23 June 2026

The Century of Cinema: 1906

Il Cinema Ritrovato turns 40 this year. We like the idea that the organisers called one of their three programmes 'The Time Machine'. The programme puts a spotlight on silent cinema, structured around two sections: 'A Hundred Years Ago', on which we post later this week, and 'Century of Cinema'. This section follows, year after year, a chronological path beginning with the birth of the Seventh Art in 1895 and revisits the milestones that shaped the cinema during its formative period. Mariann Lewinsky and Karl Wratschko curated this year's 'The Century of Cinema: 1906' with some 60 titles: 'New highlights in this year’s programme include dramas of unprecedented refinement by Albert Capellani and the very first productions of the Danish company Nordisk. The section explores cinema’s experimental vocation, the growing emotional involvement of spectators, and the ability of films to reflect social realities such as racism and the ambivalent representation of women, poised between misogyny and emancipation. Documentary footage of the San Francisco earthquake and the mining disaster at Courrières, France, brings terrible events of the past vividly into the present.' For this EFSP post, we did not follow the programme, but selected 25 (yes, 19 + 6) postcards of films and plays that were published in 1906.

Cinema in 1906


Un drame à Venise (1906)
French postcard by Croissant, Paris, no. 3672. Photo: Film Pathé. Publicity still for Un drame à Venise / Venetian Tragedy (Lucien Nonguet, 1906). Caption: In the Name of Honour.

In the early Pathé Frères production Un drame à Venise / Venetian Tragedy, one of the rich palaces of Venice is the setting for a drama of smouldering love and hate. In the Middle Ages, an important lord was not loved by his wife. Despite the sumptuous wealth her husband surrounds her with, the noble dame can only think about a young and handsome Romeo. The lover is surprised by the husband, who kills him, and Romeo ends up in a canal. The noble lady escapes her death when her husband is stopped by her miraculous beauty... The film is partly in colour.

Un drame à Venise
Reprint of original French postcard by Croissant, Paris, no. 3672. Photo: Film Pathé. Publicity still for Un drame à Venise / Venetian Tragedy (Lucien Nonguet, 1906). Caption: Public entertainment.

In the 16th century, an important lord was not loved by his wife. Despite the sumptuous wealth her husband surrounds her with, the noble dame can only think about a young and handsome Romeo. A beggar who earlier on had been rewarded by the lord betrays the adulterous couple. 

Scene from Mignon (Alice Guy, 1906)
French postcard by Croissant, Paris, no. 3871. Photo: Gaumont phot. Publicity still for Mignon (Alice Guy, 1906). Caption: [Lothario to Mignon:] Have you suffered, have you wept? Have you languished without hope?

Alice Guy directed nine (or seven - the sources differ) scenes from the opera 'Mignon' for a synchronised sound film, in the Gaumont Chronophone Studio, Paris, in 1906. 'Mignon' (1866) is an opéra comique in three acts by Ambroise Thomas. The original French libretto was by Jules Barbier and Michel Carré, based on Goethe's novel 'Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre'.

Mignon (1906)
French postcard by Croissant, Paris, no. 3871. Photo: Gaumont. Publicity still for Mignon (Alice Guy, 1906). Caption: Goodbye, Mignon, be brave! Don't cry!

Alice Guy (1873-1968) is generally considered to be the world's first female director. She was born in 1873 in Paris. In 1896, she entered the film business as a secretary for Léon Gaumont at Gaumont-Paris. The next year, Gaumont changed from manufacturing cameras to producing films, and Guy became one of its first directors. She averaged two two-reelers a week and impressed the company so much with the output and the quality of her productions that by 1905, she was made the company's production director, supervising the company's other directors. After her first film in 1896, she directed and produced or supervised almost six hundred silent films ranging in length from one minute to thirty minutes, the majority of which were of the single-reel length. In addition, she also directed and produced or supervised one hundred and fifty synchronised sound films for the Gaumont Chronophone. Alison McMahan at Women Film Pioneers Project: "Her Gaumont silent films are notable for their energy and risk-taking; her preference for real locations gives the extant examples of these Gaumont films a contemporary feel." In 1907, Alice Guy married Herbert Blaché, an Englishman who ran the company's British and German offices. The pair went to the U.S. in 1909 to set up the company's operations there. In 1910, she and her husband set up their own production company in New York, the Solax Film Co. (1910-1914), and built a studio in Fort Lee, New Jersey. After a period of critical and financial success, her company's fortunes declined, and she eventually shut down the studio. Although she secured work directing films for several major Hollywood studios, she returned to France in 1922 after her divorce from Blaché. She was never able to secure any directorial jobs there and never made a film again.

Carmen, (Alice Guy, 1906)
French postcard by Croissant, Paris, no. 3890. Photo: Gaumont phot. Publicity still for Carmen (Alice Guy, 1906). Caption: "Toreador, be on guard, and dream as you fight. May a dark eye watch you, and may love await you."

