25 February 2026

Fänrik Ståls sägner (1926)

The two-part historical film Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (John W. Brunius, 1926) is set during the Finnish War between Sweden and Russia in 1808-1809, during the Napoleonic era. The script was written by Ivar Johansson and was based on the epic poem 'The Tales of Ensign Stål' (1848) by nineteenth-century writer Johan Ludvig Runeberg. The silent Swedish film was shot at the Råsunda Studios in Stockholm, and exteriors were shot at Tavastehus, Ritoniemi, Ruovesi and other places. Cinematography was by Hugo Edlund and Karl Andersson, and sets were designed by Vilhelm Bryde. Runeberg's work had already been filmed in 1910 and would be remade again in 1939.

Edvin Adolphson in Fänrik Ståls sägner (1926)
Swedish postcard by Axel Eliassons Konstförlag, no. 461. Photo: SBF / Film AB Nordstjaernan. Edvin Adolphson as General G.K. von Döbeln in Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (John W. Brunius, 1926).

Thor Modéen in Fänrik Stäls sägner (1926)
Swedish postcard by Axel Eliassons Konstförlag, no. 462. Photo: SBF / Film AB Nordstjaernan. Thor Modéen as General J.A. Sandels in Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (John W. Brunius, 1926).

Nils Ohlin in Fänrik Ståls sägner (1926)
Swedish postcard by Axel Eliassons Konstförlag, no. 463. Photo: SBF / Film AB Nordstjaernan. Nils Ohlin as Lt. Wilhelm von Schwerin in Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (John W. Brunius, 1926).

Alfred Lundberg in Fänrik Ståls sägner (1926)
Swedish postcard by Axel Eliassons Konstförlag, no. 464. Photo: SBF / Film AB Nordstjaernan. Alfred Lundberg as General K.N. af Klercker in Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (John W. Brunius, 1926).

Adolf Niska in Fänrik Ståls sägner (1926)
Swedish postcard by Axel Eliassons Konstförlag, no. 465. Photo: SBF / Film AB Nordstjaernan. Adolf Niska as the Russian Lt. Colonel Jakob Kulneff in Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (John W. Brunius, 1926).

Patriotic material in a highly literary setting


The first part of Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (1926) begins with the opening stanzas of 'Our Country', illustrated with Finnish landscape pictures. This is followed by the beginning of the frame story about the young Runeberg (played by his own great-grandson), who visits and eventually becomes good friends with Fänrik (Ensign) Stål, the narrator (John Ericsson). The film then links back to the situation of the frame story from time to time. Without clearly marked boundaries, the content of the following poems from 'The Tales of Ensign Stål' by Johan Ludvig Runeberg is retold in more or less detail with motifs from the Finnish War of 1808-1809: "The Governor", "Kulneff", "Field Marshal", "Trosskusken", "Old Lode", "von Törne", after which the capitulation of Sveaborg (Suomenlinna) is finally reconstructed.

In addition, there are also fragments from other legends. Two legends, 'Wilhelm von Schwerin' and 'Munter', begin here and end in the second part of Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (1926). The story of von Schwerin, played by Nils Ohlin, has been embroidered with a love story, which has no counterpart in Runeberg. In addition to Runeberg, Ericsson and Ohlin, other major actors in the film were, e.g. Einar Fröberg as field-marshall Klingspor, Alfred Lundberg as general af Klercker, Nils Wahlbom as general major Adlercreutz, Edvin Adolphson as major von Döbeln, Thor Modéen as major Sandels, Thor Christiernsson as lieutenant-colonel Lode, Helge Karlsson as Munter, and Adolph Niska as the Russian lieutenant-major Kunteff.

After the success of the first Karl XII film (1925), the team of Herman Rasch, Ivar Johansson and John W. Brunius began planning a film about Gustaf III, based on Carl Jonas Love Almquist's 'The Queen's Jewel'. The plans went as far as to begin filming, but were interrupted, probably for two main reasons: another film about Gustaf III was being filmed at the SF studios in 1925, and Gösta Ekman was lured over to Germany to play Faust and thus betrayed the team from Karl XII. Under the new company name Nordstjärnan, the gentlemen instead turned to another patriotic material in a highly literary setting, Runeberg's poem cycle about the Finnish war of 1808-1809, 'Fänrik Ståls sägner'. The project aroused fierce opposition in some quarters, mainly in Finland, where there was fear of a commercial desecration of the Runeberg text, especially after it leaked out that the fifteen-year-old Wilhelm von Schwerin had been provided with a love story in the film script. Despite Brunius's assurances that this fictionalisation was a mistake that should be eliminated, distrust of the film adaptation remained.

Once the film was completed, the criticism was no longer due to a lack of patriotic spirit. However, it caused a great stir within certain cinema owners' circles when this patriotic epic was handed over to the foreign distribution company Liberty by the exclusive rights holder, Svenska Biografernas Förening (Swedish Cinema Association), for distribution. By investing 100,000 kronor in the filming, the SBF had secured this exclusive right. The association would soon emerge as its own producer of historical spectacle films and - in competition with Nordstjärnan - record the genre's final disaster film, Gustaf Wasa in 1928 and 1928. Unlike most other 1920s films with historically patriotic motifs, Fänrik Stål's Tales seems to have been fairly successful financially. This does not mean that it was the greatest success with the public, but rather that it was cheaper to produce than Karl XII.

