31 May 2026

Barbara Payton

Today, EFSP tells the very sad tale of blue-eyed, peroxide blonde sexpot Barbara Payton (1927-1967). She was less known for her films than for her stormy social life and eventual battles with alcohol and drug addiction. At the end of her film career, she made two interesting films in Great Britain.

Barbara Payton
British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, London, no. D 86. Photo: Eagle-Lion.

Barbara Payton
Spanish postcard by Soberanas, no. 708.

Barbara Payton
Mexican postcard by Edicion Gamboa, no. 126.

Blossoming good looks


Barbara Payton was born Barbara Lee Redfield in Cloquet, Minnesota, in 1927. She was the daughter of Norwegian immigrants Erwin Lee Redfield and Mabel Irene Todahl. A son, Frank Leslie III, was born in 1931. In 1938, the family moved to Odessa, Texas, where Payton’s father started a motel court. Both of Payton's parents had long-standing problems with alcohol. As Payton was growing into maturity, her good looks were also blossoming, which drew attention to her. She was known as a lively girl, willing to please, and she learned early in life that she had a potent effect on the opposite sex. In November 1943, the then-16-year-old eloped with her high school boyfriend, William Hodge. The marriage seemingly amounted to nothing more than an act of impulsive, teenage rebellion, and Payton did not fight her parents' insistence that the marriage be annulled. A few months later, she quit high school.

In 1944, she met her second husband, a decorated combat pilot named John Payton, who at the time was stationed at Midland Air Base. The handsome couple were married in 1945 and moved to Los Angeles, where John enrolled at USC under the G.I. Bill. It was still early in their marriage that Barbara, restless and feeling confined by her life as a housewife, expressed a desire to pursue a modelling or acting career. Payton officially launched her modelling path by hiring the services of a local photographer who shot photos of her sporting fashionable outfits. This portfolio attracted the favourable attention of a clothing designer, Saba of California, who signed her to a contract modelling a line of junior fashion.

Her career progressed, and in September 1947, the Rita La Roy Agency in Hollywood took her on as a client and brought her more work as a model in print advertising, notably in catalogues for Studebaker cars. She also appeared in clothing ads for such magazines as Charm and Junior Bazaar. During this period in her life, the couple welcomed their son, John Lee, who was born in February 1947. Payton managed to combine the responsibilities of wife, new mother and professional model, yet the strains on the Payton marriage finally reached the breaking point, and Barbara and her husband separated in 1948. Barbara took an apartment in Hollywood with her infant son, with whom she was very close. Payton's drive, fuelled by her high-energy personality, had become focused on promoting her career and showcasing her beauty around the town’s hot spots. She was labelled the 'Queen of the Night Clubs' by columnist Harrison Carroll.

Her notoriety as a luminous, fun-loving party girl in the Hollywood club scene ignited the attention of William Goetz, an executive of Universal Studios. In January 1949, he signed her, aged twenty-one, to a contract with a starting salary of $100 per week. Payton first gained notice as a drop-dead gorgeous young woman in the Film Noir Trapped (Richard Fleischer, 1949), co-starring Lloyd Bridges. In 1950, she was allowed to make a screen test for John Huston's production of the forthcoming MGM crime drama The Asphalt Jungle. She was not chosen, and the part of the sultry mistress of a mob-connected lawyer went to Marilyn Monroe. She started to use sleeping pills to sleep and speed to keep her weight down.

After being screen-tested by James Cagney and his producer brother William, Payton starred with Cagney in the violent Noir thriller Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (Gordon Douglas, 1950). William Cagney was so smitten with Payton's sensual appeal and beauty that her contract was drawn as a joint agreement between William Cagney Productions and Warner Bros., who together saw fit to bestow on Payton a salary of $5,000 a week; a large sum for an actress yet to demonstrate star power at the box office. For a relative newcomer, Payton more than managed to hold her own in Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye among a cast of Hollywood veterans and alongside a superstar like Cagney himself. Her portrayal of the hardened, seductive girlfriend, whom Cagney’s character ultimately double-crosses, was critically praised in newspaper reviews of the film. Her acting skills were recognized and her significant screen charisma was widely acknowledged. Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye was the highpoint in Payton’s career, the moment in time she was christened as a player with bona fide star power.

