Showing posts with label Pina Menichelli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pina Menichelli. Show all posts

04 July 2015

Pina Menichelli

We are still at Il Cinema Ritrovato 2015 in Bologna. One of the sections is 1915: Cinema of A Hundred Years Ago. The heyday of the dazzling Italian divas, like Francesca Bertini, Lyda Borelli and fascinating and enigmatic Pina Menichelli (1890-1984). With her contorted postures and disdainful expression, she was the most bizarre Italian silent film diva. Her film Il fuoco/The Fire (1915) was shown earlier this week.

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 377. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 411. Photo Pinto, Roma.

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano (Milan), no. 410. Photo: Pinto.

Pina Menichelli
French postcard by BPA, Rueil.

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard, no. 47.

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 409. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Notre Dame des Spasmes


Giuseppina Menichelli was born in Castroreale, Italy, in 1890. She was a sister of singer and actress Dora Menichelli.

After starting her film career at the Roman Cines company in 1913, Pina was catapulted into stardom by Giovanni Pastrone's D'Annunzian film Il Fuoco/The Fire (1915) co-starring with Febo Mari. Il Fuoco tells the love story of a young, vulnerable painter and a wealthy woman. The film's erotic atmosphere caused it to be banned and prompted clerical demonstrations against the film.

Because of her femme fatale, men devouring type, and her extreme and sudden gestures she was nicknamed 'Notre Dame des Spasmes'. Menichelli did however know how to play also in a more restrained way, as Tigre Reale/Royal Tiger (Giovanni Pastrone, 1916) showed.

The script was based on a book by Giovanni Verga and was scripted by the author himself. Verga was a Sicilian writer known for his realist (verismo) fiction rather than for his symbolist-decadent works. Despite this the story of Tigre Reale is a melodrama, full of unlikely twists and turns, but the public was held, mesmerized, by the fascinating and enigmatic Menichelli.

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard by Ed. Vettori, Bologna. Photo: still from Tigre Reale (Giovanni Pastrone, 1916).

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard. Photo: probably still from Tigre reale (Giovanni Pastrone, 1916).

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard by Vettori, Bologna, no. 461. Pina Menichelli and Alberto Nepoti, probably in Tigre reale (Giovanni Pastrone, 1916).

Pina Menichelli in IL padrone delle ferriere
Italian postcard by Vettori, Bologna. Photo: publicity still for Il padrone delle ferriere (Eugenio Perego, 1919). The other actress must be Lina Millefleurs.

Pina Menichelli in La seconda moglie
Italian postcard by Edizione G.B. Falci, no. 262. Photo: publicity still of Pina Menichelli and Livio Pavanelli in La seconda moglie (Amleto Palermi, 1922).

Pina Menichelli in La seconda moglie
Italian postcard by Rinascimento Film, Roma. Photo: publicity still of Pina Menichelli in La seconda moglie (Amleto Palermi, 1922).

The Letter


La dama de chez Maxim's (Amleto Palermi, 1923) was one of Pina Menichelli's last films. With this film and with Occupati d'Amelia (Telemaco Ruggeri, 1925), both adaptations of boulevard comedies by Georges Feydeau, Menichelli proved she was well able to do comedy and not only melodramatic and 'vampy' films. In both films one of her co-stars was the French comedian Marcel Lévesque, on the far right on the card below.

After these comedies, however, Pina Menichelli withdrew from the cinema and held back any attempt to interview her.

Pina Menichelli died in 1984 in Milan. Fifteen years later she was one of the divas featured in Diva Dolorosa (Peter Delpeut, 1999).

In her fascinating, ironic text, Short Manual for the Aspiring Scenario Writer, the French author Colette gave a typical description of the femme fatale in cinema, largely based on Pina Menichelli.

Talking about the 'arms' of the femme fatale Colette indicates the hat and the rising gorge: "The femme fatale' s hat spares her the necessity, at the absolute apex of her wicked career, of having to expend herself in pantomime. When the spectator sees the evil woman coiffing herself with a spread-winged owl, the head of a stuffed jaguar, a bifid aigrette, or a hairy spider, he no longer has any doubts; he knows just what she is capable of. And the rising gorge? The rising gorge is the imposing and ultimate means by which the evil woman informs the audience that she is about to weep, that she is hesitating on the brink of crime, that she is struggling against steely necessity, or that the police have gotten their hands on the letter. What letter? THE letter."

