01 March 2026

Sacha Guitry

French actor, dramatist and director Sacha Guitry (1885-1957) was known for his stage performances, often in the more than 120 plays he wrote. Guitry's plays range from historical dramas to contemporary light comedies. From the 1930s to the end of his life, he enthusiastically embraced the cinema, making as many as five films in a single year. After his death, 12,000 people filed past his coffin before his burial in Paris.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard by F.A., no. 9. Photo: H. Manuel.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard by Editions P.I., Paris, no. 84. Photo: Studio Piaz.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard by GREFF, S.E.R.P. Editeur, Paris. Photo: Studio Harcourt.

His own definitive interpreter


Alexandre-Pierre Georges ‘Sacha’ Guitry was born at Nevsky Prospect no. 12, Saint Petersburg, Russia, in 1885. He was the third son of the French actor Lucien Guitry and his wife Marie-Louise-Renée, née Delmas de Pont-Jest. The couple had eloped, in the face of family disapproval, and were married at St Martin in the Fields, London, in 1882. They then moved to the Russian capital, where Lucien ran the French theatre company, the Théâtre Michel, from 1882 to 1891.

The marriage was brief. Guitry Senior was a persistent adulterer, and his wife instituted divorce proceedings in 1888. Two of their sons died in infancy (one in 1883 and the other in 1887); the other surviving son, Jean, became an actor and journalist. The family's Russian nurse habitually shortened Alexandre-Pierre's name to the Russian diminutive ‘Sacha’, by which he was known all his life.

The young Sacha made his stage debut in his father's company at the age of five. When Lucien Guitry returned to Paris, he lived in a flat in a prestigious spot, overlooking the Place Vendôme and the Rue de la Paix. The young Sacha lived there, and for his schooling, he was first sent to the well-known Lycée Janson de Sailly in the fashionable Sixteenth arrondissement. He did not stay long there and went to a succession of other schools, both secular and religious, before abandoning formal education at the age of sixteen.

After giving up school, Guitry embarked on a career as a playwright with a little musical piece called 'Le Page' (1902), with a score by Ludo Ratz. Eighteen months later, he joined his father's company at the Théâtre de la Renaissance. At first, he appeared under the stage name ‘Lorcey’, but the pseudonym deceived no one, as the press immediately announced the debutant's real identity. His first role was in 'L'Escalier', by Maurice Donnay, in November 1904.

He fell out with his father over what the latter saw as Guitry's lack of professionalism. In the aftermath of their quarrel, they neither saw nor spoke to one another. A member of Lucien Guitry's company was a young actress, Charlotte Lysès. In 1905, she and Sacha set up home together. For her, he wrote his play, 'Le KWTZ' (1905).

He had his first substantial hit with 'Nono' at the Mathurins. When the leading man in Guitry's 1906 play 'Chez les Zoaques' fell ill, the author took over, and in the words of a critic, "proved to be his own definitive interpreter". The pattern of his career was set: he remained an actor-author and later manager for the rest of his life.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard by Editions Gendre, Paris, no. 119. Photo: Paul Nadar, 1905. Caption: Sacha Guitry, French actor and author, 1885-1957.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard by A.N., Paris, no. 3. Photo: Emera.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard by La Voix de son Maître. Photo: Alban, Bruxelles.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard by Editions Chantal, no. 505. Photo: Tobis.

Five consecutive hits


For the next five years, Sacha Guitry's plays were, at best, moderate successes. But then he had five consecutive hits with 'Le veilleur de nuit' (1911), 'Un beau mariage' (1912), 'Le prise de Berg-op-Zoom' (1912), 'La pèlerine écossaise' (1912), and 'Les deux converts' (1914), the last of which was staged by the Comédie Française. His first film was Ceux de chez nous / Those Of Our Home (Sacha Guitry, 1915), a short patriotic piece illustrating the works of some French artists like Auguste Renoir, Auguste Rodin and Sarah Bernhardt. He wrote and played in the film Un Roman d'amour et d'aventures / A Novel Of Love And Adventure (René Hervil, Louis Mercanton, 1917), an experience that left him unsatisfied. He was not greatly attracted by the medium of silent film, regarding dialogue as the essence of drama. So, he did not make a full-length film until 1935.

In 1915, he met the young singer Yvonne Printemps, with whom he began an affair that led Charlotte to leave him and obtain a divorce. Guitry started to write leading roles for Printemps in some musicals and straight comedies. Guitry was reconciled with his father in 1918. Lucien appeared in many productions with his son and Printemps, including 'Mon Père avait raison' and 'Comment on ecrit l'histoire'. They played together in Paris, but also in the West End of London.

Guitry developed a charming, witty stage persona, often appearing in period-dress light comedies, for instance, his 1925 pastiche 'Mozart', about the young Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart on a visit to Paris. To compose the score, he approached André Messager, with whom he had successfully collaborated in 1923 on a show for Printemps, 'L'amour masqué'. Messager was unavailable and recommended the composer Reynaldo Hahn, who accepted the commission. The resulting production took some liberties with historical accuracy, but it proved highly popular. Printemps, in a breeches role, played and sang the young Mozart, with Guitry as the composer's patron, Baron Grimm. After playing successfully at the Théâtre Edouard VII, the company presented the piece in London, on Broadway, Boston and Montreal in 1926-1927.