Barbara Payton
British postcard in The People series by Show Parade Picture Service, London, no. P. 1033. Photo: Universal-International.

Barbara Payton and Gregory Peck in Only the Valiant (1951)
Spanish postcard.Barbara Payton and Gregory Peck in Only the Valiant (Gordon Douglas, 1951). Collection: Marlene Pilaete.

A black eye and a tarnished reputation


Caught up in the glitz and glamour, Barbara Payton's career had started taking second place to a reckless life full of capricious romances involving several top stars and producers, many of them married. In 1949, she had a six-month affair with Bob Hope in which he paid for her to live in a luxurious apartment. The affair ended when she began making demands for more money. Her screen appearances opposite Gary Cooper in Dallas (Stuart Heisler, 1950) and Gregory Peck in Only the Valiant (Gordon Douglas, 1951) disappointed. Both Westerns were lacklustre productions where her roles were no more than window dressing for the hero and did little to highlight her skills as an actress.

Payton's career decline began with the Horror film Bride of the Gorilla (Curt Siodmak, 1951), co-starring Raymond Burr. However, her slightly lurid appeal still seemed to be enough to carry her through Tinseltown. According to rumours, she had affairs with producer Howard Hughes, Woody Strode, George Raft, Dallas co-stars Gary Cooper and Steve Cochran, John Ireland, and Texas oilman Bob Neal.

In addition to her first two marriages, Payton was married two more times. In 1950, she had met classy 'A' actor Franchot Tone and the two were later engaged. She was the subject of a spread in Confidential Magazine when Tone allegedly caught her in bed with Guy Madison. In 1951, while engaged to Tone, Payton began having an affair with muscular B-movie actor Tom Neal, and she also proposed marriage to him. She allowed him to move into her apartment, which Tone was paying the rent for. She kicked him out when Tone returned from out of town.

Payton went back and forth publicly between Neal and Tone. On 14 September 1951, Tom Neal, a former college boxer, physically attacked Tone at Payton's apartment, leaving him in an 18-hour coma with a smashed cheekbone, broken nose and concussion. Barbara ended up with both a black eye and a tarnished reputation. Payton and Tone, who was still recovering from his injuries, were married in 1951 in Payton's hometown of Cloquet, Minnesota. However, after being married, Tone discovered that she had continued her relations with Neal and Tone was subsequently granted a divorce in 1952.

When Franchot Tone decided to divorce her, he had a private detective take pictures of her having sex with other men. He then sent the photos to all the major Hollywood studios, hoping they would ruin her career. They did. Barbara Payton and Tom Neal capitalised on the notorious press coverage by touring in plays such as 'The Postman Always Rings Twice', based on the popular 1946 Film Noir of the same name. They would also star together in The Great Jesse James Raid (Reginald Le Borg, 1953), a B-Western that received a limited release to theatres. In May 1953, Payton announced that she and Neal were to be married that summer in Paris. The couple broke up the following year.

Barbara Payton
Spanish postcard, no. 2263.

Barbara Payton
Dutch postcard by DRC, no. F 154. Photo: Warner Bros.

Barbara Payton
Belgian collector card by Publesca for Cinema Novy, Nevele, no. 24. Photo: Warner Bros.

I am not ashamed


Barbara Payton's hard drinking and hard living ultimately destroyed her both physically and emotionally. Gary Brumburgh at IMDb: "She went to England to try to rejuvenate her career, but no dice; it was over, and her life was skidding out of control. Her once beautiful face was now blotchy, and her once spectacular figure was now bloated. Barbara sank deeper into the bottle." In England, she starred for the Hammer studio in the Science Fiction film Four Sided Triangle/The Monster and the Woman (Terence Fisher, 1953). And although Leonard Maltin called it a 'bomb' in his Movie Guide, among Hammer fans at IMDb, both the film and Payton's acting are highly regarded.