Pina Menichelli and Milton Rosmer in La donna e l'uomo
Italian postcard by Ed. G.B. Falci, Milano. Pina Menichelli and Milton Rosmer in the Italian silent film La donna e l'uomo (Amleto Palermi, 1923), produced by Rinascimento Film and distributed by UCI.

Pina Menichelli in La biondina
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano Milan) for one of Pina Menichelli's last films La biondina (Amleto Palermi, 1923), based on a book by Marco Praga and tells the tragedy of a woman whose husband kills her in the end. It seems that Italian censorship forced the scriptwriter to add morality to the film, so Praga's tragedy is framed within a story about a modest, conventional wife who, encouraged by her friend, dreams of breaking out, but then reads Praga's book and decides to remain honest and loyal. The actress on the left on the card could be the friend (Gemma de' Ferrari).

Pina Menichelli in La dame de chez Maxim
Italian postcard (G.B. Falci, Milano) for Pina Menichelli's last film La dame de Chez Maxim (Amleto Palermi, 1923). Menichelli played the legendary Môme Crevette in one of the many film adaptations of Georges Feydeau's classic boulevard comedy.

Pina Menichelli in La dame de chez Maxim
Italian postcard. Photo: G.B. Falci, Milano. Publicity still for La dama de chez Maxim's (1923) with Marcel Lévesque at far right.

Pina Menichelli in La dame de Chez Maxim
Italian postcard. Photo: G.B. Falci, Milano. Publicity still for La dama de chez Maxim's (1923).

Sources: Vittorio Martinelli (Le dive del silenzio), Greta de Groat (Unsung Divas of the Silent Screen), Il Cinema Ritrovato 2015 and IMDb.

25 October 2014

La seconda moglie (1922)

Today a special post on the Italian silent film La seconda moglie/The second wife (Amleto Palermi, 1922), based on the melodrama The Second Mrs. Tanqueray. Star is the fascinating and enigmatic Pina Menichelli, the most bizarre Italian diva of the silent era. Her leading man is Livio Pavanelli.

Alfredo Martinelli in La seconda moglie
Italian postcard. Photo: Rinascimento Film, Roma. Caption: "Sir George starts to doubt the stability of the Primrose Restaurant." Postcard for the Italian silent film La seconda moglie (Amleto Palermi, 1922) with Alfredo Martinelli.

Orietta Claudi in La seconda moglie
Italian postcard. Photo: Rinascimento Film, Roma. Caption: "The idea of becoming nun gives a shiver to Eliana's soul." Postcard for the Italian silent film La seconda moglie (Amleto Palermi, 1922) with Orietta Claudi.

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Fotominio 78. Postcard with Orietta Claudi and Pina Menichelli in La seconda moglie (Amleto Palermi, 1922).

A mundane beauty


Lord Aubrey Tanqueray (Livio Pavanelli) loses his wife, a woman of rigid habits who had managed to perfectly organize his life up to his station, but she has left him sentimentally unsatisfied. Left alone, Tanqueray sends his daughter to a religious college and leads a grey and recluse life.

Years go by. The man gets tired of his solitude and starts to frequent the London society. He meets Paula (Pina Menichelli), a mundane beauty, falls in love with her and marries her.

Though the woman has decided to abandon her once so liberal life and shows she's eager to convert, she doesn't manage to bond with Eliana (Orietta Claudi), now a girl in full blossom, who despises of the intruder.

In an attempt to solve the situation, Tanqueray decides to send the girl to Paris. Here Elina meets captain Ardale (Alfredo Menichelli), falls in love with him, and returned, home, presents him as her fiancé. But Paula recognizes in Ardale one of her ex-lovers. She confesses to Eliana her guilt in deterring the girl to unite her life with an adventurer and makes an end to her life by a gun shot.

The play from which the film was adapted, The Second Mrs. Tanqueray by Arthur Wing Pinero, had already been the vehicle for stage actresses such as Eleonora Duse, Virigina Reiter and Italia Vitaliani, and afterwards Maria Melato and Emma Grammatica.

Though the film, released in 1923, was received with mixed reviews, it was one of Pina Menichelli's most popular films, both in Italy and abroad.

Pina Menichelli, Livio Pavanelli in La seconda moglie
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Photo: Fotominio 78. Postcard with Pina Menichelli in La seconda moglie (Amleto Palermi, 1922).