On this card for the 1906 film Carmen, directed by Alice Guy for Gaumont, Carmen flirts with the toreador before his fight with the bull: "Toréador, en garde, et songe en combattant. Qu'un œil noir te regarde et que l'amour t'attends." The film consisted of 12 so-called phonoscènes, an early sound-on-disc system. The film is presumed lost. It is unknown who the singers are. Allison MacMahan told us that this version of Carmen was among the earliest phonoscenes made. No performers were listed, only 'Opera Français'.

Carmen (Alice Guy, 1906)
French postcard by Croissant, Paris, no. 3890. Photo: Gaumont Phot. Scene from Carmen (Alice Guy, 1906). Caption: [The gypsy girl Carmen challenges Don José:] "Love is a Bohemian child, it has never known any law; if you do not love me, I love you, if I love you, beware."

Mark the half-visible logo Elge behind the woman on the right. It stands for L.G., the initials of Gaumont owner and founder Léon Gaumont. Croissant also released the coloured series of postcards for pre-1910 Pathé Frères movies.

Le fils du diable
French postcard by Théâtre Pathé Grolée, Lyon. Photo: Pathé Frères. André Deed in Le fils du diable / The Devil's Son (Charles Lucien Lépine, 1906). The cinematography was by Segundo de Chomón.

Georges Vinter in Le tour du monde d'un policier (1906|)
French postcard by Théâtre Pathé Grolée, Lyon. Photo: Pathé Frères. Georges Vinter in Le tour du monde d'un policier / A Policeman's Trip Around The World (Charles Lépine, 1906). Special effects by Segundo de Chomón.

In Le tour du monde d'un policier (1906), a police detective has many adventures as he travels to Suez, Bombay, Yokohama, and the U.S.

L'espionne (1906)
French postcard by Théâtre Pathé Grolée, Lyon. Photo: Pathé Frères. Publicity still for L'espionne / The Spy (N.N., 1906), with Louis Pagliéri.

In L'espionne (1906), the daughter of a Cossack, Vera, loves a young tartar who is the enemy of her father. She betrays her father to save the life of her lover, but loses her own life instead.

La peine du talion (1906)
French postcard by Cinema Pathé Frères. Photo: Pathé Frères. Fernand Rivers as the professor in La Peine du talion / Tit-for-Tat (Gaston Velle, 1906).

In La peine du talion (1906), a professor and two students are walking in a grove, looking for rare butterflies. They capture some, which turn suddenly into pretty girls. In revenge, the girls turn him into a butterfly. After a brief examination, the teacher is sentenced to retaliation, a gigantic plug pricked with a pin. But the students ask pardon for their teacher. The scene ends in a splendid apotheosis.

Les chiens contrebandiers (1906)
French postcard by Cinema Pathé Frères. Photo: Pathé Frères. Publicity still for Chiens contrebandiers / Dogs Used As Smugglers (Georges Hatot, 1906).

The screenplay for Les chiens contrebandiers (1906) was written by André Heuzé. In a Spanish village, not far from the border, lives Manuela. She and her companions make lace, which is smuggled by the men. Manuela has a lover who has a rival, Antonio. After his advances are rejected, Antonio swears revenge. In the following scene, the smugglers are gathered in a cave known only to them. This is where they place the lace on the dogs who have to bring it safely to the other side of the border. Meanwhile, Antonio has warned customs, and under his guidance, they pursue the dogs. However, the intelligent beasts flee, crossing hills, woods, thickets, throwing themselves to swim, barely taking time to breathe, thinking only of their precious bales. Sometimes a bale falls, but it is immediately picked up by the following dog. The smugglers were warned of the treachery by one of them. Hidden in the timber, they wait for the customs passage. Shots are exchanged, and on both sides, there are wounded. This diversion allows the dogs to get ahead. The border is near, and in a final effort, they cross the post and safely recover the goods that are entrusted to them.

Theatre in 1906


Lewis Waller in Robin Hood
British postcard by Rotary Photo E.C., no. 4222F. Photo: Foulsham & Banfield. Lewis Waller in the play 'Robin Hood' (1906) by Henry Hamilton and William Devereux.

Lewis Waller (1860-1915) was best known as a matinee idol in the popular romantic plays of his day. He also worked as a playwright and a stage manager, and appeared in several films.

Evelyn Millard in Robin Hood (1906)
British postcard by Rotary Photo E.C., no. 4359 G. Photo: Foulsham & Banfield. Evelyn Millard as Lady Marian in the British play 'Robin Hood', first performed in November 1906.

Evelyn Mary Millard (1869-1941) was an English Shakespearean actress, manager of actors and ‘stage beauty’ in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. She is mainly known for creating the role of Cecily Cardew for the premiere of Oscar Wilde's play 'The Importance of Being Earnest' in 1895.