In 1931 Guitry was awarded the Legion of Honour. In 1932, his marriage to Printemps ended. He took a six-month break from the theatre, returning in April 1933 in 'Châteaux en Espagne', which co-starred his new protégée, Jacqueline Delubac, whom he married on his fiftieth birthday. In 1935, he returned to the film studio to direct and act in Pasteur, a biography of the famous scientist. The film, based on a play which Guitry wrote in 1919, was a commercial failure, but during the shooting, Guitry fell in love with the process of filmmaking. He followed Pasteur with Bonne chance (Sacha Guitry, 1936), a comedy written directly for the screen.

In 1936 alone, Guitry released no less than four films, including the screen versions of two of his best-known plays: Faisons un rêve (written in 1916) and Mon Père avait raison (written in 1919). Le Roman d'un tricheur / The Story of a Cheat (Sacha Guitry, 1936) was adapted from Guitry's only novel, 'Les Mémoires d'un tricheur', published in 1935. Despite lukewarm reviews, the film was well-received by the public and was also successful abroad. It is now considered his most innovative film. Apart from the four films, Guitry also wrote five plays in 1936. The following year, he played four roles in the partially historical film Les perles de la couronne / The Pearls Of The Crown (Sacha Guitry, Christian-Jacque, 1937) about the history of seven pearls, four of which ended up on the crown of England, the other three end up missing. In 1939, Jacqueline Delubac left her ‘workaholic’ husband. Within months of her leaving him, he married for a fourth time; his new wife was actress Geneviève de Séréville.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard by Editions E.C., Paris, no. 51. Photo: U.F.P.C.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard by Editions et Publications Cinematographiques (EPC), no. 144. Photo: Alban.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard by Editions P.I., Paris, no. 84.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard, no. 710. Photo: Film Sédif.

Accusations of collaborating with the enemy


Sacha Guitry's career was affected by the Nazi occupation of France. He continued to work both on stage and in the cinema under the Nazis. Although this allowed him to help many of his compatriots, it also brought accusations of collaborating with the enemy. He conceived his book and associated film, De 1429 à 1942 ou De Jeanne d'Arc à Philippe Pétain / 1429 to 1942, or Joan of Arc to Philippe Pétain (1942) as a tribute to France's past glories, but many saw it as honouring the collaborationist president of Vichy France, Marshal Pétain.

In 1944, Guitry's fourth wife left him. On the liberation of France, Guitry was among the first arrested by a self-appointed militia. He was interned in a detention camp at Drancy and suffered ill effects on his health that necessitated his transfer to a Paris nursing home. He was completely cleared of all accusations of collaboration, but the experience left him disillusioned.

In 1947, Guitry married for the fifth and last time; he was sixty-two and his bride, Lana Marconi, was twenty-eight. He was permitted to resume working in the theatre in 1948 when he returned to the Paris stage with 'Le diable boiteux'. For the London season in 1953, celebrating the coronation of Elizabeth II, Guitry starred at the Winter Garden in 'Ecoutez bien, messieurs', a comedy in which he played a voluble Frenchman reduced to baffled silence by an even more voluble Englishwoman, played (in English) by Heather Thatcher. Later in the same year, he made his last stage appearance in Paris in 'Palsambleu'.

A huge success in the cinema was the historical drama Si Versailles m'était conté / Royal Affairs in Versailles (Sacha Guitry, 1954), which tells some episodes through the portrayal of the personalities who lived in Versailles' castle. In the film appeared a great number of well-known French actors appeared, often in short parts. Guitry also made the ‘sister’ films Napoléon (Sacha Guitry, 1955) with Daniel Gélin as Napoléon as a young man and Raymond Pellegrin as Napoléon in later life, and Si Paris nous était conté / If Paris Were Told to Us (Sacha Guitry, 1956).

He continued to make films until 1957, when he suffered a disabling disease of the nervous system. Sacha Guitry died in Paris at the age of seventy-two. Twelve thousand people filed past his coffin, and he was buried, like his father, in the Cimetière de Montmartre, Paris.

Set and actors of La fin du monde by Sacha Guitry
French postcard. Set of the play 'La Fin du Monde' by Sacha Guitry, first performed in 1935, at the Theatre de la Madeleine in Paris. Not to be confused with the 1930 Sci-Fi film by Abel Gance.

Sacha Guitry
French promotion card by Cineas. Photo: Tobis. Publicity still for Le nouveau Testament / Indiscretions (Sacha Guitry, 1936).

Lana Marconi in Si Versailles m’était conté (1954)
West-German postcard by Universum-Film A.G. (Ufa), Berlin Tempelhof, no. FK 955. Photo: C.L.M. Film, Paris/ Pallas Film Verleih. Lana Marconi in Si Versailles m’était conté / Royal Affairs in Versailles (Sacha Guitry, 1954). Collection: Marlene Pilaete.