Reportedly, she was also good in her last leading role in the Film Noir Murder Is My Beat (Edgar G. Ullmer, 1955). Linda Rasmussen at AllMovie: "Director Edgar G. Ulmer uses flashbacks and elliptical editing to good effect, but the film lacks any strong visual or narrative centre. Barbara Peyton delivers a great performance as the ambiguous, mysterious femme fatale. While still of some interest, Murder is My Beat lacks the power and grim vision of Ulmer's bleak gem, Detour."

In 1955, Payton married George A. 'Tony' Provas, a furniture store executive in Nogales, Arizona. They divorced in August 1958. In March 1956, she lost custody of her son John Lee Jr. after her ex-husband charged that she exposed their son to "profane language, immoral conduct, notoriety, unwholesome activities" and failed to provide the boy with a "moral education". From then on, her growing alcoholism and drug abuse led to multiple skirmishes with the law, including an arrest for passing bad checks. In 1962, she married a fifth time, to Jess Rawley, but they separated in 1965.

In 1962, Payton was arrested for prostitution when she propositioned an undercover cop in a Sunset Boulevard bar. Later that year, she was stabbed by a drunk and received 38 stitches to heal the wound. Payton won an uncredited bit part in the Western comedy 4 for Texas (Robert Aldrich, 1963), which was her last acting role. In 1963, she published her autobiography, 'I Am Not Ashamed', which was ghostwritten by Leo Guild. She didn't want to be paid in cash or check, but asked for payment in red wine because there were claims on her cash. The book included unflattering photographs of Payton and admissions that she had been forced to sleep on bus benches and suffered regular beatings as a prostitute. In 1965, she was arrested and charged with possession of heroin and a hypodermic syringe. The charges were dismissed due to "insufficient evidence."

In 1967, ill and after failed efforts to curb her drinking, Barbara Payton moved back to San Diego, California, to live with her parents. Several weeks later, the 39-year-old former starlet was found there on the bathroom floor - dead of heart and liver failure. Her son, John Lee Payton Jr., was serving in Vietnam when she died. Her life has been the subject of several books, including 'Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye: The Barbara Payton Story' (2007), by John O'Dowd, 'L.A. Despair: A Landscape of Crimes and Bad Times' (2005), by John Gilmore, and 'B Movie. a Play in Two Acts' (2014), by Michael B. Druxman. Her remains were interred at Cypress View Mausoleum and Crematory in San Diego, CA. Her location plot is Chapel of Promise Niche 28 (downstairs), in the middle, at the top right side


Trailer Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (Gordon Douglas, 1950). Source: Felixxxx9999 (YouTube).


Trailer for Bride of the Gorilla (Curt Siodmak, 1951). Source: Trailers, Sci, and/or Fi (YouTube).


Trailer for the British Film Noir The Flanagan Boy / Bad Blonde (Reginald LeBorg, 1953). Source: Hammer (YouTube).

Sources: Gary Brumburgh (IMDb), Linda Rasmussen (AllMovie - This page is now defunct), Wikipedia and IMDb.

30 May 2026

Lya de Putti

Hungarian-born film star Lya de Putti (1897-1931) portrayed vamps in German and American silent films. In 1925, she reached the zenith of her career with the leading role in the Weimar classic Variété, as the alluring femme fatale between Emil Jannings and Warwick Ward.

Lya de Putti in Varieté (1925)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1268/2, 1927-1928. Photo: Ufa. Lya de Putti in Varieté (Ewald André Dupont, 1925).

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1273/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Hans Natge.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 2023/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Fanam.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3020/4, 1928-1929. Photo: Roman Freulich.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3178/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Roman Freulich.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3370/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Roman Freulich.