Herbert Beerbohm Tree as Nero
British postcard by J. Beagles & Co., no. 354 R. Photo: F.W. Burford. Herbert Beerbohm Tree as Nero in the stage production 'Nero' (1906).

Stephen Phillips’ play 'Nero' opened at His Majesty’s Theatre, London, in 1906. In addition to Herbert Beerbohm Tree as Nero, Constance Collier played Poppaea, while Tree's wife, Helen Maud Holt, played Agrippina, mother of Nero.

Constance Collier and Herbert Beerbohm Tree in Nero (1906)
British postcard by Beagles & Co., London, no. G 407. Photo: F.W. Burford. Constance Collier as Poppaea and Herbert Beerbohm Tree as Nero in the stage production 'Nero' (1906). Constance Collier created the part of Poppaea for the stage. Stephen Phillips’ 'Nero' opened at His Majesty’s Theatre, London, in 1906.

Constance Collier (1878–1955) was an English stage and film actress and later one of Hollywood's premier drama and voice coaches. In a career that covered six decades, she evolved into one of London’s and Broadway’s finest tragediennes. Although she appeared in several silent British and American films, her career in the cinema really took off in her senior years when Collier appeared in well-regarded supporting roles in more than twenty Hollywood productions.

Herbert Beerbohm Tree and Constance Collier in Antony and Cleopatra
British postcard by Rotary Photo E.C., no. 3287B. Photo: Burford. Herbert Beerbohm Tree as Mark Antony and Constance Collier as Cleopatra in the Shakespeare play 'Antony and Cleopatra', first performed in 1906. Also with Hugh C. Buckler as Eros and Alice Crawford as Charmian.

Constance Collier in Antony and Cleopatra (1906)
British postcard by The Philco Publishing Co., London, no. 3316 E. Photo: Bassano. Constance Collier as Cleopatra in the stage production 'Antony and Cleopatra' (1906).

Just after the turn of the century (1901), Constance Collier was invited to join the theatre company of the esteemed Herbert Beerbohm Tree, who had been searching for a comparably tall leading lady to play opposite him. In 1905, Collier married handsome English actor Julian Boyle (stage name Julian L'Estrange). They performed together for many years until he died in 1918 in New York from the deadly Spanish influenza. In 1906, Beerbohm Tree's extravagant revival of 'Antony and Cleopatra' opened at His Majesty's Theatre, with Tree as Mark Antony and Constance Collier as Cleopatra, a performance for which she received much critical praise. Collier was now established as a popular and distinguished actress.

The Girl Who Lost Her Character
British postcard by Holland Rowbottom, Theatrical Printer, Bournemouth & London. Photo: publicity still for the stage play 'The Girl Who Lost Her Character'. Caption: Take her away.

The play 'The Girl Who Lost Her Character' by Walter Melville was produced in 1906. The Melville family were successful in their acting, writing and management of several theatres in London and the provinces. Perhaps the most spectacular success of the family was the partnership between Frederick and Walter Melville, who jointly ran the Lyceum, the Prince’s Theatre and other major theatres, mainly in London. Their melodramas, most notably the ‘Bad Women Dramas’, filled the Melville theatres after the pantomime season, continuing a long theatrical tradition well into the twentieth century.

Sarah Bernhardt in La Vierge d'Avila
French postcard by Croissant, Paris, no. 3312. Photo: Henri Manuel. Sarah Bernhardt in the play 'La Vierge d'Avila' (1906) by Catulle Mendès. The postcard was mailed in 1907. Caption: VIth Tableau. That lily is a Pater [nostrum], that jasmine an Ave [Maria]...

Sarah Bernhardt in La Vierge d'Avila (1906)
French postcard. Photo: Henri Manuel. Sarah Bernhardt as Soeur Therese in 'La Vierge d'Avila' in a 1906 performance at Theatre Sarah-Bernhardt. 'La Vierge d'Avila' was composed by Reynaldo Hahn and written by Catulle Mendès.

Jules César (1906)
French postcard in the Collection Photo-Programme, Paris. Publicity still for 'Jules César' (Julius Caesar) by William Shakespeare, performed at the Théâtre de l'Odéon in Paris. First night at 4-12-1906. Caption: Translated and reworked by Louis de Gramont. 10th Tableau. The Battlefield. The voluntary death of Cassius, struck on his command by Pindarus.

In this production of 'Jules César' (Julius Caesar), Edmond Duquesne played Caesar, Maxime Desjardins Brutus, Philippe Garnier Cassius, Édouard de Max Mark Antony, Ballot Pindarus, and Madeleine Barjac Calpurnia. Scenes: Lucien Jusseaume, music: Gustave Doret.

