04 July 2026

La Collectionneuse: Vera Reynolds

Vera Reynolds was one of the Wampas Baby Stars of 1926. At the time, she was professionally linked to famous director Cecil B. De Mille. At the beginning of the 1930s, she could only find work at Poverty Row studios and retired in 1932. Later, she made headlines for her complicated marital history.


Vera Reynolds
French postcard by J.R.P.R., Paris, no. 53. Photo: Film Erka Prodisco.

Vera Reynolds
British postcard by Picturegoer, no. 250.

Vera Reynolds and Ricardo Cortez Cortez in Feet of Clay (1924)
Mexican postcard by CIF, no. 1584. Vera Reynolds and Ricardo Cortez in Feet of Clay (Cecil B. DeMille, 1924).

Comedy shorts


Vera Reynolds was born on the 25th of November 1899 in Richmond, Virginia, U.S.A.

She made her film debut in 1917 and appeared in comedy shorts, working, for example, for Mack Sennett or Al Christie.

In 1921 and 1922, she was Eddie Barry’s leading lady in a series of comedies distributed by Arrow Pictures.

She also played opposite Stan Laurel in The Pest (1922).

Her first feature film was Prodigal Daughters (1923), as Gloria Swanson’s sister.

Vera Reynolds and Ricardo Cortez Cortez in Feet of Clay (1924)
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci-Editore, Milano. Vera Reynolds and Ricardo Cortez in Feet of Clay (Cecil B. DeMille, 1924).

Vera Reynolds
British embossed postcard, no. 94.

Cecil B. DeMille


Vera Reynolds was then professionally linked to Cecil B. DeMille for several years.

Under his direction, she played in Feet of Clay (1924), which had her making a round trip to the afterworld, and The Golden Bed (1925), as vamp Lillian Rich’s gentle and decent sister. She was also featured in The Night Club (1925), adapted from a 1913 play by Cecil B. DeMille and his brother, William C. de Mille.

In 1925, the famous director left Paramount and founded his own production unit, the DeMille Pictures Corporation, whose films would be distributed by P.D.C. His first personally directed release through this new partnership was The Road to Yesterday (1925), in which Vera co-starred with Jetta Goudal, Joseph Schildkraut and William Boyd.

Under the De Mille Pictures Corporation banner, she also starred, under various directors’ helm, in Silence (1926), Sunny Side Up (1926), Risky Business (1926), Corporal Kate (1926), The Little Adventuress (1927), Almost Human (1927) and The Main Event (1927).

In August 1927, it was reported that she had attempted suicide by taking poison. She denied it, claiming that it was accidental and that she simply had suffered from food poisoning.

Vera Reynolds
Austrian postcard by Iris Verlag, no. 5130. Photo: P.D.C. / Sascha Verleih.

Vera Reynolds in Sunny Side Up (1926)
Austrian postcard by Iris Verlag, no. 5130. Photo: P.D.C. / Sascha Verleih. Vera Reynolds in Sunny Side Up (Donald Crisp, 1926).

Decline


From 1928 on, Vera Reynolds' career began to decline.

Her last silents were Golf Widows (1928) for Columbia, The Divine Sinner (1928) for Trem Carr Pictures and Jazzland (1928) for Carlos Productions.

She made her talkie debut in a Madge Bellamy vehicle, Tonight at Twelve (1929), and was then Buck Jones’ leading lady in the western The Lone Rider (1930).

Afterwards, she got leading roles in films distributed by Poverty Row studios such as Tiffany, Chesterfield, Sono Art-World Pictures, Action Pictures or Mayfair, where her name could still have some marquee value. She was featured in, for example, Borrowed Wives (1930), The Lawless Woman (1931), Neck and Neck (1931), Dragnet Patrol (1931) and Gorilla Ship (1932).

Her filmography ended with Tangled Destinies (1932).

Vera Reynolds
Romanian postcard. Photo: Kawa-Film. Vera Reynolds in Sunny Side Up (Donald Crisp, 1926).

Vera Reynolds and Kenneth Thompson in Risky Business  (1926)
Romanian postcard. Photo: Kawa-Film. Vera Reynolds and Kenneth Thompson in Risky Business (Alan Hale, 1926).

