who works in the film industry, and one daughter. They divorced in 1958.

In 1963, she married Los Angeles TV news director Lennie Blondheim. Miiko Taka's last film to date was the American action film The Challenge (John Frankenheimer, 1982).

Miiko Taka in Sayonara (1957)
Dutch postcard, no. 29. Photo: Warner Bros. Publicity still for Sayonara (Joshua Logan, 1957).

Miiko Taka
Dutch postcard by Uitg. Takken, Utrecht, no. 3731. Photo: Warner Bros. Publicity still for Sayonara (Joshua Logan, 1957).

Sources: Variety, AllMovie, Wikipedia and IMDb.