Mounet-Sully and others in Polyeucte (Cauterets)
French postcard. Mounet-Sully, Albert Lambert, Louis Delaunay, Louis Ravet and Mlle Lucie Brille in the stage play 'Polyeucte' by Pierre Corneille, staged at the Théâtre de la Nature in Cauterets on 11 or 12 August 1906.

In the stage play 'Polyeucte'(1906), Mounet-Sully played Polyeucte, Lambert Severus, and Lucie Brille Pauline. The play is based on the life of the martyr Saint Polyeuctus.

La Vestale, Béziers (1906), distribution (crew & cast)
French postcard. Staging of the opera 'La Vestale' by Gaspare Spontini and libretto by Étienne de Jouy, performed at the Théâtre des Arènes in Béziers on 26 and 28 August 1906.

In the opera 'La Vestale' (1906), the lead singers were Valentin Duc (Théâtre de l'Opéra) as Licinius and Harriet Strasy (Théâtre de la Monnaie) as Julia. The set was designed by Jambon & Bailly, de l'Opéra. General director: M. D'Herbilly, conductor: Jean Nussy-Verdié, ballet director: Céline Rozier.

Egill Rostrup in Axel og Valborg
Danish postcard by Ed. Paul Heckscher, no. 2162. Egill Rostrup as the Norwegian King Haakon Herdebred (Haakon II) in the play 'Axel og Valborg' (1808-1810) by Adam Oehlenschläger. This postcard was mailed in 1907.

Danish actor, director and theatre historian Egill Barfod Rostrup (1876-1940) was the son of barrister and master carpenter Søren Kaspar William Rostrup and Vitta Kristiane Barfod. He was admitted to the Royal Theatre's drama school in 1896 and made his debut at the Royal Theatre in 1899. He then joined the Folketeatret (1899-1900), Casino (1900-1905) and Dagmarteatret (1905-1918). Rostrup made his film debut in 1911 and did two films with August Blom at Nordisk in 1913 and 1919. Yet, it was not until the early 1920s that he frequently appeared in a series of films with A.W. Sandberg. He made a significant contribution to theatre history research before obtaining his doctorate in 1921. He also began to work as a director, staging a long series of performances at the leading theatres and occasionally playing a role himself. His performances at the Royal Theatre around 1928-1930 were particularly noteworthy. Egill Rostrup was very interested in the ideas of the Russian Konstantin Stanislavski and in 1940 translated his work ‘An Actor's Work on Himself’ into Danish.

Martinius Nielsen in Axel og Valborg
Danish postcard by Ed. Paul Heckscher. Martinius Nielsen in 'Axel og Valborg' by Adam Oehlenschläger, a tragedy in five acts written in Paris in 1806 and first printed in Copenhagen in 1810. In 1906, Martinius Nielsen produced and directed the play at the Dagmar Theatre in Copenhagen, with Adam Poulsen as Axel and Anna Larssen as Valborg. Nielsen himself played a Black Friar.

Danish actor and theatre director Martinius Nielsen (1859-1928) made his stage debut at Casino in 1880, where he remained until 1884. Then he followed his future wife, Oda Nielsen, to the Dagmar Theatre. He subsequently joined the Royal Theatre (1886–1889), returned to the Dagmar Theatre (1889–1894) and then joined the Folketeatret (1894–1897). From 1897 to 1909, he was the theatre director at the Dagmar Theatre, where he made it Copenhagen's leading theatre. From 1902 to 1905, he was also director of the Casino Theatre. Martinius made his film debut in 1910 with Nordisk Films Kompagni in Kean (Holger Rasmussen, 1910) and subsequently appeared as an actor in only one other film, Den hemmelige Traktat / The Secret Treaty (Alfred Lind, 1913). In 1914, he made his debut as a film director with the production company Dania Bio Film. Between 1914 and 1923, and with a peak in 1916-1918, he directed 17 films, mostly for Nordisk, and often with Valdemar Psilander in the lead.

Sources: Fondation Jérôme Seydoux-Pathé (French), Roberta and Simone Blaché (The Memoirs of Alice Guy Blaché), Alison McMahan (Alice Guy Blaché: Lost Visionary of the Cinema), Alison McMahan (Women Film Pioneers Project), Kinomata: la donna nel cinema, Les Archives du spectacle (French), Danskefilm, Wikipedia (Danish) and IMDb.

For the complete film La Peine du talion in full colour, see Vimeo. And check out last year's post, Back to 1905.

22 June 2026

A tribute to Luchino Visconti

The 40th edition of Il Cinema Ritrovato pays tribute to Luchino Visconti, a filmmaker whose legacy the Cineteca di Bologna has helped preserve through the restoration of some of his greatest masterpieces, Senso, The Leopard / Il gattopardo, and Rocco and His Brothers. We wish to celebrate him in 2026, marking the 120th anniversary of his birth and the 50th anniversary of his death. For today's post, we selected a few of our postcards of Visconti's films and stage plays. The section is curated by Caterina d’Amico.