Lya de Putti in Manon Lescaut (1926)
British postcard by Ross Verlag Foreign, no. 58. Photo: Terra-Film. Lya de Putti in Manon Lescaut (Artur Robison, 1926).

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 727/2, 1925-1926. Photo: Alex Binder. Collection: Didier Hanson.

To the capital of the European silent cinema of the 1920s


Amalia 'Lia' de Putty was born in Vécse, Austria-Hungary (now Vojcice, Slovakia) in 1897 (some sources say 1899). She was the daughter of a Hungarian baron and cavalry officer and a former countess. Lia had two brothers, Geza and Alexander, and a sister, Mitzi.

In 1913 (or 1912 according to some sources), she married county magistrate Zoltán Szepessy, and she had two daughters with him.

In Budapest, she began her stage career with a short stint in the Vaudeville circuit. In 1918, she made her screen debut with A császár katonái / The Emperor's Soldiers (Béla Balogh, 1918).

That year, she divorced Szepessy. Shortly after her divorce, she married Ludwig Christensen, who died in 1922.

She made her next film in Romania, Pe valurile fericirii / The Waves Of Happiness (Dolly A. Szigethy, 1920). Then she moved on to the capital of the European silent cinema of the 1920s, Berlin.

Othello (1922)
French postcard by Edition de la Cinematographie Française. Photo: Grandes Productions Cinématographiques (G.P.C.). Photo: Ica von Lenkeffy as Desdemona and Lya de Putti as Emilia in Othello (Dimitri Buchowetzki, 1922).

Othello (1922)
French postcard by Edition de la Cinematographie Française. Photo: Grandes Productions Cinématographiques (G.P.C.). Photo: Werner Krauss as Jago and Lya de Putti as Emilia in Othello (Dimitri Buchowetzki, 1922).

Der brennende Acker (1922)
French postcard by Edition de la Cinématographie Française, Paris. Photo: G.P.C. Publicity still for Der brennende Acker / Burning Soil / La terre qui flambe (Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau, 1922). Helga, Count Rudenburg's second wife (Stella Arbenina), and Gerda, the Count's daughter (Lya de Putti), in a fierce get-together.

Der brennende Acker (1922)
French postcard by Edition de la Cinématographie Française, Paris. Photo: G.P.C. Publicity still for Der brennende Acker / Burning Soil / La terre qui flambe (Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau, 1922). Gerda (Lya de Putti) and her maid (Leonie Taliansky).

Luciano Albertini and Lya de Putti in Die Schlucht des Todes (1923)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 578/1. Luciano Albertini and Lya de Putti in Die Schlucht des Todes (Luciano Albertini, Francis A. Bartoni, 1923). The card depicts the final scene: Luciano has just saved Lya from falling down the Devil's Canyon and reconciles with her after he refuses to acknowledge her illegal child and his failed attempt at suicide.

Luciano Albertini and Lya de Putti in Die Schlucht des Todes (1923)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 578/2, 1919-1924. Photo: Leo Klaude, Berlin / Phoebus Film. Luciano Albertini and Lya de Putti in Die Schlucht des Todes / The Ravine of Death (Luciano Albertini, Albert-Francis Bertoni, Max Obal, 1923).

An alluring femme fatale


In 1920, Lya de Putti progressed to perform classical ballet in Berlin. She became the premier danseuse at the Berlin Winter Garden in 1924.

In Germany, she played supporting roles in films by famous directors. She worked twice with F.W. Murnau, first at the drama Die brennende Acker / Burning Soil (1922) with Vladimir Gajdarov, and then at Phantom (1922) starring Alfred Abel.

She starred in six films produced by Joe May, including the exotic adventure epic Das Indische Grabmal / The Indian Tomb (Joe May, 1921), starring Olaf Fønss.