Sacha Guitry
French postcard by A.N., Paris, no. 1088. Photo: Raymond Voinquel.

Sources: François Leclair (IMDb), Wikipedia, and IMDb.

28 February 2026

La Collectionneuse: Judy Holliday

Judy Holliday was considered one of the greatest comic actresses of the Golden Age of Hollywood. George Cukor, who directed her five times, held her acting in high esteem and considered her 'a master of comedy' and a 'true artist'. He declared, "Like all the great clowns, Judy Holliday could also move you. She made you laugh, she was a supreme technician, and then suddenly you get touched. She could interpret a text with the subtlest detail, her pauses would give you every comma - she’d even give the author a semicolon if he’d written one. And vocally, she was fascinating, she had a way to hitting the notes like a bull’s-eye, and the slightest distorsion in the recording meant that you lost something". Jack Lemmon, who played opposite her in It Should Happen to You (1954) and Phffft (1954), allegedly said of her: "She was intelligent and not at all like the dumb blonde she so often depicted. She didn’t give a damn where the camera was placed, how she was made to look, or about being a star. She just played the scene, acted with, not at. She was also one of the nicest people I’ve ever met".

Judy Holliday
Italian postcard by Ballerini & Fratini, Firenze, no. 2992. Photo: Columbia CEIAD.

Judy Holliday
British postcard in the Picturegoer series, London, no. D12. Photo: Metro Goldwyn Mayer.

Beginnings in show business


Judy Holliday was born as Judith Tuvim on the 21st of June 1921 in New York, into a Jewish family active in leftist circles.

She graduated from the Julia Richman High School in 1938 and briefly worked as a telephonist for Orson Welles’ Mercury Theatre Group.

She allegedly made her screen debut as an extra in the short Too Much Johnson (1938). It was directed by Orson Welles and was intended to be part of a stage production. Finally, it was never publicly screened and was believed to be lost until a print was found in 2008.

In 1938, she joined a group of performers called The Revuers. They played engagements in nightclubs, had their own radio show on NBC for several weeks in 1940 and recorded a 78-rpm album.

Two other Revuers members would later also make good: Betty Comden and Adolph Green, who became famous musical-comedy composers, lyricists and writers.

Judy Holliday and William Holden
Spanish postcard, no. 2547. Judy Holliday and William Holden in Born Yesterday (George Cukor, 1950).

Most Promising Female Performer


After The Revuers had played at the Trocadero in Los Angeles, 20th Century Fox showed interest in Judith, signed her and changed her name to Judy Holliday.

She appeared as an unbilled extra in Greenwich Village (1944) and had another uncredited bit role in Something for the Boys (1944).

She finally got a more substantial part in George Cukor’s Winged Victory (1945), as a U.S. Air Force pilot’s wife.

After she allegedly had refused Darryl Zanuck’s sexual advances, she was released from her contract.

She was soon noticed on Broadway in 'Kiss Them for Me', which ran from March to June 1945 and earned her the Clarence Derward Award for Most Promising Female Performer. Her part would be later played by Jayne Mansfield in the 1957 movie version.

Judy Holliday in Born Yesterday
West German postcard by Kolibri-Verlag, no. 494. Photo: Columbia. Judy Holliday in Born Yesterday (George Cukor, 1950).

Judy Holliday
American Kodak postcard.

Born Yesterday


In 1945, Garson Kanin wrote the play 'Born Yesterday' for Jean Arthur, who opened with it in New Haven on the 20th of December 1945.

The ever-insecure Arthur quit in Boston on the 1st of January 1946, pleading health reasons, and was replaced by Judy Holliday, who quickly learnt her lines to be ready for the Philadelphia opening on the 12th of January.

The leading character of the play, Billie Dawn, is a former chorus girl who has become the mistress of a corrupt junkyard tycoon. Embarrassed by her dumbness and ignorance, he hires a journalist to educate her so that she can become more socially acceptable. In the end, Billie turns out smarter than everybody gives her credit for.

'Born Yesterday'was a huge hit on Broadway, where it opened on the 4th of February 1946, and made Judy famous. She gave her final performance in the play on the 24th of May 1949. After she left, ticket sales fell off and 'Born Yesterday' finally closed on the 31st of December, after a lengthy run of 1642 performances.

Judy Holliday received rave reviews for her clever portrayal of a dumb broad who awakens intellectually, morally and politically.

Judy Holliday
American postcard by A B-H Publications, Los Angeles. This postcard was issued on the occasion of the Academy Awards Ceremony, which took place on the 29th of March 1951. The winners in the acting category were Judy Holliday (Best Actress for Born Yesterday), Josephine Hull (Best Supporting Actress for Harvey), José Ferrer (Best Actor for Cyrano) and George Sanders (Best Supporting Actor for All About Eve).

Best Actress Oscar


Columbia bought the film rights of 'Born Yesterday' at a high price in September 1947, planning it as a vehicle for their nr 1 female star, Rita Hayworth. But it was bad timing: she met Aly Khan in 1948, married him in 1949 and temporarily left the screen.

Columbia’s boss, Harry Cohn, was not keen to allow Judy Holliday to appear in the film version and began searching for other actresses to cast as Billie Dawn. However, Garson Kanin was sure she would be the right choice.