Giuseppe Visconti's home theatre in Milan
Italian postcard by Officine G. Ricordi e Co., Milano. Luchino Visconti (born 1906) was raised with theatre and staging from a very young age. His father, Duke Giuseppe Visconti di Modrone, staged his own stage plays. Under the pseudonym of Joseph von Jcsti (Von Jcsti is an anagram of Visconti), he directed plays at his home theatre in Palazzo Visconti in Milan. This is a postcard for the play Un po' d'amore (A Little Love), a revue in three acts. A lady named Teresa writes on the card that it is the revue she saw last winter in Casa Visconti. This must have been Winter 1912-1913, as the card is dated 2 September 1913.

Luchino Visconti and Anna Magnani in Bellissima (1951)
French postcard in the Collection Cinéma by Éditions La Malibran, Paris, 1990, no. CI 15. Luchino Visconti and Anna Magnani in Bellissima / The Most Beautiful (Luchino Visconti, 1951).

Luchino Visconti
American postcard by Pomegranate, Corde Madera, CA. / Black Box Collotype Continuous Tone Printers, Chicago, IL, no. 35-5136. Photo: Sanford Roth. Caption: Visconti, Rome, 1954.

Alida Valli in Senso (1954)
Dutch postcard by Takken, Utrecht, no. 1683. Photo: publicity still for Senso (Luchino Visconti, 1954) with Alida Valli. The picture was taken at Villa Godi Malinverni, Lugo di Vicenza, the first villa designed by Andrea Palladio. The murals were by painters from the School of Veronese.

Alida Valli and Farley Granger in Senso (1954)
Italian postcard by Rotocalco Dagnino, Torino. Photo: Lux Film. Alida Valli and Farley Granger as Countess Livia Serpieri and Lt. Franz Mahler in Luchino Visconti's historical film Senso (1954). Visconti refers here to the famous romantic painting by Francesco Hayez, 'Il Bacio' (The Kiss, 1859).

Farley Granger in Senso (1954)
Italian postcard by Bromostampa, Milano, no. 7. Photo: Publicity still of Farley Granger in Senso (1954).

Marcello Mastroianni and Maria Schell in Le notti bianche (1957)
German postcard by Ufa, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 3486. Photo: G.B. Poletto. Publicity still for Le notti bianche / White Nights (Luchino Visconti, 1957) with Marcello Mastroianni and Maria Schell.

Jean Marais in Le notti bianche (1957)
German postcard by Rüdel-Verlag, Hamburg-Bergedorf, no. 2141. Photo: J. Arthur Rank Film. Publicity still for Le notti bianche / White Nights (Luchino Visconti, 1957) with Jean Marais.

Jean Marais and Maria Schell in Le notti bianche (1957)
Photocard. Publicity still for Le notti bianche / White Nights (Luchino Visconti, 1957) with Jean Marais and Maria Schell.

Alain Delon
East German postcard by VEB Progress Film-Vertrieb, Berlin, 1967. retail price: 0,20 MDN.Photo: publicity still for Rocco e i suoi fratelli/Rocco and His Brothers (Luchino Visconti, 1960), featuring Alain Delon as Rocco.

Annie Girardot in Rocco e i suoi fratelli (1960)
East German postcard by VEB Progress Filmvertrieb, Berlin, no. 1696, 1962. Photo: publicity still for Rocco e i suoi fratelli / Rocco and his brothers (Luchino Visconti, 1960) with Annie Girardot as Nadia.

Alain Delon in Rocco e i suoi Fratelli (1960)
Spanish postcard by Archivo Bermejo, no. 7363. Photo: Radio Films, 1961. Publicity still for Rocco e i suoi fratelli / Rocco and His Brothers (Luchino Visconti, 1960) with Alain Delon.

Alain Delon
French postcard by the Bibliothèque Nationale de Paris / Imp. Bussière A.G., Paris, 1990. Photo: Roger Pic. Alain Delon in the play 'Dommage qu'elle soit une p... (It's a pity she's a whore), written by John Ford and directed by Luchino Visconti (1961) in Paris.

Thomas Milian & Romy Schneider in Boccaccio 70
Publicity still used in Germany, distributed by Rank, mark of the German censor FSK. Tomas Milian and Romy Schneider in Luchino Visconti's episode Il lavoro in the film Boccaccio '70 (1962). Milian plays a bored aristocrat, caught in a scandal with call girls. Schneider plays his rich and equally bored Austrian wife, who tries to seduce her husband and make him pay for love, just like he did with his call girls. It works, but leaves the woman with bitterness. The set of the film was terribly costly because of all the authentic, valuable objects present.