Her biggest hit – especially in the US – was the UFA production Varieté / Jealousy (Ewald André Dupont, 1925). De Putti played the alluring femme fatale Bertha-Marie, who seduces the simple carnival concessionaire Stephan Huller (Emil Jannings) and then betrays him with the handsome acrobat (Warwick Ward). Feeling doubly impotent because he himself had been a famous aerialist before suffering a crippling accident, Jannings fantasises about killing his rival - and, finally, does so.

De Putti followed this success with star performances in Manon Lescaut (Arthur Robison, 1925) opposite Vladimir Gajdarov, and Junges Blut / Young Blood (Manfred Noa, 1926) with Walter Slezak.

Lya de Putti
French postcard by A.N., Paris, no. 134. Photo: Phoebus Film. Publicity still for Im Namen des Kaisers / In the Name of the Emperor (Robert Dinesen, 1925).

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 560/1, 1919-1924. Photo: Atelier Balazs, Berlin.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 868/1, 1925-1926. Photo: Binder. Collection Didier Hanson. Early card of De Putti in which her name is still spelt Lia instead of Lya.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1267/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Alex Binder / Ufa. Lya de Putti in Manon Lescaut (Arthur Robison, 1926).

Lya de Putti in Manon Lescaut (1926)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1267/2, 1927-1928. Photo: Alex Binder / Ufa. Lya de Putti in Manon Lescaut (Arthur Robison, 1926).

Lya de Putti and Vladimir Gajdarov in Manon Lescaut (1926)
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano, no. 129. Photo: A. Stefano Pittaluga. Lya de Putti and Vladimir Gajdarov in Manon Lescaut (Arthur Robison, 1926).

Lya de Putti
Italian postcard by S.A. Stefano Pittaluga, no. 131. Photo: Lya de Putti in Manon Lescaut (Arthur Robison, 1926).

Invitation to Hollywood


Studio mogul Adolph Zukor invited Lya de Putti to come to Hollywood. At her arrival in New York in February 1926, she told American reporters that she was twenty-two years old. Her ocean liner's records list her as having been twenty-six.

Her American debut was David Wark Griffith's Sorrows of Satan (D.W. Griffith, 1926), starring Adolphe Menjou. The film was released in two versions, one in America and the other in Europe. In the American version, one scene had De Putti fully dressed. The same scene in the European release had De Putti topless.

She went to work for Universal in such films as The Heart Thief (Nils Olaf Chrisander, 1927) starring Joseph Schildkraut, Buck Privates (Melville W. Brown, 1928) with Zasu Pitts, and The Scarlet Lady (Alan Crosland, 1928).

In between these films, she returned to Germany for a short time in order to shoot Charlotte etwas verrückt / Charlott something crazy (Adolf E. Licho, 1928). During this stay, a serious accident happened. Lya de Putti fell from a window. The press interpreted it as an attempted suicide. But de Putti recovered quickly and returned to the US.

Hollywood generally cast her as a vamp, and she often wore her dark hair short in a style similar to that of Louise Brooks.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1028/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Alex Binder.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1028/2, 1927-1928. Photo: Alex Binder.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1028/3, 1927-1928. Photo: Alex Binder.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1268/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Alex Binder / Ufa.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1269/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Alex Binder / Ufa.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1269/4, 1927-1928. Photo: Alex Binder / Ufa.

Lya de Putti and Kenneth Harlan in Midnight Rose (1928)
French postcard by Cinémagazine-Edition, no. 618. Photo: Universal. Lya de Putti and Kenneth Harlan in Midnight Rose (James Young, 1928).

An attempt to make a restart on Broadway


Lya de Putti was rumoured to be engaged to Count Ludwig Salm von Hoogstraten, a former husband of the American oil heiress Millicent Rogers, but she denied the engagement.

De Putti failed to make it big in Hollywood, and her Hollywood efforts were inhibited by her foreign accent when the sound film arrived.

She left the screen in 1929 to attempt to make a re-start on Broadway. Later that year, she returned to Europe.