So, when he and his wife, Ruth Gordon, wrote the screenplay of M.G.M.’s Adam’s Rib (1949), a Katharine Hepburn-Spencer Tracy vehicle directed by George Cukor, Judy Holliday was encouraged to tackle the key role of jilted wife Doris Attinger. Katharine Hepburn notably championed her generously and saw to it that the film would be a showcase for Judy’s talents. Cukor, who was a big fan of Judy, also lent his expertise to give her the most exposure.

In view of her performance in Adam’s Rib, Harry Cohn relented and signed her. He didn’t live to regret it, as Born Yesterday (1950), again directed by George Cukor, was commercially and critically successful.

In 1951, Judy Holliday was, against all odds, awarded the Best Actress Oscar, notably facing strong competition from Bette Davis in All About Eve and Gloria Swanson in Sunset Boulevard. She also got a Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Comedy.

Judy Holliday
British postcard issued by the “Evening Argus”. The “Evening Argus” was a local newspaper based in Brighton and Hove.

Judy Holliday
German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin, no. A1352. Photo: Columbia Pictures.

A Columbia star


Judy Holliday made a brief return to Broadway in May 1951 in a revival of 'Dream Girl', for a limited engagement of two weeks.

George Cukor then directed her again in The Marrying Kind (1952) and It Should Happen to You (1954).

In addition to Cukor, she was on familiar ground, as the first film was written by Gordon Kanin and Ruth Gordon and the latter by Kanin on his own. Such a partnership was a great asset to her career.

Next came Mark Robson’s Phffft (1954), written by George Axelrod, who called Judy 'one of the finest comedy technicians in the world'. The movie earned Kim Novak, who was groomed at the time as Columbia’s newest sex symbol, a Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer.

She ended her stay at Columbia with two films directed by Richard Quine, The Solid Gold Cadillac (1956) and Full of Life (1956).

Judy Holliday
Italian postcard by Vetta Traldi, Milano, no. 3.

A wave of anti-communism


At the beginning of the 1950s, a strong movement against leftist ideas and an anti-Red craze threatened to break Judy Holliday’s career. In 1950, her name was mentioned in the publication 'Red Channels', which listed so-called communist sympathisers in the entertainment industry. Her family history and her support of left causes made her an ideal target.

She appeared before Senator Pat McCarran’s Internal Security Subcommittee on the 26th of March 1952. She was advised to act as a dumb blonde, in the Billie Dawn mould, and she played it to the hilt.

She confused the interrogators by displaying double-talk, invoking memory gaps, pretending not to understand some of the questions, pleading ignorance in political matters and playing up the idea that she was a gullible woman. She admitted to shallow thinking and to having been irresponsible regarding her civic activism. But it should be noted that, during her hearing, she carefully and adroitly avoided naming names, a feat which she was understandably proud of.

She was such a good actress that her ploy of passing for a slow-witted, naive, scatterbrained and easily swayed person worked. In the end, the Committee could not find any evidence of close ties to the Communist Party and dismissed her.

In truth, Judy was far from being dumb and was no stranger to political and social issues. For example, she had sent a telegram of protest to Washington when concert-goers were attacked by racist and anti-communist rioters in Peekskill in 1949, in relation to African American singer Paul Robeson’s recitals.

Judy Holliday in The Marrying Kind (1952)
Italian postcard by Edizioni S.I.P.Ci, Milano. Photo: Columbia CEIAD. Judy Holliday in The Marrying Kind (George Cukor, 1952).

Judy Holliday
Italian postcard by Turismofoto, no. 46.

Another Broadway hit


Judy Holliday made a triumphant comeback on Broadway with 'Bells Are Ringing', which she played from November 1956 to March 1959. It won her a Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical.

She also starred in the film version, M.G.M.’s Bells Are Ringing (1960), opposite Dean Martin.

In 1960, she started out-of-town tryouts on 'Laurette'. The play never made it to Broadway, as she had to leave the production following serious health problems.

She appeared on the Great White Way for the last time in 'Hot Spot', which was a flop and closed after 43 performances in 1963. The review in 'Billboard' read: "Predictions of failure did precede the show and these were confirmed when the New York Critics' Circle passed a unanimous negative judgment".

Judy Holliday died from cancer on the 7th of June 1965. She had married musician David Oppenheim in 1948, but the marriage ended in divorce. They had a son, Jonathan, in 1952. From 1959 on, she had a long-term relationship with jazzman Gerry Mulligan.

Judy Holliday
West German postcard by Ufa /Film-Foto (Universum-Film Aktiengesellschaft), Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 3589. Photo: Columbia Film.

Text and postcards: Marlene Pilaete.

27 February 2026

Emil Birron

Emil Birron (1878-1952) was a German stage and film actor who peaked in the cinema during the late 1910s and early 1920s. He worked with such directors as Lupu Pick, Ewald André Dupont and Friedrich Zelnik.

Emil Birron
German postcard by Photochemie, Berlin, no. K. 1733. Photo: Wilhelm Willinger, Berlin.