Romy Schneider in Boccaccio '70
Dutch postcard. Photo: HAFBO. Romy Schneider dressed in Chanel in the episode Il lavoro / The Job (1961) by Luchino Visconti, an episode of the anthology film Boccaccio '70. Schneider was a big fan of Chanel's fashion herself.

Luchino Visconti on the set of Il Gattopardo, 1963
Swiss postcard by News Productions, Baulmes, no. 55668. Photo: Michelangelo Durazzo / ANA Paris / Musée de l'Elysée, Lausanne. Caption: Luchino Visconti directing the scene of 'Te Deum' in Il Gattopardo / The Leopard, 1963.

Alain Delon and Claudia Cardinale in Il Gattopardo (1963)
Vintage card. Photo: publicity still for Il Gattopardo / The Leopard (Luchino Visconti, 1963) with Alain Delon and Claudia Cardinale.

Alain Delon and Claudia Cardinale in Il Gattopardo (1963)
Small Romanian collector card. Photo: publicity still for Il Gattopardo / The Leopard (Luchino Visconti, 1963) with Alain Delon and Claudia Cardinale.

Alain Delon in Il Gattopardo
Small Romanian collectors card. Photo: Alain Delon as Tancredi Falconieri in Il Gattopardo / The Leopard (Luchino Visconti, 1963).

Luchino Visconti, Claudia Cardinale and Burt Lancaster with a leopard
French postcard by Éditions Cahiers du cinéma, Paris, 1997. Photo: Traverso. Luchino Visconti, Claudia Cardinale and Burt Lancaster with a leopard at the 1963 Cannes Film Festival.
Morte a Venezia/ Death in Venice Dutch postcard, using an original poster of Morte a Venezia/Death in Venice, for a Dutch rerelease of the film. Photo: Björn Andresen and Dirk Bogarde in Morte a Venezia/Death in Venice (Luchino Visconti, 1972).

Reframing Luchino Visconti: film and art


Where does the visual splendour of Visconti’s films come from? In the first part of his Reframing Luchino Visconti: film and art, Ivo Blom tells how the visual arts (painting, sculpture, photography) served in set and costume design (e.g. as props and as sources of inspiration). The second part of the book focuses on (deep) staging, framing, mobile framing and mirroring.

Ivo's study deals with the ways in which Luchino Visconti appropriated the visual arts and the cinema of previous filmmakers in his own films. Whilst much has been written about literary and theatrical influences upon Visconti’s work – besides being a film-maker, he was also a leading theatre and opera director – there has been a lot of speculation about but little hard corroboration of pictorial influences in his films. Ivo's book goes deeply into set and costume design and cinematography. The book is based on extensive archival research, interviews with Visconti’s collaborators and secondary literature, and is richly illustrated with pictures obtained from museums, photo services and films.

Sources: Ivo Blom (personal blog) and Sidestone Press.


21 June 2026

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)

Within the framework of the British research project Museum of Dream Worlds, EFSP collaborator Ivo Blom co-organises two workshops at Il Cinema Ritrovato 2026. Tomorrow, the first workshop will be dedicated to unique prints of silent films on Greco-Roman antiquity in the collection of the British Film Institute. In the 'One Century Ago' section of The Time Machine programme of Il Cinema Ritrovato, the Italian-German silent film Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926) will be shown today. It was one of the many adaptations of the novel 'The Last Days of Pompeii' (1834) by Edward George Bulwer-Lytton. The stars were the Hungarian actors Victor Varconi and Maria Corda, the Italian actress Rina De Liguoro and the German Bernhard Goetzke. Original release prints of the film were entirely colourised by the Pathechrome stencil colour process.

Victor Varconi
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano, no. 8. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Victor Varconi as Glaucus in the Italian epic Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei/The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei/The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

Glaucus (Victor Varconi) training at the gymnasium.

Maria Corda in Gli ultimi giorni  di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

Maria Corda as the blind flower girl Nydia.

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

Pompeian street life with the rich Greek Glaucus (Victor Varconi) and his wealthy friends meeting the blind flower girl Nydia (Maria Corda), who also sings and plays the lyre. The bearded man left in the back is Burbo (Carlo Duse), the brutal tavern owner, who owns Nydia as a slave.

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

A Pompeiian street with Burbo's tavern. Sets were by Vittorio Cafiero, costumes by Duilio Cambellotti.

Maria Corda in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Maria Corda as Nydia in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926). Caption: The human harmonica (referring to the orgies at Arbaces' house, where women are forced to perform and serve the men).

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

Glaucus (Victor Varconi) has saved Nydia (Maria Corda) from Burbo and taken into his house. Nydia loves Glaucus, but he can only think of Ione.

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

Nydia, in love with Glaucus, thinks she has given Glaucus a love potion, but instead it makes him delirious. It is Arbaces who has concocted this.