A complicated private life


Vera Reynolds had a rather complicated private life. In 1919, she married comedian Earl Montgomery. After their divorce, she married actor, director and future screenwriter Robert Ellis in 1926.

In September 1937, it was reported that she had filed a breach of promise suit against Ellis. In March 1938, the suit was called off after a month’s hearing. Vera claimed that she had married Ellis in Greenwich Village in 1926 and that, after the ceremony was found to be invalid, he had promised to remarry her. Both testified that they had lived together as man and wife ever since, but Ellis contended they never were married. A settlement was found when the couple agreed to a legal marriage ceremony. An attorney quite prophetically pointed out that this agreement didn’t necessarily mean an immediate reconciliation.

Time Magazine announced their (re)marriage in April 1938. In December, Vera filed for divorce but very quickly dismissed the action. In late 1941, she was back in the news when she contested the terms of a separation agreement allowing her to receive monthly payments from Ellis. He maintained she had full knowledge of the deal when signing it and that, therefore, she was not in a position to litigate. Vera Reynolds and Robert Ellis finally divorced for good.

In 1943, Ellis married Helen Logan. On the marriage certificate, he listed himself as 'divorced' and mentioned three previous marriages. His former wives were all actresses: Irene Fenwick, May Allison and Vera Reynolds. Helen Logan had been Ellis’ collaborator since 1935. Together, they had penned numerous screenplays for 20th Century Fox.

Vera Reynolds passed away on the 22nd of April 1962 in Los Angeles.

Vera Reynolds
Mexican postcard, no. 64.

Vera Reynolds
British postcard by Picturegoer, no. 250a.

Vera Reynolds
Fan photo.

Text and postcards: Marlene Pilaete.

03 July 2026

Photo by Philippe Halsman

Philippe Halsman (1906-1979) was an outstanding American portrait and fashion photographer. He worked for Life magazine for 20 years and his work appeared on the cover of the magazine over a hundred times. His ‘Jump Pictures’ of politicians and celebrities, which he produced in 1959, are considered his speciality.

Marilyn Monroe
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. 2214. Photo: Philippe Halsman, 1959. Marilyn Monroe.

Louis Armstrong
French postcard. Photo: Philippe Halsman / Magnum. Caption: The American jazzman Louis Armstrong, photographed in 1966.

Woody Allen
American postcard by Fotofolio, New York, N.Y. Photo: Philippe Halsman, 1969. Woody Allen.

Eartha Kitt
American postcard by Fotofolio, New York, no. PH50. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: Eartha Kitt, 1954.

Grace Kelly
Australian freecard by AvantCard postcard, no. 16219. Photo: Philippe Halsman. This card promoted the exhibition 'Grace Kelly - Style Icon' in the Bendigo Art Gallery in 2012.

Accused of murdering his father


Philippe Halsman was born Filips Halsmans in Riga, in the part of the Russian Empire which later became Latvia, in 1906 to Jewish parents. His father, Morduch (Maks) Halsman, was a dentist, and his mother, Ita Grintuch, was a secondary school headmistress. Halsmans became familiar with art during visits to major European museums in his youth. He was already particularly interested in portraits. At the age of fifteen, his passion for photography began thanks to a family camera. From 1924, he studied electrical engineering in Dresden, Germany and worked part-time as a freelance photographer for Ullstein Verlag.

On 10 September 1928, whilst staying in Tyrol, the 22-year-old Halsmans went on a mountain hike with his father to the Schwarzenstein in the Zillertal Alps. During this hike, his father lost his life under circumstances that remain unclear to this day. There were no witnesses, and the evidence pointed to a violent death. Philippe was arrested immediately, although there were no apparent motives on his part. The murder trial in Innsbruck caused a sensation throughout Europe. Various anti-Semitic remarks were made in the context of the trial. Despite his protests of innocence, Halsmans was sentenced by a jury court in Innsbruck to ten years’ imprisonment, despite a complete lack of evidence. In an appeal, he was eventually sentenced to four years’ imprisonment. The trial reflected the prevailing anti-Semitism in rural Austria between the two world wars