Unfortunately, even if some critics praised the patriotic feeling that the film evoked, the overall attitude of the reviewers was very critical. Monotonous and undramatic, theatrical and unrealistic were recurring objections, and the comparison with Herman Rasch and John W. Brunius's earlier historical splendour, Karl XII, did not turn out at all in the new film's favour. Dramaturgically, the film suffers from having no unifying central figure. As in Karl XII, the many episodes are presented as tableaux lined up on top of each other, and as such, emphasis is placed on connecting the imagery to well-known models from art. In Ensign Stål's Tales, it is primarily Albert Edelfelt's illustrations that Hugo Edlund's photographic compositions allude to.

Thor Christiernsson in Fänrik Ståls sägner (1926)
Swedish postcard by Axel Eliassons Konstförlag, no. 467. Photo: SBF / Film AB Nordstjaernan. Thor Christiernsson as Lt. Colonel K.L. Lode in Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (John W. Brunius, 1926).

Jon Ericsson and Carl Michael Runeberg in Fänrik Ståls sägner (1926)
Swedish postcard by Axel Eliassons Konstförlag, no. 468. Photo: SBF / Film AB Nordstjaernan. John Ericsson as Ensign Stål and Carl Michael Runeberg as Johan Ludvig Runeberg, his great-grandfather, in Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (John W. Brunius, 1926). Caption: Runeberg and Ensign Stål.

Fänrik Ståls sägner (1926)
Swedish postcard by Axel Eliassons Konstförlag, no. 473. Photo: SBF / Film AB Nordstjaernan. Scene from Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (John W. Brunius, 1926). Caption: The March of the Björnborgs.


Josef Fischer, Otto Malmberg and Alfred Lundberg in Fänrik Ståls sägner (1926)
Swedish postcard by Axel Eliassons Konstförlag, no. 478. Photo: SBF / Film AB Nordstjaernan. Josef Fischer as Colonel Jägerhorn, Otto Malmberg as Admiral K.O. Cronstedt (Commander of Sveaborg), and Alfred Lundberg as General K.N. af Klercker in Fänrik Ståls sägner / The Tales of Ensign Stål (John W. Brunius, 1926). Caption: At Sveaborg.

Sources: Svensk Filmdatabas, Wikipedia (Swedish and English) and IMDb.

24 February 2026

Uschi Elleot

Uschi Elleot (1899–1975) was a German stage and film actress who starred in several silent films. She was the younger sister of actress Carola Toelle. After her cinema career ended, she emigrated to the United States and married an American.

Uschi Elleot
German postcard by Verlag Ross, Berlin, no. 351/1, 1919-1924. Photo: Becker & Maass / Deutsche Bioscop. Collection: Geoffrey Donaldson Institute.

Uschi Elleot
German postcard by Verlag Ross, Berlin, no. 351/2, 1919-1924. Photo: Becker & Maass / Deutsche Bioscop.

A silent operetta


Uschi Elleot was born Olga Margarete Lucia Toelle in 1899 in Berlin. Her parents were the engineer Rudolph Carl Toelle and Rosalie Toelle, née Wernicke. Lucia Toelle was the younger sister of Carola Toelle.

She chose the backward version of her family name as her stage name. With the help of her sister, who introduced her to director Nils Chrisander, Uschi Elleot made her film debut in Chrysanthème (Nils Chrisander, 1918).

Chrisander cast Elleot in three of his productions in quick succession, including the silent drama Die weißen Rosen von Ravensberg / The White Roses of Ravensberg (Nils Chrisander, 1919).

Then, other directors hired her and she appeared in the silent operetta Schwarzwaldmädel / The Black Forest Girl (Arthur Wellin, 1920), based on the 1917 operetta of the same title by Leon Jessel.

With her sister Carola Toelle, she played in Der Spielmann / The Minstrel (Karl Otto Krause, 1921). At the same time, Uschi Elleot also appeared in musical theatre productions, for example, in 1921 in Ernst Steffan's operetta 'Das Milliardensouper' at the Berliner Theater, where she had Ralph Arthur Roberts and Hilde Wörner as partners.

Uschi Elleot
German postcard by Verlag Ross, Berlin, no. 351/3, 1919-1924. Photo: Becker & Maass / Deutsche Bioscop.


Uschi Elleot
German postcard by Verlag Ross, no. 1145/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Karl Schenker.

She first set foot on American soil in New York


Uschi Elleot was married to the conductor and composer James Siegfried Nicklass from 1916 to 1927.

Her later films included the silent historical drama Marie Antoinette - Das Leben einer Königin / Marie Antoinette, the Love of a King (Rudolf Meinert, 1922) with Diana Karenne, and the drama Bohème - Künstlerliebe / La Boheme (Gennaro Righelli, 1923).

Elleot retired from the film business in the mid-1920s. One of her last films was the drama Heiratsschwindler / The Marriage Swindler (Carl Boese, 1925) starring Reinhold Schünzel.

Instead, she began appearing as a singer. In the 1928/1929 theatre season, she played alongside Fritzi Massary in the operetta 'The Merry Widow' at the Metropol-Theatre and sang a song from the operetta on a record with her stage partner Walter Jankuhn.

In 1933, she first set foot on American soil in New York, coming from Bremen. Lucia Toelle married Gert von Gontard there and moved with him to California. In December 1939, she became an American citizen. After their divorce (around 1944), she lived in Brazil, where she lived as Lucia Margaret Drew. She returned to New York in the early 1960s, where she died in 1975.

Uschi Elleot
German postcard by Verlag Hermann Leiser, Berlin-Wilm., no. 6825. Photo: Atelier Riess, Berlin.