The novel and the painting


The novel 'The Last Days of Pompeii' was written by Edward Bulwer-Lytton in 1834. Bulwer-Lytton was inspired by the painting 'The Last Day of Pompeii' by the Russian painter Karl Briullov, which Bulwer-Lytton had seen in Milan.

The novel culminates in the cataclysmic destruction of the city of Pompeii by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. 'The Last Days of Pompeii' became a bestseller, thanks to the eruption of Vesuvius just before its publication.

'The Last Days of Pompeii' uses its characters to contrast the decadent culture of 1st-century Rome with both older cultures and coming trends. The protagonist, Glaucus, a handsome Athenian nobleman and Ione's betrothed, represents the Greeks who have been subordinated by Rome.

His nemesis is Arbaces, a scheming Egyptian sorcerer, a high priest of Isis and the former guardian of Ione and her brother Apaecides. Arbaces represents the still older culture of Egypt. He murders Apaecides and frames Glaucus for the crime. Repeatedly, he attempts to seduce Ione.

Olinthus is the chief representative of the nascent Christian religion, which is presented favourably but not uncritically. The Christian converts Apaecides to Christianity and is sentenced to death for his religion.

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 53/1. Photo: Hisa Film-Vertrieb. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926). Glaucus (Victor Varconi) and the rich Julia (Lia Maris, not Rina de Liguoro as this card pretends) meet on the streets of Pompeii, so the blind flower girl Nydia (Maria Corda) hears that Glaucus is back in town. Set designer Vittorio Cafiero copied various original artefacts from Pompeii for this film, such as the small burner held up by satyrs in the shop.

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 53/2. Photo: Hisa Film-Vertrieb. Publicity still for the Italian silent epic Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926). Glaucus (Victor Varconi) listens to beautiful and rich Greek Ione (Rina De Liguoro) playing the harp. The statue left was copied from an original Roman one.

Maria Corda and Victor Varconi in The Last Days of Pompeii (1926)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 53/3. Photo: Hisa Film-Vertrieb. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926). Collection: Didier Hanson.

Victor Varconi in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 1344/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Hisa Film-Vertrieb. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926). Victor Varconi as Glaucus.

Victor Varconi as Glaucus in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 1344/2, 1927-1928. Photo: Hisa Film-Vertrieb. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926). Victor Varconi as Glaucus.

Rina De Liguoro in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
German postcard by Verlag Ross, Berlin, no. 1345/1, 1927-1928. Rina De Liguoro as Ione in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926), released in Germany as Die letzten Tage von Pompeji.

Maria Corda in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 1346/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Hisa Film-Vertrieb. Maria Corda as Nydia in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926).

Bernhard Goetzke in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 1347/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Hisa Film-Vertrieb. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926). Bernhard Goetzke as the evil Egyptian priest Arbaces.

The star cast


Handsome Victor Varconi (1891–1976) was as Glaucus, the male star of Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii. The Hungarian Varconi, originally Viktor Varkony, was a highly successful matinee idol of the Hungarian-Austrian and German silent cinema in the 1910s and early 1920s. Later, he was the first Hungarian actor to become a Hollywood star until the sound film completely altered the course of his career.

Hungarian Maria Corda (1898-1975) played the slave girl Nydia, who is in love with Glaucus. Corda was an immensely popular star of the silent cinema of Austria and Germany. The pretty, blonde actress was a queen of the popular epic spectacles of the 1920s, which were often directed by her husband, Alexander Korda.

Not pictured on one of the postcards is Rina De Liguoro (1892-1966) as Ione. She was the last diva of the Italian silent cinema of the 1920s. De Liguoro had her breakthrough in 1924 as the sensual, untamed Roman empress Messalina, and the beautiful countess continued her glittering career in such epics as Quo Vadis (1924), Casanova (1927), and Cecil B. DeMille's notorious box office flop Madam Satan (1930).

Emilio Ghione (1879-1930), who played Calenus, was an Italian silent film actor, director and screenwriter. He is best known for writing, directing and starring in the Za La Mort series of adventure films, in which he played a likeable French Apache and 'honest outlaw.'

The evil Egyptian priest Arbaces was played by German film actor Bernhard Goetzke (1884–1964). He was one of the impressive stars of German silent cinema, particularly in the films by Fritz Lang. Goetzke appeared in 130 films between 1917 and 1961.

Maria Corda and Victor Varconi in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Victor Varconi as Glaucus and Maria Corda as Nydia in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926).

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Lia Maris as Julia and Enrica Fantis as Julia's friend in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926). Caption: At the Villa on the [river] Sarno.

Rina de Liguoro in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Rina De Liguoro as Ione in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926).

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi 1926).

The Forum with the Temple of Jove (Jupiter) in Pompeii.