His sister Liouba, friends and lawyers campaigned for his release, receiving support from Thomas Mann and various European Jewish intellectuals, including Sigmund Freud, Albert Einstein, and Jakob Wassermann, who confirmed his innocence. Reporters Heinrich Eduard Jacob (Berliner Tageblatt, Vienna), Emil Kläger (Neue Freie Presse, Vienna) and Rudolf Olden championed Halsman’s cause by publishing several brilliantly researched articles critical of the judiciary. At that time, a fierce battle raged between psychiatry and the relatively young discipline of psychology. Freud’s theory of the Oedipus complex was debated and expressly ruled out by Freud in newspaper articles, specifically in relation to this case.

Halsmans spent two years in prison, where he contracted tuberculosis. His letters from prison were published as a book in 1930: 'Briefe aus der Haft an eine Freundin'. He was pardoned by the President of Austria, Wilhelm Miklas, and released in October 1930, on the condition that he would leave Austria for good. He moved to France. In 1931, Halsmans left Austria and moved to France to live with his sister. In Paris, he finally turned his childhood hobby, photography, into his profession and opened a photography studio in 1931. He started to call himself Philippe Halsman. Alongside this, he studied at the Sorbonne. He began taking photographs for fashion magazines such as Vogue and quickly gained a reputation as one of France’s finest portrait photographers.

In 1934, the photographer took his first celebrity portrait of André Gide and went on to specialise in this field, photographing Paul Valéry, Jean Giraudoux, Jean Cocteau, André Malraux, Marc Chagall and Le Corbusier. Philippe Halsman became known for his sharp images, in contrast to the soft-focus style often used at the time, and for his close-cropped shots. In 1936, after two years of working together, he married the photographer Yvonne Moser. He commented on the marriage: “I often advise young photographers to marry their rivals. It’s the best way to neutralise them." They would collaborate throughout their lives. They had two children: Irene (born in 1939 in Paris) and Jane (born in 1941 in New York). When Nazi Germany invaded France, Halsman's family fled to Marseille. Eventually, they managed to obtain American visas, with the help of family friend Albert Einstein, whom Halsman famously photographed later in 1947, and the Emergency Rescue Committee.

Jean Cocteau
French postcard. Photo montage: Philippe Halsman / Magnum Photos. Caption: The French writer Jean Cocteau in a photographic montage by Philippe Halsman.

Salvador Dali, In Voluptate Mors, 1944
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. PH6. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: Salvador Dali, In Voluptate Mors, 1944.

Jean Cocteau
French postcard by Fotofolio, N.Y., N.Y, no. PH8. Photo: Philippe Halsman, 1949. Caption: The Act of Creation. Jean Cocteau, actress Ricki Soma (wife of John Huston and mother of Anjelica) and dancer Leo Coleman.

George Balanchine, Jerome Robbins, Ruthanna Boris, Anthony Tudor and Todd Bolender
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. PH2. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: Choreographers George Balanchine, Jerome Robbins, Ruthanna Boris, Anthony Tudor and Todd Bolender, 1951.

Alfred Hitchcock, The Birds (1963)
American postcard by Fotofolio, New York, N.Y., no. PH 18, 1981. Photo: Philippe Halsman, 1962 / Hastings Galleries Collection. Alfred Hitchcock on the set of The Birds (1963).

Dali's moustache


Philippe Halsman achieved his first success in America when the cosmetics company Elizabeth Arden used his image of model Constance Ford against the American flag in an advertising campaign for the ‘Victory Red’ lipstick. Just one year later, he secured a permanent position at Life magazine, the pinnacle of photojournalism at the time. He first photographed hat designs. A portrait of a model wearing a Lilly Daché hat was the first of his 103 covers for Life, more than by any other photographer. In 1945, Halsman was appointed president of the American Society of Magazine Photographers.