Uschi Elleot
German postcard by Verlag Hermann Leiser, Berlin-Wilm., no. 6826. Photo: Atelier Riess, Berlin-W.

Sources: Thomas Staedeli (Cyranos), Filmportal, Wikipedia (German and English) and IMDb.

23 February 2026

Signe Hasso

Swedish actress Signe Hasso (1915-2002) was only 12 when she started to work as a child extra at The Royal Dramatic Theatre and was at 16 one of the youngest students to study drama there. She quickly got leading roles in films and received excellent reviews. In 1940, she went to Hollywood and signed a contract with RKO, touted as the 'next Garbo' after Greta Garbo retired in 1941. Despite her talent, it didn't lead to any work, and she ventured off to New York and the theatre. She signed a contract with MGM and made a dozen films, including Fred Zinnemann's The Seventh Cross (1944), The House on 92nd Street (1945), and George Cukor's A Double Life (1947). Her Hollywood career lasted about a decade, but she never really caught on with audiences in the United States. During her career, which lasted some 60 years, she appeared in more than 30 feature films and over 50 television productions.

Signe Hasso
French postcard by Editions P.I. presented by Victoria, Brussels, Paris, no. 278. Photo: Paramount, 1953.

Signe Hasso
Small German collectors card in the 'Film Stars der Welt ' series by Greiling-Sammelbilder, series E, no. 153. Photo: Hamann-Meyerpress.

A difficult trip of six months to Hollywood


Signe Hasso was born Signe Eleonora Cecilia Larsson in the Kungsholmen parish of Stockholm, Sweden, in 1915. She was the daughter of Kaifas Larsson, an office manager from Dalarna, and Helfrid Elisabet Johanna Larsson (nee Lindström). Her father and her grandfather died when she was four. Her mother had financial difficulties and worked as a waffle cook to support the family. With her mother, grandmother, and two siblings, Signe shared a single room.

Hasso attended Matteusskolan, Kungsholms elementarskola för flickor (elementary school for girls) and Norrmalms enskilda läroverk. Her acting career began by accident at the age of 12. When a young actress fell ill, her mother, a former aspiring actress, was asked if she knew a little girl who could act. Signe's audition for Molière's play 'Den inbillade sjuke' (Le Malade imaginaire / The Imaginary Invalid) was successful, and she began earning money as an actress. She was noticed there by the play's director, Olof Molander.

From 1927 on, she performed in Royal Dramatic Theatre productions and enrolled as one of the youngest acting students in its history at the age of 16. One of her classmates was Ingrid Bergman. In 1933, Signe Larsson made her first film, Tystnadens hus / House of Silence (Rune Carlsten, Eric Malmberg, 1933). On the set, she met German film cinematographer Harry Hasso, whom she married the same year. They had a son, Karl Georg Harry (1934), by the time she was 19. The couple divorced in 1942.

After graduating in 1935, she joined the National Theatre and worked there until 1939. Signe appeared in other Swedish films like the dramas Häxnatten / Witches' Night (Schamyl Bauman, 1937), Karriär / Career (Schamyl Bauman, 1938), and Vi två / The Two of Us (Schamyl Bauman, 1939) starring Sture Lagerwall. Then followed a flop. In the historical drama Emilie Högquist (Gustaf Molander, 1939), she portrayed 19th-century actress Emilie Högquist. Its production company, Svensk Filmindustri, suffered its largest financial losses of the decade.

It did not hurt Hasso's career. She starred in the Norwegian-Swedish drama Vildmarkens sång / Bastard / The Song of the Wilderness (Helge Lunde, Gösta Stevens, 1940) with Georg Løkkeberg, and in the comedy Stora famnen / With Open Arms (Gustaf Edgren, 1940). She was approached by producer Howard Hughes to move to the United States and sign a contract with RKO Pictures. Her journey to the USA was very difficult with the impending Nazi war actions. She travelled by the Siberian Railroad across Russia, into China, sailed from Singapore to San Francisco, and then travelled by train to Los Angeles. After a trip of six months, she finally met with the RKO studio chiefs discussing films. The studio touted her as the 'next Garbo', but it didn't lead to any film roles. To make a living, she turned to the stage and appeared in five Broadway productions, beginning with 'Golden Wings' (1941).

Signe Hasso
British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, no. W 821. Photo: Universal International.

Signe Hasso
German postcard by Das Programm von Heute, Berlin. Photo: Nordland / Siegel.

A lusty French maid who provides the young hero with an early bedside education


In 1943, Signe Hasso signed with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. She made her Hollywood debut in the war film Assignment in Brittany (Jack Conway, 1943), starring with French actor Jean-Pierre Aumont, who also made his American film debut. Her first role of note was in Heaven Can Wait (Ernst Lubitsch, 1943), starring Gene Tierney, Don Ameche, and Charles Coburn. She made a humorous splash in the supernatural comedy as Mademoiselle, a lusty French maid who provides the young hero with an early bedside education.

Another highlight was the drama The Seventh Cross (Fred Zinnemann, 1944), set in Nazi Germany. Spencer Tracy played a prisoner who escaped from a concentration camp and who gradually sheds his cynical view when ordinary Germans try to save him. During the 1940s, she also appeared in the Film Noir Johnny Angel (Edwin L. Marin, 1945), the Spy film The House on 92nd Street (Henry Hathaway, 1945), the melodrama A Scandal in Paris (Douglas Sirk, 1946) with George Sanders, and the comedy-thriller Where There's Life (Sidney Lanfield, 1947) starring Bob Hope.