In Germany, she could be seen in Rund um die Liebe / About Love (Oskar Kalbus, 1929), a documentary compilation film showing footage from various films, with a.o. Lilian Harvey and Valerie Boothby.

She went to England to study the language and also made the silent film The Informer (Arthur Robison, 1929) with Lars Hanson and Warwick Ward. It would turn out to be her final film.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1273/2, 1927-1928. Photo: Hans Natge.

Lya de Putti in Junges Blut (1926)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1349/2, 1927-1928. Photo: Terra Film. Lya de Putti in Junges Blut / Young Blood (Manfred Noa, 1926).

Walter Slezak and Lya de Putti in Junges Blut (1926)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1350/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Terra Film. Walter Slezak and Lya de Putti in Junges Blut / Young Blood (Manfred Noa, 1926).

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1562/3, 1927-1928. Photo: Alwin Steinitz.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1819/3, 1927-1928. Photo: Fanamet. Lya de Putti in The Sorrows of Satan (D.W. Griffith, 1926).

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 1819/4, 1927-1928. Photo: Fanam.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 1931/2, 1927-1928. Photo: Melbourne Spurr, Hollywood.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3020/3, 1928-1929.

A fatal chicken bone


Lya de Putti returned to America. At the end of 1931, a macabre and bizarre accident followed. De Putti swallowed a chicken bone, which had to be surgically removed. At the hospital, she reportedly behaved irrationally and eluded her nurses. Eventually, she was found in a corridor. She contracted an infection, then pleurisy in her right side, followed by pneumonia in both lungs.

Lya de Putti died in 1931 in the New York hospital. She was only 34. According to Wikipedia, she left "just £800 (UK equivalent at the time) and a few bits of jewellery. Four years earlier, £800 was her weekly wage."

She was survived by her third husband, Louis Jahnke, whom she had married in 1922. Her first husband, Zoltán Szepessy, committed suicide shortly after her death.

They had two daughters, Ilona (1914) and Judith (1916). Both daughters were interviewed as old ladies for the documentary Das dritte Leben der Lya de Putti / The Third Life of Lya de Putti (Gisela Scheelein, 1996).

In the film Cabaret (Bob Fosse, 1972), singer Sally Bowles (Liza Minnelli) tells her friend Brian Roberts (Michael York) that Lya de Putti is her 'favourite screen siren'. In a subsequent scene, Bowles dismisses de Putti, claiming that she "makes too many faces."

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3220/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Phoebus-Film. Lya de Putti in the German silent film Charlott etwas verrückt / Charlott a little crazy (Adolf E. Licho, 1929).

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3220/3, 1928-1929. Photo: Phoebus-Film. Lya de Putti in the German silent film Charlott etwas verrückt / Charlott a little crazy (Adolf E. Licho, 1929).

Livio Pavanelli and Lya de Putti in Charlott etwas verrückt (1928)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3221/1, 1928-1929. Photo: Phoebus-Film AG. Livio Pavanelli and Lya de Putti in the German silent film Charlott etwas verrückt / Charlott a little crazy (Adolf E. Licho, 1929).

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, Foreign, no. 3452, 1928-1929. Photo: G.L. Manuel Frères, Paris.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3494/2, 1928-1929. Photo: probably a still from The Heart Thief (Nils Olaf Chrisander, 1927).

Lya de Putti and Joseph Schildkraut in The Heart Thief (1927)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3495/1, 1928-1929. Photo: LPG. Lya de Putti and Joseph Schildkraut in The Heart Thief (Nils Olaf Chrisander, 1927).

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3717/2, 1928-1929.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 3817/3, 1928-1929.

Lya de Putti
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4081/1, 1929-1930.

Sources: Hal Erickson (AllMovie - Page now defunct), Jessica Keaton (Silence is Golden), Thomas Staedeli (Cyranos), Jarod Hitching (IMDb), Wikipedia, Filmportal.de and IMDb.