In 1941, Philippe Halsman met the Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí at the Julien Levy Gallery in New York, where the painter was exhibiting. In the late 1940s, they began working together. In his 1948 work 'Dalí Atomicus', he explored the idea of suspension. It depicts three flying cats, a bucket of water and Dalí in mid-air. Halsman and Dalí eventually published an overview of their collaboration in 1954 in the book 'Dali’s Moustache', which contains 36 different depictions of the artist’s characteristic moustache.

Another well-known collaboration between the two was the work 'In Voluptas Mors', a surrealist portrait of Dalí alongside a tableau vivant of seven naked women posing in the shape of a large skull. It took Halsman three hours to arrange the models according to a sketch by Dalí. Over the years, various reinterpretations of and allusions to 'In Voluptas Mors' have appeared; the best known is the version subtly used on the poster for the film The Silence of the Lambs (Jonathan Demme, 1991), whilst an overt reinterpretation appeared on a promotional poster for the British Horror film The Descent (Neil Marshall, 2005).

The photographer remained friends with Salvador Dalí throughout his life and worked with the artist for over 30 years, with the surrealist influence in Philippe Halsman’s photographs being unmistakable.

In 1947, Halsman photographed a grief-stricken Albert Einstein, who, during the session, expressed regret over his role in the American race for nuclear weapons. This became one of Halsman’s most famous photographs. The photograph was used on a US postage stamp in 1966 and on the cover of Time Magazine in 1999, in which Einstein was named ‘Person of the Century’.

Humphrey Bogart
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. PH17. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: Humphrey Bogart, 1944.

Marlon Brando
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. PH38. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: Marlon Brando, 1950.

Marilyn Monroe
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. PH7. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: Marilyn Monroe, 1952.

William Holden
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. PH29. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: William Holden, 1954.

Anthony Perkins
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. PH26, 1983. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: Anthony Perkins, 1956.

Jumpology


In 1951, the founders of Magnum Photos invited Philippe Halsman to join the agency as a ‘contributing member’. That year, NBC commissioned him to photograph several popular comedians of the time, including Milton Berle, Sid Caesar, Groucho Marx and Bob Hope. He photographed the comedians whilst they were performing their acts, and many were photographed whilst jumping into the air. This later inspired many jump shots of celebrities, including the Ford family, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Marilyn Monroe, María Félix and Richard Nixon.

Philippe Halsman asked his subjects to jump off the ground for the portrait, and captured them at the moment of the jump. In the pictures, they appear to be floating. Halsman: “When you ask someone to jump, their attention focuses primarily on the act of jumping and the masks fall away, so that the real person appears.” The photographer developed a philosophy around jump photography, which he called 'jumpology'. In 1959, he published 'Philippe Halsman’s Jump Book', which contained a humorous discussion of jumpology and 178 photographs of famous jumpers.

In his 1961 book 'Halsman on the Creation of Photographic Ideas', he discussed ways in which photographers could produce unusual works by following six rules:
1. The rule of the direct approach: you get a strong photograph if you are straightforward and simple.
2. The rule of the unusual technique: to make an everyday and uninteresting subject interesting and unusual, there are several photographic techniques, including unusual lighting, unusual angles, and unusual compositions.
3. The rule of the added unusual feature: capture the audience’s attention through something unexpected. This can be achieved by introducing an unusual feature or prop into the photograph. For instance, Diane Arbus’s photograph of a young boy holding a hand grenade.
4. The rule of the missing function: stimulate the viewer by defying their expectations.
5. The rule of composite characteristics: combine the other rules to add originality to your photograph.
6. The rule of the literal or ideographic method: convey a message through a photograph by depicting the subject as clearly as possible.

In 1960, during the Cold War, he photographed portraits of the Soviet elite for Life magazine during an extended stay in Russia. Celebrities photographed by Halsman include Alfred Hitchcock and François Truffaut during their 1962 interview, Judy Garland, Winston Churchill, John F. Kennedy, Dorothy Dandridge, Pablo Picasso and Jean Cocteau. Many of these photographs appeared on the cover of Life.

In 1963, Halsman was appointed a member of the Famous Photographers School. His works were exhibited at documenta 6 in Kassel. In 1967, Halsman received the Golden Plate Award from the American Academy of Achievement. In 1975, he received the Life Achievement in Photography Award from the American Society of Magazine Photographers. In 1945, he was elected the first president of this organisation. He also organised many major exhibitions around the world. Philippe Halsman died in 1979 in New York at the age of 73.