Her favourite role was in A Double Life (George Cukor, 1947) as the ex-wife of an actor driven mad, played by Ronald Colman. As Othello, he adopts the same rage as William Shakespeare's jealous Moor and endangers Hasso's character, who plays Desdemona. Her reaction to finding real blood on the bed during the climactic death scene of the play within the film was memorable. She longed to go back to the theatre and worked on Broadway and the West End. Hasso was also a frequent guest on Bob Hope's TV series. In 1955, she returned to Stockholm and helped to start a national repertory theatre in Sweden. She also produced the film Den underbara lögnen / The Magnificent Lie (Mike Road, 1955) and cast her second husband, William Langford, opposite her. The film is based on the 1831 short story 'La Grande Bretèche' by Honoré de Balzac and a further short story by Guy de Maupassant.

Then tragedy struck. William Langford died later that year in New York. In 1957, her 22-year-old son Karl Hasso was killed in a motorcycle accident on Santa Monica Boulevard in Los Angeles. Devastated, she returned to Hollywood. In the following decade, Hasso made guest appearances in popular TV series, including Route 66, Bonanza, and The Green Hornet. She played supporting parts in the psychological Horror film Picture Mommy Dead (Bert I. Gordon, 1966) starring Don Ameche, Martha Hyer, and Zsa Zsa Gabor, and the Horror thriller A Reflection of Fear (William Fraker, 1972) starring Sondra Locke and Robert Shaw. In the 1970s, she relocated to Park La Brea, where she remained until her death.

Her later TV appearances included guest roles in the series Cannon, Starsky and Hutch, The Streets of San Francisco, Ellery Queen, Quincy, M.E., Magnum, P.I., Hart to Hart, and The Fall Guy. She also appeared in the acclaimed psychological drama I Never Promised You a Rose Garden (Anthony Page, 1977), starring Bibi Andersson, Kathleen Quinlan and Sylvia Sidney. Her debut novel, 'Momo' (1977), depicts her childhood in interwar Stockholm. Hasso also composed music and translated Swedish folk songs into English. Her second album, 'Where the Sun Meets the Moon' (1979), contains her versions of Swedish folk tunes. She continued to act until late in her life. Her last film was One Hell of a Guy (James David Pasternak, 1998), starring Rob Lowe and Michael York. Although the romantic comedy is mediocre, according to IMDb reviewers, Hasso's role as an old actress made the film worth seeing. Sylvia Stel at IMDb: "I loved Signe Hasso as Cassie's Aunt Vivian. She is fabulous in perhaps one of her last great roles. You can tell that she was a great film actress." Signe Hasso died of pneumonia and cancer at Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre, Los Angeles, in 2002. She was 86.

Spencer Tracy and Signe Hasso in The Seventh Cross (1944)
Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, Milano, no. 47. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Spencer Tracy and Signe Hasso in The Seventh Cross (Fred Zinnemann, 1944).

Spencer Tracy and Signe Hasso in The Seventh Cross (1944)
Italian postcard, no. 1203. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Spencer Tracy and Signe Hasso in The Seventh Cross (Fred Zinnemann, 1944).

Sources: Thomas E. Hilton/R.M. Sieger (IMDb), Mattias Thuresson (IMDb), Sylvia Stel (IMDb), Wikipedia (English and Swedish) and IMDb.

22 February 2026

Written by Karl May

Karl May (1842–1912) was one of Germany’s most widely read authors and a master storyteller whose adventure novels shaped popular images of the American West and the Orient for generations of European readers. Although he travelled little before late in life, his vivid imagination created enduring heroes such as Winnetou and Old Shatterhand. May’s tales proved equally powerful on screen. From the 1920s onwards, and especially during the 1960s boom of German Westerns, his stories inspired hugely successful films that left a lasting mark on European popular cinema.

Pierre Brice and Lex Barker
Dutch postcard by Facet Publishers, Lunteren, no. 4. Photo: Rank Film Distributors (Holland) N.V. Pierre Brice and Lex Barker in Der Schatz im Silbersee (Harald Reinl, 1963).

Chris Howland in Winnetou I (1963)
German postcard, no. E 21. Photo: Constantin. Chris Howland in Winnetou I (Harald Reinl, 1963). Caption: "What do you do as a reporter when you get no Indian in front of your camera? You put on some make-up and make a self-portrait, here, unfortunately, it failed."

Winnetou I, Ralf Wolter
German postcard, no. E 22. Photo: Constantin. Ralf Wolter in Winnetou I (Harald Reinl, 1963). Caption: "The conquering Apaches decide in the powwow to kill the white prisoners. The cranky Sam Hawkens just can't understand why this is the way he has to go to the happy hunting ground."

Pierre Brice in Old Shatterhand (1964)
German postcard by Kruger. Photo: Bernard of Hollywood (Bruno Bernard) / CCC Produktion. Pierre Brice as Winnetou in Old Shatterhand (Hugo Fregonese, 1964).

Lex Barker in Old Shatterhand (1964)
German postcard by Kruger. Photo: Bernard of Hollywood (Bruno Bernard) / CCC-Produktion. Lex Barker as Old Shatterhand in Old Shatterhand (Hugo Fregonese, 1964).

From poverty to literary fame


Carl Friedrich May was born in 1842 in Ernstthal, then part of the Kingdom of Saxony. He was the fifth child of weaver Heinrich May and his wife Wilhelmina Weise. Nine of the thirteen other children in the poor family died at a young age. Shortly after his birth, he became blind due to a vitamin deficiency. During his blind childhood, his grandmother told him many fairy tales, which developed his imagination. At the age of four or five, after medical examination, he was given the right nutrients (vitamins A & D), after which he was able to see and walk. For this story, there is no evidence other than May's own statements.