Ressel Orla in Die Sünde (1918)
German postcard by Rotophot in the Film Sterne series, no. 549/3. Photo: Decla. Emil Birron and Ressel Orla in Die Sünde / The Sin (Alwin Neuss, 1918).

Emil Birron
German postcard by Verlag Hermann Leiser, Berlin, no. 1415. Photo: Zander & Labisch.

The Sin


Emil Birron, also Emil Biron and Emil Byron, was born in 1878 as Rudolf Wilhelm Emil Bleeke in Elberfeld (or Barmen), now part of Wuppertal, in the German Empire.

He made his stage debut in 1900 at the Potsdam City Theatre (today Hans Otto Theater). He then trained there as an actor from 1900 to 1902. In 1902, he continued his stage career in Magdeburg, in 1903/1904, he played at the Kleines Theater in Berlin, and from 1904 to 1907 at the Deutsches Volkstheater in Vienna.

Later, he acted from 1907 to 1912 as a Royal Court Actor in Munich, and from 1912 to 1914 he was active in Breslau (now Wroclaw, Poland), where he directed the Lobe Theatre. From 1915 to 1917, he appeared at the Thalia Theatre in Hamburg, after which he played in Berlin. He appeared mostly in comedies and farces, but he was also successful in classic dramas such as the title role in William Shakespeare's 'Hamlet' and as the prince in 'Die Judin von Toledo' (The Jewess of Toledo) by Franz Grillparzer.

In 1917, Emil Birron began his career as a silent film actor, debuting as one of the suitors of Hella Moja in the comedy Die gute Partie / The Good Party (Otto Rippert, 1918). He would act in some 30 films, mainly in the years 1917-1921, plus five films between 1927 and 1938.

These included films with Ressel Orla such as Die Sünde / The Sin (Alwin Neuß, 1918), Das Glück der Frau Beate / The Happiness of Mrs Berate (Alwin Neuß, Otto Rippert, 1918), and Kitsch (Lupu Pick, 1919), but also the films Der Weg der Grete Lessen / The Journey of Grete Lessen (Rudolf Biebrach, 1919) with Lotte Neumann and Katinka (Emil Birron, Paul Otto, 1918) with Rita Clermont.

Ressel Orla in Das Glück der Frau Beate
German postcard in the Film Sterne series by Rotophot, no. 548/2. Photo: Decla. Ressel Orla in Das Glück der Frau Beate / The Happiness of Mrs. Beate (Alwin Neuß, Otto Rippert, 1918). The man on the right with the white tie is Emil Birron.

Ressel Orla in Das Glück der Frau Beate (1918)
German postcard by Rotophot in the Film Sterne series, no. 548/4, 1919-1924. Photo: Decla. Ressel Orla in Das Glück der Frau Beate / The Happiness of Mrs. Beate (Alwin Neuß, Otto Rippert, 1918). The man left is Emil Birron, while the man in the back is Max Ruhbeck.

Ressel Orla in Die Sünde
German postcard by Rotophot in the Film Sterne series, no. 549/5. Photo: Decla. Ressel Orla and Emil Birron in Die Sünde / The Sin (Alwin Neuss, 1918).

Lotte Neumann in Der Weg der Grete Lessen (1919)
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 637/2. Photo: Maxim-Film. Lotte Neumann and Emil Birron in Der Weg der Grete Lessen / The Journey of Grete Lessen (Rudolf Biebrach, 1919).

When life says no


After World War I, Emil Birron appeared in such films as Wenn das Leben nein sagt / When life says no (Karl Mueller-Hagens, 1919), Alkohol / Alcohol (Ewald André Dupont, Alfred Lind, 1920), and Hundemamachen / The Little Dog Mom (Rudolf Biebrach, 1920) with Ossi Oswalda. Alkohol / Alcohol was begun by Lind but finished by Dupont. It was Dupont's first major melodrama and was one in a series of 'Aufklärungsfilme'(Enlightenment films) examining social issues, which were produced around the time.

In these films, he had the male lead, while he also played supporting parts in films like Blutrache / Vendetta (Georg Jacoby, 1919) with Pola Negri and Harry Liedtke, and King Frederick William IV in Die Weber / The Weavers (Friedrich Zelnik, 1927), starring Paul Wegener and William Dieterle.

Birron's theatre activities were limited to guest performances from 1922 to 1936. In the 1928/1929 season, he was stage manager at the Deutsches Stadttheater (today Mahen-Theater) in Brno.

During the 1930s, he only played a few small supporting parts in films. His last film appearance was as a ship's steward in the musical Mach mich glücklich / Make Me Happy (Artur Robison, 1935) alongside Else Elster and Albert Lieven. In 1936, Birron ended his career as an actor. He was later active as a stage agent and promoted young talent.

Emil Birron died in 1952 in Potsdam in East Germany. He was 74. Nothing is currently known about his private life.

Emil Birron
German postcard by Kunstverlag Jos. Paul Böhm, München, no. 200.

Emil Birron
German postcard by Photochemie, Berlin, no. K. 1734, Photo: Wilhelm Willinger, Berlin.