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei/The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

The funeral of Apecides (Vittorio Evangelisti). Apecides, brother of Glaucus' lover Ione and former pupil of the Egyptian high priest of Isis, Arbaces, has converted to Christianity and threatens to unmask Arbaces's frauds. Arbaces stabs him and puts the blame on Glaucus, who was unknowingly drugged by Nydia. The priest in the middle is Calenus (Emilio Ghione), who has seen Arbaces murdering Apecides. Arbaces himself (Bernhard Goetzke) can be seen at the extreme left.

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei/The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

At the Via delle Tombe in Pompeii, the funeral service for the murdered Apecides is held. In the centre is the priest Calenus (Emilio Ghione).
Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

Calenus (Emilio Ghione) tries to blackmail Arbaces (Bernhard Goetzke). Arbaces leads him to his treasury.
Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

Calenus (Emilio Ghione) has been fooled by Arbaces and is locked up in the treasury, which is also a dungeon.

The adaptations


The first theatrical adaptation of 'The Last Days of Pompeii' was Errico Petrella's opera, 'Jone', with a libretto by Giovanni Peruzzini. It premiered at La Scala in 1858. It was successful and remained in the Italian repertoire well into the 20th century. In 1877, an ambitious theatrical adaptation followed, mounted at the Queen's Theatre, Long Acre in London. It featured a staged eruption of Vesuvius, an earthquake and a sybaritic Roman feast – the earth did not quake, the volcano did not erupt, acrobats fell onto the cast below, and the production was an expensive flop.

The first film version was the British short film The Last Days of Pompeii (1900), directed by Walter R. Booth. Eight years later followed Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Arturo Ambrosio, Luigi Maggi, 1908). In 1913 followed to more Italian silent film versions, Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Mario Caserini, 1913), and Jone ovvero gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / Jone or the Last Days of Pompeii (Giovanni Enrico Vidali, Ubaldo Maria Del Colle, 1913).

The first sound version was the Hollywood production The Last Days of Pompeii (Ernest B. Schoedsack, Merian C. Cooper, 1935), with Preston Foster and Basil Rathbone. It carried a disclaimer that, although the movie used the novel's description of Pompeii, it did not use its plot or characters. The film was a moderate success on its initial release but made an overall loss of $237,000.

After the war followed the French-Italian version Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / Les Derniers Jours de Pompéi / The Last Days of Pompeii (Marcel L'Herbier, Paolo Moffa, 1950), starring Micheline Presle and Georges Marchal. The amphitheatre scenes were filmed at the Arena di Verona. The next adaptation was another Italian version, Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Sergio Leone, 1959), starring Steve Reeves. Mario Bonnard, the original director, fell ill on the first day of shooting, so assistant director Leone and the scriptwriters finished the film. Later followed two TV versions and a German stage musical, Pompeji (2008).

But how was the 1926 version? David Melville reviews at IMDb: "The last of the great silent Italian epics, The Last Days of Pompeii is as lavish as anything produced by Hollywood at that time - only much, much raunchier. During an orgy in the house of the evil priest Arbaces, naked slave girls are served up (literally!) on platters decked with flowers. A nubile mummy rises out of her sarcophagus to do a striptease, and bare-breasted sphinx statues come to life as her chorus line. In the gladiators' tavern, wildly effeminate men (kohl-dark eyelids and lipstick as thick as clotted blood) drool and bat their eyes over so much naked, muscular flesh. All in all, the most satisfyingly decadent Ancient Rome saga until Fellini Satyricon in 1968!"

Victor Varconi and Rina de Liguoro in Gli ultimi gorni di Pompei (1926)
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Victor Varconi as Glaucus and Rina De Liguoro as Ione in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926).

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

At the basilica (courts of justice). Glaucus (Victor Varconi) is sentenced to die.

Maria Corda in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1926)
Italian postcard. C. Chierichetti, Milano. Grandi Films, Roma. Maria Corda as Nydia in Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (Carmine Gallone, Amleto Palermi, 1926).

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

Glaucus (Victor Varconi) and the Christian Olintus (Ferruccio Biancini), the man on the right, in the prison of the Christians, waiting for their ordeal in the arena.

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

Glaucus (Victor Varconi) is in prison. The man on the right is the Christian Olintus (Ferruccio Biancini), who had converted Apecides. Olintus will see the eruption and destruction of Pompeii as a punishment from God.

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

Glaucus is sentenced to die in the arena, eaten by lions, when just in time, Glaucus's friends Sallustius, Nydia, Ione and Calenus expose Arbaces as the real murderer, and he threatens to be lynched by the mob. Suddenly, Vesuvius erupts, and the terrorised people flee.

Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei
Italian postcard by C. Chierichetti, Milano. Photo: Grandi Films, Roma. Publicity still for Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei / The Last Days of Pompeii (Amleto Palermi, Carmine Gallone, 1926).

The destruction of the house of Glaucus.

Sources: David Melville (IMDb - Page now defunct), Wikipedia and IMDb.