In 1856, Karl May began training as a teacher in Waldheim, Saxony. Here, in 1860, he was convicted of stealing six candles. In 1861, May passed his teaching exam. He was appointed as a teacher at the factory school in Altchemnitz. Here, on 26 December, he was convicted of theft. He took a watch, which he was allowed to borrow from a roommate during the day, home for the weekend, after which the roommate reported it. May was sentenced to imprisonment. He lost his job and his teaching licence. After this, May worked with little success as a private tutor, an author of tales, a composer and a public speaker. When he pretended to be a wealthy doctor in 1865, he was caught and sentenced to four years in prison. He was released early in 1868, but committed further thefts in various positions, for which he served a prison sentence in Waldheim from 1870 to 1874. During these difficult years, May became an administrator of the prison library, which gave him the chance to read travel literature, adventure stories and classical works, which later fed his fiction.

His life changed when he met the Catholic prison chaplain Johannes Kochta in Waldheim. After his release, May returned to his parents in Ernstthal and began writing. From 1875 to 1878, May was appointed editor of the colportage weekly magazines Der Beobachter an der Elbe and Frohe Stunden. In the 1870s and 1880s, he published short adventure tales for magazines, often presenting them as first-person travel accounts. These magazines were owned by the Dresden publisher Heinrich Gotthold Münchmeyer. This secured May's livelihood for the first time. May then began to publish some stories he had written himself. In 1876, May resigned because attempts were made to tie him permanently to the company by marrying Münchmeyer's sister-in-law, and because the publishing house had a bad reputation. After another job as an editor at Bruno Radelli's publishing house in Dresden, May became a freelance writer in 1878 and moved to Dresden with his girlfriend Emma Pollmer. However, his publications did not yet provide a regular income; there is evidence of May's rent arrears and other debts from In 1880, he married Emma Pollmer, with whom he had been living for several years. Between 1881 and 1887, the first versions of his travel adventures appeared in 1992 as 'Durch die Wüste' (The Death Caravan), 'Durchs wilde Kurdistan' (Through Kurdistan) and 'Von Bagdad nach Stambul' (To Istanbul) in the Catholic family magazine Deutscher Hausschatz. During this period, he also began work on a series of colportage novels for Munchmeyer.

In 1888, Karl May was given a permanent position as an employee at the Stuttgart magazine Der gute Kamerad. His breakthrough came with longer novels set in exotic locales, particularly the American West and the Middle East, written long before he had visited either region. May skilfully blended action, moral reflection and a strong sense of idealism, promoting themes of friendship, justice and intercultural understanding. From 1892 onwards, his travel stories appeared in increasingly large print runs. Most of his American novels are characterised by a Christian moralistic, romantic slant. Thanks to the good sales of his books, he was very successful. May conducted talking tours in Germany and Austria and allowed autographed cards to be printed.

In 1899-1900, Karl May undertook his first trip to the Orient. In 1908, he also travelled to America, from where he brought back many original souvenirs from the daily life of various Native American tribes. In 1903, he divorced his wife and married his secretary, Klara Plöhn. May began to see himself as a great writer, but his later works,  such as 'Babel and the Bible', 'To the Land of the Silver Lion', and 'Peace on Earth', were not recognised.

Pierre Brice and Lex Barker in Der Schatz im Silbersee
Dutch postcard by Gebr. Spanjersberg N.V., Rotterdam/Edition Facet Publishers. Photo: Rank Film Publishers (Holland) N.V. Pierre Brice as Winnetou and Lex Barker as Old Shatterhand in Der Schatz im Silbersee (Harald Reinl, 1962).

Götz George in Der Schatz im Silbersee (1962)
German postcard, no. E 61. Photo: Constantin. Götz George in Der Schatz im Silbersee / The Treasure of Silver Lake (Harald Reinl, 1962).

Götz George and Karin Dor in Der Schatz im Silbersee (1962)
German postcard, no. E 76. Photo: Constantin. Götz George and Karin Dor in Der Schatz im Silbersee / The Treasure of Silver Lake (Harald Reinl, 1962).

Herbert Lom, Der Schatz im Silbersee
German postcard, no. E 77. Photo: Constantin. Herbert Lom as the bad colonel Cornel in Der Schatz im Silbersee (Harald Reinl, 1962). In the photo, he has found the treasure of the film title. He and his four mates have found it in the cave of the Silver Lake and have overpowered the old and blind Indian guard.

Karin Dor and Jan Sid in Der Schatz im Silbersee (1962)
German postcard, no. E 80. Photo: Constantin. Karin Dor and Jan Sid in Der Schatz im Silbersee / The Treasure of Silver Lake (Harald Reinl, 1962).

The great adventure novels


Karl May’s works are often not considered literature, but rather popular fiction (German: Trivialliteratur). His works is divided in four catagories: the Travel novels, the Youth stories like 'Die Helden des Westens' or 'Unter Geiern' (1987-1988, Among Vultures), the Colportage novels he wrote for Münchmeyer novels, including 'Die Liebe des Ulanen' (1883-1985, The Love of the Ulaan), 'Der verlorne Sohn' (1884–1986, The Prodigal Son), and 'Der Weg zum Glück' (1886–1988, The Road to Happiness), and Other work, like poetry, drama and autobiographical texts.