Emil Birron
German postcard by Verlag Ross, Berlin, no. 397/2, 1919-1924. Photo: Becker & Maass, Berlin.

Emil Birron
German postcard by Photochemie, Berlin, no. K. 3235. Photo: Kurt Lande.

Sources: Stephanie D'heil (Steffi-Line - German), Thomas Staedeli (Cyranos), Wikipedia (German and English), Filmportal, and IMDb.

26 February 2026

Kissing Statues

Today starts the conference 'Le ombre di Eros' (26-27 February 2026) about eroticism and passion in Italian silent cinema at the University of Turin. Of course, my EFSP partner in crime, Ivo Blom, is present in Italy for a lecture. Italian silent cinema was a space of ambiguity and experimentation. Filmmakers created an erotic imaginary marked, at times, by excess, repression, symbolism, allusions, and disguises. Ivo's lecture, ‘Baciando le statue’ (Kissing the Statues), is part of the British research project Museum of Dream Worlds, which links silent films on Greco-Roman antiquity in the British Film Institute's collection with films and objects in other parts of Europe, including the National Cinema Museum in Turin. Ivo analyses the myth of Pygmalion, when an artist creates his ideal of female beauty as a statue that comes to life. The other famous example converses this situation. In Quo vadis?, the slave girl Eunice embraces the statue of her master, Petronius. A statue as a substitute for the unattainable. In both cases, there are more chaste and more lascivious and passionate versions. Ivo reveals in his lecture that literary sources already used sensual words, while parodies both on stage and on screen confirmed the fame of myths and a rather male-dominated gender perspective. EFSP offers a glimpse of his lecture.

Rina de Liguoro in Quo Vadis? (1924)
German postcard by Ross-Verlag, Berlin, no. 699/6, 1919-1924. Photo: Filmhaus Bruckmann. Rina de Liguoro as Eunice in Quo Vadis? (Gabriellino D'Annunzio, Georg Jacoby, 1924).

Eunice


In his 1896 novel 'Quo Vadis', Henryk Sienkiewicz describes the scene with Eunice as follows: "...pointing to a Mercury with a caduceus that resembled Petronius. [...] Only Eunica remained in the untiorium. For a moment, with her head bowed, she listened to the voices and laughter fading away in the laconicum; then she took the amber and ivory stool on which Petronius had been sitting and brought it before her master's statue. Standing on the stool, she wrapped her arm around the statue's neck; her hair fell over her shoulder like a golden wave; her flesh moulded itself to the marble; her mouth was pressed tightly against Petronius' cold lips."

It is clear from Sienkiewicz's words that it is not just about the statue, but above all about Eunice's behaviour. She is a slave for whom her master is unattainable, even though she is passionately in love with him. In addition to the gender barrier, there is a strong class barrier. However, slowly but surely, Petronius realises that she is truly in love with him, softens and begins to love her too. This is particularly true after Eunice's mental torment is accompanied by the physical torment of flogging, and she continues to love him all the same.

As early as 1900, a theatrical version of the novel was produced in Rome by Silvano D'Arborio and in Paris by Émile Moreau. Moreau's version, in which actress Suzanne Miéris enjoyed theatrical success as Eunice, was widely published, as here in the magazine L'Illustration, where it is suggested that Petronius is already witnessing Eunice's kiss. Looking closely, one can see that Eunice's clothes are semi-transparent and, in fact, in subsequent pictorial representations, Eunice is depicted half-naked or completely naked, shifting the viewer's attention to her instead of the statue.

This can be seen in a work by Alfons Mucha, in which Petronius again witnesses the scene. The same is true of Jan Styka's illustrations for the book 'Quo Vadis', and in illustrated postcards by Styka, Bruno, Mastroianni and Gambaldi. Some refer to Sienkiewicz's references to a statue of Petronius as Mercury; others do not, but the focus on the female body is always central.

The most chaste version in cinema is shown in Enrico Guazzoni's 1913 version of Quo Vadis. In this early film. Actress Amelia Cattaneo plays Eunice. The 1924 version includes a rather more lascivious version with Rina de Liguoro, who not only shows more of her body, but also embraces the statue of Petronius with greater passion. The scene closely follows Sienkiewicz's words.


Theatre

Quo vadis?, cover L'Illustration (1901)
Cover page of a special issue of L'Illustration of 23 March 1901, dedicated to the stage play 'Quo vadis?', based on the novel by Henryk Sienkiewicz. Here, Eunice is kissing the statue of Petronius.

Suzanne Miéris (?-?) was a French stage actress who peaked in the early 1900s at the Théâtre Antoine and the Théâtre de la Gaité. She had her breakthrough as Eunice, Petronius' slave, and later also lover, in Emile Moreau's stage version of 'Quo vadis?', performed at the Théâtre de la Porte Saint-Martin in Paris in March-April 1901. Miéris played, e.g. opposite Cora Laparcerie as Lygia, Dumény as Petronius, and Gilda Darthy as Poppaea. The play was such a success that after touring the French provincial cities in Summer 1901, the troupe returned to the Théâtre de la Porte Saint-Martin in September 1901, with success, now with Édouard de Max as Petronius. Afterwards, Miéris was actively promoted by postcards, always with her headband and costume from 'Quo vadis?', even when making publicity for other plays. In October 1901, she was replaced by Mme Spindler in 'Quo vadis?' because of her obligations at the Théâtre Antoine. By October 1901, 'Quo vadis?' had been performed over 150 times.