Pina Menichelli in La seconda moglie
Italian postcard. Photo: Rinascimento Film, Roma. Caption: "That monotonous and grey life awoke in the rebel a whole lost world." Postcard for the Italian silent film La seconda moglie (Amleto Palermi, 1922) with Pina Menichelli.

Pina Menichelli and Livio Pavanelli in La seconda moglie
Italian postcard by G.B. Falci, Milano. Postcard for the Italian silent film La seconda moglie (Amleto Palermi, 1922) with Pina Menichelli and Livio Pavanelli.

Orietta Claudi


Orietta Claudi (?-?), who played Eliana,  had a relatively short career in Italian silent cinema of the early 1920s. She mostly played the young family girl opposite the mundane divas such as Pina Menichelli, Italia Almirante Manzini and Maria Jacobini.

She probably debuted in L'Innamorata (Gennaro Righelli, 1920), starring Almirante Manzini. Claudi's character had her real first name Orietta (or was Orietta not the real name of Claudi?).

After Stelle (Riccardo Cassano, 1920) and Il supplizio del silenzio (Eugenio Perego, 1920), Claudi acted opposite Maria Jacobini and Amleto Novelli in La casa di vetro (Gennaro Righelli, 1920).

In the very successful drama Amore rosso (Gennaro Righelli, 1921), Claudi played the rival of Jacobini in winning the love of Lido Manetti.

After Il cielo (André Habay, 1921) starring director Habay as a pilot who risks getting blind and Claudi as his British fiancée, she acted as the hostile daughter Eliana opposite Pina Menichelli and Livio Pavanelli in La seconda moglie (Amleto Palermi, 1922).

Claudi's last parts were in Il sogno d'amore (Gennaro Righelli, 1922) with Almirante Manzini, and La gerla di papà Martin (Mario Bonnard, 1923) with Gianna Terribili Gonzales.

Pina Menichelli and Orietta Claudi in La seconda moglie
Italian postcard. Caption: "Paola: No! Forgive me... We will really be good friends..." Postcard for the Italian silent film La seconda moglie (Amleto Palermi, 1922) with Pina Menichelli and Orietta Claudi.

Pina Menichelli, Livio Pavanelli and Orietta Claudi in La seconda moglie
Italian postcard. Photo: Rinascimento Film, Roma. Caption: "Eliana: Oh, had I only been nicer to her!" Postcard for the Italian silent film La seconda moglie/The second wife (Amleto Palermi, 1922) with Pina Menichelli, Livio Pavanelli and Orietta Claudi.

Sources: Vittorio Martinelli (Italian - Il cinema muto italiano, 1921-1922) and IMDb.

30 August 2010

Happy Birthday, Jan!

Today is the 50th birthday of Jan!!! Congratulations.

Who is Jan? It's his nom de plume, but he is my dearest friend and partner. He is the great unknown force behind EFSP. Many cards here are from Jan's incredible collection of silent film star postcards and numerous stories are in fact his. To give you an impression: here follow my 5 favorite cards of his collection.


5. Lyda Borelli

Lyda Borelli
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 323. Photo: Fontana.

Considering her profile, it is not hard to imagine why critics and artists of the early 20th century compared Italian diva Lyda Borelli to the heroines of Aubrey Beardsley.

4. Josephine Baker

Josephine Baker
Austrian postcard by Iris Verlag, no. 5293.

Josephine Baker (1906-1975) is well-known as a singer and a dancer. In 1925 she became an instant success in Paris, because of her erotic dance. She also performed in a handful silent and early sound films, La Sirene des Tropiques (1927), Zouzou (1934) and La princesse TamTam (1935).

3. Pina Menicchelli

Pina Menichelli
Italian postcard by Ed. A. Traldi, Milano, no. 409. Photo: Pinto, Roma.

Pina Menichelli (1890-1984) was one of the true divas of Italian silent cinema.

2. Rudolph Valentino

Rudolph Valentino in The Son of the Sheik (1926)
Italian postcard.

The Son of the Sheik (George Fitzmaurice, 1926) was the last film of Rudolph Valentino, the latin lover of the 1920s. The film premiered July 1926; one month after Valentino had died, at the age of 31.

1. Pola Negri

Pola Negri
Italian postcard by Ed. Ballerini & Fratini, Firenze.

A great picture of Pola Negri in Good and Naughty (Malcolm St. Clair, 1926).

A big hug for Jan.