Karl May's most successful and best-known book is the Youth novel 'Der Schatz im Silbersee' (1890-1891, The Treasure of Silver Lake). May describes the journey of a group of trappers to Silver Lake in the Rocky Mountains and the pursuit of a group of villains led by Cornel Brinkley, also known as ‘Red Cornel’ because of his hair colour. The novel has several simultaneous plot lines that eventually converge and resolve at the eponymous Silver Lake. 'Der Schatz im Silbersee' was first published in 1890–1891 as a serial in the magazine Der Gute Kamerad and released in book form in 1894. It has been filmed twice: first in 1962 as a live-action film under the original title, with Lex Barker as Old Shatterhand and Pierre Brice as Winnetou, and three decades later as a DEFA puppet animation film entitled Die Spur führt zum Silbersee / The Trail Leads to Silver Lake (1990). The Swiss composer Othmar Schoeck adapted 'Der Schatz im Silbersee' for opera.

May's other famous works are his Travel novels. May wrote two large cycles: the American West stories featuring Old Shatterhand and the Apache chief Winnetou, and, less famous, the stories of Kara Ben Nemsi and Hadji Halef Omar in North Africa and the Middle East. The youth stories appeared in the period from 1887 to 1897 in the magazine Der Gute Kamerad. Most of them are set in the Wild West. Unlike in the travel adventures, Old Shatterhand is not the first-person narrator. With few exceptions, May had not visited the places he described, but he compensated successfully for his lack of direct experience through a combination of creativity, imagination, and documentary sources, including maps, travel accounts and guidebooks, as well as anthropological and linguistic studies. The work of writers such as James Fenimore Cooper, Gabriel Ferry and Friedrich Gerstäcker served as his models.

Among May's most successful novels of the American West is the 'Winnetou' trilogy (1893), which introduced the noble and wise chief of the Apaches, becoming May’s most beloved creation. Winnetou is usually accompanied by his white friend and blood brother, Old Surehand a.k.a. Old Shatterhand, from whose narrative perspective the stories about Winnetou are often written. The 'Old Surehand' trilogy (1894-1897, Old Shatterhand), focuses on May’s alter ego in the Wild West.

Another series of novels was set in the Ottoman Empire. In these, the narrator-protagonist, Kara Ben Nemsi, travels with his local guide and servant Hadschi Halef Omar through the Sahara Desert to the Near East, experiencing many exciting adventures. This series includes 'Durch die Wüste' (1892, Through the Desert), the opening volume of the Oriental cycle, 'Im Reiche des silbernen Löwen' (1898, In the Realm of the Silver Lion), continuing Kara Ben Nemsi’s travels in the Middle East, and 'Ardistan und Dschinnistan' (1909, Ardistan and Dschinnistan), a later, more philosophical work reflecting May’s spiritual concerns. These books sold in the millions and were translated into numerous languages, securing Karl May’s status as a cornerstone of German popular literature.

Winnetou I, Lex Barker
German postcard, no. E 23. Photo: Constantin. Lex Barker in Winnetou I (Harald Reinl, 1963). Caption: "Old Shatterhand has also been sentenced to die at the stake. He regrets emphatically that he rescued Winnetou from the Kiowas. An ordeal by battle will decide."

Mario Adorf in Winnetou - 1. Teil (1963)
German postcard, no. E 31. Photo: Constantin. Mario Adorf (left) as Santer in Winnetou - 1. Teil / Apache Gold (1963). Caption: "Santer and his gang are still looking for the Apache gold. Unnoticed, they follow the course of the Indians to the hiding place of the treasure."

Pierre Brice in Winnetou II. Teil (1964)
German postcard by ISV, no. R 14. Pierre Brice in Winnetou II. Teil / Last of the Renegades (1964).

Klaus Kinski in Winnetou II (1964)
German postcard, no. R 21. Klaus Kinski in Winnetou - 2. Teil / Last of the Renegades (Harald Reinl, 1964). Caption: "With the help of band member Luke, the criminals find the cave and take possession of the women and children of the Assiniboin."

Pierre Brice, Karin Dor
German postcard, no. R 24. Karin Dor as Ribanna and Pierre Brice as Winnetou in Winnetou II. Teil / Last of the Renegades (Harald Reinl, 1964). Caption: "Winnetou is waiting for the Assiniboins and learns to know and love Ribanna."

Karl May and the cinema


Karl May’s visual storytelling and clear-cut heroes made his novels an ideal source material for film. In 1920, May's friends Marie Luise Droop and Adolf Droop founded the production company ‘Ustad-Film’ (Ustad = Karl May) in cooperation with Karl May Verlag. They produced three silent films based on the Orient cycle, Auf den Trümmern des Paradieses / On the Brink of Paradise (Josef Stein, 1920) with Carl de Vogt as Kara Ben Nemsi, the sequel Die Todeskarawane / Caravan of Death (Josef Stein, 1920) with Béla Lugosi in a supporting role as a sheikh, and Die Teufelsanbeter / The Devil Worshippers (Muhsin Ertuğrul, 1920). The now-lost films had no success, and the company went bankrupt the following year.

In 1936, the first sound film, Durch die Wüste / Through the Desert (Ferenc Szécsényi, 1936), was released, again based on the Orient cycle. Two decades later, it was followed by the first colour films, Die Sklavenkarawane / The Slave Caravan (Georg Marischka, Ramón Torrado, 1958) and its sequel Der Löwe von Babylon / The Lion of Babylon (Johannes Kai, Ramón Torrado, 1959).