Art

The Kiss of Eunice in Quo vadis?
French postcard by A.N. (Armand Noyer), Paris, no. 276/3. Sculptobromure: Domenico Mastroianni, 1913. Mastroianni first created his compositions in plasticine or clay. He then captured the images both in sepia and coloured-in. Domenico Mastroianni was the brother of Marcello Mastroianni's grandfather.

Quo vadis (Mastroianni, 1913)
French postcard by A.N. (Noyer), Paris, card 3 in a series of 18 Luxochrome postcards. Design: Domenico Mastroianni. Eunice is kissing the statue of Petronius.

The Kiss of Eunice
Italian coloured postcard. 'The Kiss of Eunice' by Domenico Mastroianni.

Eunice kissing the statue of Petronius
German postcard by Ed. A. Raczynski, Kraków (Munich) in the series 'Quo vadis?' by the Polish artist Piotr Stachiewicz (1858-1938), No. 3 of a series of 20 or 22 (sources differ) postcards. Caption: Eunice kissing the statue of Petronius.

In 1896, Peter Stachiewicz created a series of 22 paintings illustrating 'Quo Vadis' by Henryk Sienkiewicz. The collection was well received by the audience. It was presented in 1902 and was created before the novel was finished. The artist was recognised as the favourite painter of the writer. He illustrated, among others: 'Trilogy', 'Without Dogma', and 'The Połaniecki Family'. In 1902, 'Quo Vadis' was printed for the first time with his 20 illustrations. It was done again in 1910. Thanks to the efforts of Edward Aleksander Raczyński, a folio of 22 lithographs in Chinese cardboard was also published. According to Raffaele de Berti and Elisabetta Gagetti, between 1900 and 1930, several editions of the postcard series were released, sometimes as 20 and at other times as 22 postcards.

Quo vadis: The kiss of Eunice
French postcard by Ed. Lapina, Paris, no. 448. Quo vadis: The kiss of Eunice. Artwork by Jan Styka.

The Kiss of Eunice
French postcard, no. 4435 Dl. Photo: ND. 'The Kiss of Eunice' by Jan Styka. Salon de Paris 1910.

The Kiss of Eunice
Italian postcard by Ed. G. Sborgi, Firenze. 'The Kiss of Eunice' by A. Alessandrelli.

The Kiss of Eunice by G.G. Bruno
Vintage postcard, no. 1. The Kiss of Eunice by G.G. Bruno, 1909. Remarkable here is the statue of Petronius represented as Mercurius / Hermes.

Film

Quo vadis? (Enrico Guazzoni, Cines 1913)
Italian postcard for the classic epic Quo vadis? (Enrico Guazzoni, Cines 1913). Caption: The devotion of the slave Eunice (Amelia Cattaneo) to Petronius (Gustavo Serena).

Marina Berti in Quo Vadis (1951)

Marina Berti in Quo Vadis (1951)

Screen captions from Quo Vadis (Mervyn LeRoy, 1951). Eunice (Marina Berti) kissing the statue of Petronius. This happens in this film version much later than in the novel, after being whipped for refusing her master's order to become Vinicius' slave, instead of in the book's first chapter.

Pygmalion and Galatea


The key text in the case of Pygmalion is Ovid's 'Metamorphoses'. Ovid uses sensual and erotic words: "Pygmalion is enchanted, and a flame is kindled in his heart for that artificial body. He often runs his hand over the statue to feel whether it is flesh or ivory, and cannot bring himself to say that it is ivory. He kisses her, and it seems to him that she kisses him back, and he talks to her and embraces her, and he has the sensation that his fingers sink into the limbs he touches, and he fears that the pressure will leave a bruise on her limbs."

This reminds us of Bernini's 'Rape of Proserpina' in the Borghese Gallery, with his hand pressing on the flesh or marble. Incidentally, Ovid speaks of ivory, not marble, because it is more similar to the colour of human skin. Even when the woman (Ovid does not mention Galatea's name) comes to life, his words are very sensual: “He brings his mouth close again and with his hands he also fondles her breasts. The ivory he fondles softens, and losing its hardness, it sinks and yields under his fingers, [...]”. Ovid is also quite explicit about the results of the encounter between the two lovers, as after nine months, they have a son, named Paphos.

Especially during the 19th century, a wave of Pygmalionism pervaded culture: literature, visual arts and performing arts. As Jeffrey Richards writes in his monograph 'The Ancient World on the Victorian and Edwardian Stage' (2009): 'The obsession with statues of women became a classifiable form of erotomania dubbed by Havelock Ellis ‘Pygmalionism’, after the mythical Greek sculptor. This stemmed in part from the idea that sculptures should be as realistic as possible. As John Ruskin stated, “It is the task of the best sculptor, the true Daedalus, to make immobility seem like breath and marble like living flesh”.