Mary Martin
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. PH24. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: Mary Martin, 1950.

Jimmy Durante
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. PH22. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: Jimmy Durante, 1951.

Richard Nixon by Philippe Halsman
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. PH5. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: Richard Nixon jumping, 1956.

Maurice Chevalier
American postcard by Fotofolio, NY, NY, no. PH56. Photo: Philippe Halsman. Caption: Maurice Chevalier, 1958.

Dawn Addams
German postcard by Ufa, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 2270. Photo: Halsman / Imperial-Translux / Herzog-Film. Dawn Addams.

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch, French and German).

02 July 2026

Quo vadis? (1924)

Last week, we enjoyed at Il Cinema Ritrovato, Quo vadis? (1913), based on the classic novel by Henryk Sienkiewicz. One of the most spectacular films of European silent cinema was a later silent version, Quo vadis? (1924). The producer was grand old man Arturo Ambrosio, and his production company, the Unione Cinematografica Italiana (UCI), was a Ufa-like or Universal-like merger of many Italian pre-war film companies. The directors were the German Georg Jacoby and the Italian Gabriellino D' Annunzio, son of Gabriele D'Annunzio, the famous Italian writer and adventurer. The sets for this German-Italian coproduction were designed by R. Ferro and G. Spilani. A lot of publicity material was produced for the film, including several series of postcards, as we showed in an earlier post on Quo vadis? (1924) from 2023. This post contains the most beautiful postcard series published by the Turinese Editions di lusso L'Argentografica.

Quo Vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3040. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924) starring Emil Jannings as Nero and Elena Sangro as Poppea.

Quo Vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3041. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924) starring Alphons Fryland as Vinicius.

Quo Vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3042. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924).

Quo Vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3043. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924).

Quo Vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3044. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924).

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3046. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). The lions in the arena.

Quo vadis 1924 UCI, Nero's orgy
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3047. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). Gildo Bocci as Vitellius at Nero's orgy.

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3048. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). Ursus and Licia/Lygia in prison.

Quo Vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3049. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924) starring Alphons Fryland as Vinicius and Lilian Hall-Davis as Licia.

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3050. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924), starring Emil Jannings as Nero and Lilian Hall-Davis as Licia. Nero menaces Licia, after having 'saved her from the clutches of Vinicius'.

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3051. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). Roman cavalry in the arena.

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3052. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). Nero's Palace. The man in the litter in the foreground is André Habay, who plays Petronius.

Quo Vadis (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3053. Photo: Unione Cinematografica Italiana. Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924) with Elena Sangro. Sent by mail in Italy in 1926.

Quo Vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3054. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924).

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3055. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). Alfons Fryland as Vinicius and Lilian Hall-Davis as Licia/Lygia at Nero's banquet.

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3056. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). Ursus (Bruto Castellani) has killed the gladiator Croton, who instead had been paid to kill Ursus, to abduct Lygia again. The traitor Chilo (Gino Viotti) watches on.

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3057. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). Nero's human torches in his gardens.

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3058. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). The Abduction of Licia/Lygia.

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3059. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). After Licia's/ Lygia's abduction. From 1909 on, the same litter was constantly used in Roman Antiquity films at Cines, including the 1913 Quo vadis?.

Quo Vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Edizione L'Argentografica, Torino, no. 3060. Publicity still for the Italo-German epic Quo Vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio & Georg Jacoby, 1924), starring Emil Jannings as Nero.

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Ed. L'Argentografica, Turin, no. 3063. Photo: Unione Cinematografia Italiana (UCI). Scene from Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). Christ has fallen under the Cross, the veil of Veronica.

Quo vadis? (1924)
Italian postcard by Prosdocimi, Roma. Photo: Unione Cinematografica Italiana. Caption: Construction for the film Quo vadis?. Actually, this was an already existing construction for the so-called Mostra del Lazio (1923), designed by Armando Brasini, and reused as Nero's palace in Quo vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924). Card mailed in December 1930.