Karl May's true cinematic renaissance came in the 1960s, when West German producers launched a highly successful series of colour adventure films. Most of these 18 films are set in the Wild West, beginning with Der Schatz im Silbersee / The Treasure of the Silver Lake (Harald Reinl, 1962). The majority were produced by Horst Wendlandt or Artur Brauner. The film music by Martin Böttcher and the landscapes of Yugoslavia, where most of the films were shot, played a major role in the success of the cinema series.

Key adaptations include Winnetou – 1. Teil / Winnetou: Part One (Harald Reinl, 1963) and Old Shatterhand / Old Shatterhand (Hugo Fregonese, 1964). The Karl May films combined sweeping landscapes, memorable music and a romantic vision of adventure. They became iconic across Europe. Recurring leading actors were Lex Barker (Old Shatterhand, Kara Ben Nemsi, Karl Sternau), Pierre Brice (Winnetou), Stewart Granger (Old Surehand), and Ralf Wolter (Sam Hawkens, Hadschi Halef Omar, André Hasenpfeffer). They cemented May’s characters as screen legends and influenced the look and feel of European Westerns and adventure cinema.

In the following decades, further films were made for the cinema, like the East German animation film Die Spur führt zum Silbersee (1990) and television, including Das Buschgespenst (1986) and Winnetou – Der Mythos lebt (2016), as well as TV series such as Kara Ben Nemsi Effendi (1973-1975). However, most of the films have almost nothing in common with the original books. In 2001, Michael Herbig, alias ‘Bully’, released the film Der Schuh des Manitu / Manitou's Shoe (Michael Herbig, 2001), which became one of the most successful German films since the Second World War. It parodies not so much the books as the film adaptations starring Pierre Brice and Lex Barker and is based on a similar parody in his comedy show Bullyparade.

Der Schut (1964) with Lex Barker and Ralf Wolter
German postcard by Heinerle Karl-May-Postkarten, no. 15. Photo: CCC / Gloria. Lex Barker and Ralf Wolter in Der Schut / The Yellow One (Robert Siodmak, 1964). Caption: "In the evening at house Galingré: "Halef, I will play a trick on the Mübarek. Therefore, you had to get me bismuth and mercury. From this, I'll make bullets that look like lead bullets, but disintegrate during firing. Now I'll load the gun alternately with a bullet made of lead and a fake one ..."

Pierre Fromont and Marie Versini in Der Schut (1964)
West German postcard by Heinerle Karl-May-Postkarten, no. 25. Photo: CCC / Gloria-Verleih. Pierre Fromont and Marie Versini in Der Schut / The Yellow One (Robert Siodmak, 1964). Caption: "Monsieur Galingré - for God's sake, what are you doing!" - "Don't mind me! Get out of here as fast as you can, or you'll be lost!" - "You'll pay for this, Frenchman, you scoundrel!"

Der Schut (1964) with Lex Barker and Marianne Hold
German postcard by Heinerle Karl-May-Postkarten, no. 37. Photo: CCC / Gloria. Lex Barker and Marianne Hold in Der Schut / The Yellow One (Robert Siodmak, 1964). Caption: "A short break is inserted, so Madame Galingré can recover from the rigours of the raid. The next morning, the search for the Yellow One will be continued."

Dusan Janicijevic, Lex Barker and Ralf Wolter In Der Schut (1964)
German postcard by Heinerle Karl-May-Postkarten, no. 39. Photo: CCC / Gloria. Dusan Janicijevic, Lex Barker and Ralf Wolter in Der Schut / The Yellow One (Robert Siodmak, 1964). Caption: "They have pulled Halef into the canyon lodge and tied him up there. 'Where is Kara holding on? Speak... or! '- But Halef remains silent and resists all threats and beatings."

Lex Barker and Ralf Wolter in Der Schut (1964)
German postcard by Heinerle Karl-May-Postkarten, no. 48. Photo: CCC / Gloria. Lex Barker and Ralf Wolter in Der Schut / The Yellow One (Robert Siodmak, 1964). Caption: "The Farewell Bell Tolls. Kara wants to return to his homeland. Sad Halef says his beloved Lord, "Good-bye". "Sidi, we 'll meet again, when the son of Rih has seen the light of day!"

A uniquely European dream of faraway worlds


Karl May died in 1912 in his own Villa Shatterhand in Radebeul, near Dresden. May was buried in Radebeul East. His tomb was inspired by the Temple of Athena Nike. "A thief, an impostor, a sexual pervert, a grotesque prophet of a sham Messiah!"..."The Third Reich is Karl May's ultimate triumph!" wrote Klaus Mann, son of Thomas Mann, in 1940. To which Albert Einstein replied: "...even today he has been dear to me in many a desperate hour." Herman Hesse called his books "indispensable and eternal", and the director Carl Zuckmayer even christened his daughter Winnetou in honour of May's great Apache chief. May was very conscious of distancing himself from the ethnological prejudices of his time, but May was not unaffected by the nationalism and racism that characterised Wilhelmine Germany at the time. May's most famous character, Winnetou, chief of the Mescalero Apaches, embodies the brave and noble Indian who fights for justice and peace with his ‘silver rifle’ and his horse Iltschi. Today, May's work is read with a more critical awareness of its stereotypes, yet his importance to popular culture remains undeniable.