This also applies to the performing arts, such as the plays of W.S. Gilbert and the operettas of Franz von Suppé. Gilbert's play was staged at the Haymarket Theatre in London in 1871, starring William Kendall and his wife Madge Robertson, and was a huge success (184 performances). Other theatrical productions of 'Pygmalion' followed, including the British version based on Franz von Suppé's operetta 'Die schöne Galathée' (1865). Gilbert's play was subsequently revived with great success in the United States and the United Kingdom (1880s) with Mary Anderson and Lily Langtry. In both Gilbert's and Von Suppé's versions, Galatea eventually returns to being a statue: in Gilbert's, she herself decides to turn back into stone, while in Von Suppé's, it is Pygmalion who begs Venus to turn her to stone after discovering her cheating on him with his assistant Ganymede. Furthermore, in Ovid's version, this second metamorphosis does not take place, but according to Richards, this ending was more suited to the (male) morality of the 19th century. A series of French postcards from the early 20th century follows Von Suppé's comic version.

With his parodic versions in early cinema, Georges Méliès criticises the impotent man, for whom female statues are unattainable and always faster and stronger than he is. In general, both in minor art and in early 20th-century cinema, there is a rather distrustful attitude towards the myth of Pygmalion and the female nude in sculpture. In the film La modella, the elite mock the statue of the female nude and the model (played by Stacia Napierkowska), a nude based on an ancient original preserved in the Vatican Museums. A unique copy of the first English film Pygmalion and Galatea (1912), starring actress and national beauty Ivy Close, was recently rediscovered at the BFI. The film shows a chaste version of the myth, almost Pre-Raphaelite and close to English neoclassical painting from Albert Moore to Alma-Tadema. Ivo Blom concludes that both cases express a rather masculine view of women as objects of desire, even though Eunice adores a male statue and Pygmalion a female statue. In both cases, unattainability is overcome. Eunice will later have the real Petronius instead of the substitute (even if they then die together), while Pygmalion's ideal woman is transformed into a real woman thanks to the divine intervention of Venus.

Art

Pygmalion et Galathée (Antonin Mercié, s.a.)
German postcard by Moderner Kunst-Verlag Berlin, no. MKB 2175. Pygmalion et Galathée by Antonin Mercié (year and location unknown).

Galathée (Laurent-Honoré Marqueste, c. 1885)
German postcarded by Friedrich C. Rother, Berlin. 'Galathée' by Laurent-Honoré Marqueste, c. 1885. Once Musée du Luxembourg, now Musée d'Orsay.

Fantasy

Pygmalion
French postcard by A.S. (Saint-Just), Paris, no. 743, 3. Scene from 'Pygmalion', inspired by the operetta 'Die schöne Galathée' by Franz von Suppé (1865). Caption: O Venus, that my trebling may rise up to you! That this marble by you may become a woman!

Pygmalion
French postcard by A.S. (Saint-Just), Paris, no. 743, 8. Scene from 'Pygmalion', inspired by the operetta 'Die schöne Galathée' by Franz von Suppé (1865). Caption: Ganymedes! It is you I love!...

Pygmalion
French postcard by A.S. (Saint-Just), Paris, no. 743, 10 (end). Scene from 'Pygmalion', inspired by the operetta 'Die schöne Galathée' by Franz von Suppé (1865). Caption: Well, now I know what I can do with this, and without regrets, I will sell it.

Plot: The Cypriot sculptor Pygmalion refuses to sell his beautiful statue of a woman to old Midas, who has bribed Pygmalion's assistant Ganymedes to show it to him. The artist chases them and implores Venus to make the statue he so adores alive. His wish is granted, but he regrets his wish as Galatea prefers the love of Ganymedes. Vexed, Pygmalion implores the goddess to turn the unfaithful woman back into stone again, and wants to destroy it, but Midas convinces him to sell the statue to him.

In the 1900s, A.S. (Saint-Just) published several staged, coloured postcard series based on operas and operettas such as 'Tosca', 'Faust', 'Manon Lescaut', 'Carmen', 'Cavalleria rusticana', 'Die schöne Galathée', 'La fille du régiment', 'Pippo et Bettina', 'La fille de Madame Angot' and 'Le passant', books such as 'Paul et Virginie', and plays such as 'Cyrano de Bergerac' and 'Madame Sans-Gène'.

Risqué

Pygmalion
French postcard by CCCC (Charles Collas et Cie, Cognac), card 6 of the series.

Humor

Pygmalion (Albert Guillaume, s.a.)
French postcard by Braun & Cie Editeurs, no. 7178. Salons de Paris: 'Pygmalion' by Albert Guillaume, s.a.

Film

Ivy Close in Pygmalion and Galathea (1912)
Caption from Pygmalion and Galathea (Elwyn Neame, 1912) starring Ivy Close. Collection: British Film Institute.

Sources: Le Ombre di Eros (AIRSC - Italian), National Museum, Poznań, and Raffaele de Berti, Elisabetta Gagetti ('La fortuna di Quo vadis in Italia nel primo quarto del Novecento: edizioni illustrate e paratesti cinematografici' - Italian)