Since 1987, a 120-volume historical-critical edition of Karl May's works has been published. This philologically reliable edition endeavours to reproduce the authentic wording of the first editions and, where possible, also of the author's manuscripts, and provides information on the text's history. It was accompanied by efforts by Karl May Verlag to use legal means to hinder its competitors and prohibit them from criticising the collected works of KMV. After years of disputes and several changes of publisher, the historical-critical edition has been published by Karl May Verlag since 2008, with the Karl May Society responsible for the text and the Karl May Foundation with the Karl May Museum responsible for distribution.

Karl May has been one of the world's most widely read authors for more than 100 years. His work has been translated into 46 languages. The worldwide circulation of his works, set in the Middle East, the United States and 19th-century Mexico, is estimated at 200 million, 100 million of which are in Germany. His books are still very popular today, especially in Czechia, Hungary, Bulgaria, the Netherlands, Mexico and even Indonesia, but he is almost unknown in France, Great Britain and the United States. May's life has been the subject of several films, including Freispruch für Old Shatterhand (Hans Heinrich, 1965), Karl May (Hans-Jürgen Syberberg, 1974) and the TV series Karl May (Klaus Überall, 1992).

The first stage adaptation, 'Winnetou', was created in 1919 by Hermann Dimmler. Various adaptations of the novels are also performed on open-air stages. The oldest productions have been staged since 1938 at the Felsenbühne Rathen in Saxon Switzerland. The best known are the annual Karl May Festival in Bad Segeberg (since 1952) and the Karl May Festival in Elspe (since 1958). The Karl May Festival in Bischofswerda, which has been running since 1993, offers something special, with children playing the characters. In 2006 alone, plays based on Karl May's works were performed on 14 stages. The first card games, especially various quartet games, appeared around 1935. The Karl May film wave of the 1960s brought a particular boom for the latter. The first puzzles also appeared around 1965.

From 1930 onwards, motifs from Karl May's works and stage and film adaptations were used for collectable pictures. The first two waves took place in the 1930s and the post-war period. At that time, the pictures were mainly used to promote customer loyalty for margarine, cheese, cigarettes, chewing gum, tea and other products from various manufacturers. The third wave came in the wake of the Karl May film adaptations of the 1960s, when collectable albums related to the films were published. In addition to photos from the films, drawings and images from the Karl May plays in Rathen (colourised) and Bad Segeberg, as well as from the TV series Mein Freund Winnetou, were also used. Over 90 collectable picture series have been published. Through his books, the films, the stage adaptations, radio plays, comics and postcards, Karl May continues to embody a uniquely European dream of faraway worlds – a dream that found one of its most lasting expressions on the cinema screen.

Stewart Granger and Götz George in Unter Geiern (1964)
German postcard by ISV, no. C 11. Photo: Constantin. Stewart Granger and Götz George in Unter Geiern / Among Vultures (Alfred Vohrer, 1964).

Elke Sommer and Götz George in Unter Geiern (1964)
German postcard by ISV, no. C 13. Photo: Constantin. Elke Sommer and Götz George in Unter Geiern / Among Vultures (Alfred Vohrer, 1964).

Pierre Brice and Gojko Mitic in Unter Geiern (1964)
German postcard, no. 40. Photo: Constantin. Pierre Brice and Gojko Mitic in Unter Geiern / Among Vultures (Alfred Vohrer, 1964).

Pierre Brice in Old Shattterhand (1964)
German postcard by Krüger. Photo: Bernard of Hollywood / CCC Produktion. Pierre Brice in Old Shatterhand (1964). Sent by mail in Luxembourg in 1966.

Guy Madison in Old Shatterhand (1964)
German postcard, no. 8 (1-56). Photo: CCC Produktion / Constantin. Guy Madison in Old Shatterhand (Hugo Fregonese, 1964). Caption: "Captain Bradley leads a group of settlers who want to go west."

Ralf Wolter in Winnetou - 3. Teil (1965)
German postcard, no. 8. Photo: Rialto / Constantin. Ralf Wolter in Winnetou - 3. Teil / Winnetou: The Last Shot (Harald Reinl, 1965).

Rik Battaglia and Pierre Brice in Winnetou 3. Teil (1965)
German postcard, no. 9 (1-32). Photo: Rialto / Constantin. Rik Battaglia and Pierre Brice in Winnetou - 3. Teil / Winnetou: The Last Shot (Harald Reinl, 1965).

Mario Girotti (Terence Hill) in Der Ölprinz (1965)
German postcard, no. 8. Photo: Rialto / Constantin. Mario Girotti (Terence Hill) in Der Ölprinz / Rampage at Apache Wells (Harald Philipp, 1965). Caption: "The trek reaches according to appointment to the first stage near the river. The young Forsyth secretly sneaks out of the camp and meets with members of the Finders gang in the blockhouse. Here he receives his instructions, for the Finders gang will, in the discharge of the Oil prince, attack the wagons during the night."

Pierre Brice (Winnetou) is dead
German postcard, no. 9. Photo: CCC / Constantin. Lex Barker and Pierre Brice in Winnetou und Shatterhand in Tal der Toten / The Valley of Death (Harald Reinl, 1968). Caption: "Old Shatterhand and Winnetou devise a battle plan against the Murdock Bandits."

Pierre Brice, Clarke Reynolds and Lex Barker in Winnetou und Shatterhand im Tal der Toten (1968)
West German postcard, no. 34. Photo: CCC / Constantin. Pierre Brice, Clarke Reynolds and Lex Barker in Winnetou und Shatterhand im Tal der Toten / Winnetou and Shatterhand in the Valley of Death (Harald Reinl, 1968). Caption: Winnetou, Old Shatterhand and Lieutenant Cummings have happily ended the battle in the Valley of Death.

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