Silent Era Postcards

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silentfilm

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PostSun May 16, 2010 9:56 pm

Vanity Fair (1911) still exists, Blackhawk used to sell it on film. I don't think it has been released on any video format.

Those three postcards are the oldest photos that I have. Vintage studio photos are hard to come by from before 1915. I only have two vintage stills from 1913.
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Bob Birchard

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PostTue May 18, 2010 10:02 am

Even though these images of Raymond Grifith may have postcard formatting on the back, they are actually arcade cards that were purchased from vending machines.
Last edited by Bob Birchard on Tue May 18, 2010 11:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
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missdupont

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PostTue May 18, 2010 10:25 am

I have a postcard of Henry Walthall when he was with Biograph. I'll see if I can scan it tonight.
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Derek B.

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PostWed May 19, 2010 12:00 pm

Here are a few more cards. The Paramount cards have blank backs with movie theatre and dates stamped. (In the same group I got another card for North of 36 that was like the one I posted previously but had a stamp as above rather than being used as a postcard.)

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(on the set of East Is West)

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- Derek B.
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rudyfan

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PostWed May 19, 2010 3:14 pm

Those color/poster postcards, Derek, are very cool. I've not seen these before.
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greta de groat

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PostWed May 19, 2010 11:11 pm

It sure makes Tongues of Flame look promising. And what is happening to Pola in that picture--are vegetables being ejected from that guy's hand?

greta
Greta de Groat
Unsung Divas of the Silent Screen
http://www.stanford.edu/~gdegroat
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silentfilm

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PostSun May 23, 2010 6:27 pm

Although the card says Louisiana, this lost film was actually released as The Love Mart (1927). That's Gilbert Roland and Raymond Turner.

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This is definitely an arcade card since there is no printing on the back.
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peachtreegal

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PostThu May 27, 2010 12:45 pm

Here's a British postcard I acquired recently (thank you, eBay!) of Frank Borzage from his acting days:

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Bob Birchard

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PostThu May 27, 2010 1:29 pm

peachtreegal wrote:Here's a British postcard I acquired recently (thank you, eBay!) of Frank Borzage from his acting days:

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Looks more like Borzage from "The Man Who Laughs"! ;-}
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peachtreegal

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PostThu May 27, 2010 1:50 pm

Bob Birchard wrote:
Looks more like Borzage from "The Man Who Laughs"! ;-}


ROFL

I am wondering if I could get that brand and shade of lipstick somewhere...
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silentfilm

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Re: Silent Era Postcards

PostFri Sep 16, 2011 9:41 pm

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Here's a really neat novelty postcard. If you wiggle the tab on the side, Ford Sterling's expression changes.

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Here's how it works. There are three different images of Sterling, and each one consists of vertical bars. Each image repeats every third bar (except for his shoulders, which are the same in each picture.) As you move the front clear window with the bars, a different expression is exposed.

This postcard was never mailed, but it does have a message on the back. I'm guessing that it was sent in an envelope. The message indicates that the recipient, Mary Phillips, has been sick. Sterling only worked at Universal a few months in 1914, so the postcard probably dates from that year.
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All Darc

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Re: Silent Era Postcards

PostTue Sep 20, 2011 3:15 pm

A question :

Why it's so rare to find good stills of Chaplin Keystone shorts ?????

Even BFI site used a lot of frames from bad prints, as stills, cause they had just a few stills of some shorts.
Keep thinking...
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Bob Birchard

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Re: Silent Era Postcards

PostWed Nov 30, 2011 11:31 am

In the Mrs. Stich post card text:

"Mr. Ryan - please forward any mail for us to above address -- We are living out-here now -- We love summer weather, but -- I like a City beat. Go see the boy in pictures at City Square Theatrs (sic) the Keystone picture show there. Twice week. Kind Regards to all."

I think "City beat" should probably read "City best"
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silentfilm

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Re: Silent Era Postcards

PostWed Nov 30, 2011 12:01 pm

Thanks, Bob. I'll fix it on my website.

Here's an early advertising postcard...
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The "Mutt and Jeff" film would have been a live action comedy short from the Nestor Film company, and not one of the long-running animated series that started a few years later. This would have almost certainly been a traveling exhibitor, as the Brewster Town Hall (which still stands today) was used for all kinds of events. Interestingly, this is a British postcard, but obviously it was not mailed, but just handed out as advertising.

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Here's a postcard from Varsity (1928).
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Derek B.

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Re: Silent Era Postcards

PostSun Dec 04, 2011 2:13 pm

Here's another movie postcard used in 1911 that a friend recently obtained and let me scan:
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Here is the AFI listing for the film though it doesn't have many details.
- Derek B.
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Harlowgold

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Re: Silent Era Postcards

PostSun Apr 29, 2012 11:03 pm

I have at least 200 silent movie era postcards which I bought during the early years of ebay when they could been had quite reasonably back then, often for $2-3 each, nowadays most people start the prices at around $10. The ones from Europe are the best, "real photo" glossy postcards with portraits of the stars like the ones Derek has of Laura La Plante and Betty Bronson on his scan. It seems movie star postcards were far more popular and in surplus in Europe than in the States and continued on into the 1940's at least though in the sound era the star postcards tended to be mainly the "gorgeous" stars like Dorothy Lamour, Robert Taylor,Tyrone Power, Hedy Lamarr, etc. than a wider variety of stars like in the silent era. Most of my silent postcards are of Pickford, Corinne Griffith, Anita Page, Dove, Shearer, Del Rio, Swanson, Murray, Gaynor, Pearl White, La Plante, Lillian Gish, Valentino, Novarro, and Farrell.
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silentfilm

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Re: Silent Era Postcards

PostWed May 16, 2012 11:27 am

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Minnie Maddern Fiske in Tess of the D'Urbervilles (1913).

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Edna Purviance and Charlie Chaplin in A Woman (1915).

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Charlie Chaplin, Snub Pollard and Billy Armstrong in By the Sea (1915)
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JFK

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CHARLIE CHAPLIN MAE MURRAY LEW CODY ETC ON LEVIATHAN

PostFri May 25, 2012 7:04 am

CONTENT REMOVED COPYRIGHT CONCERN
Last edited by JFK on Thu Oct 18, 2012 1:25 pm, edited 6 times in total.
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CoffeeDan

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Re: Silent Era Postcards

PostSat May 26, 2012 8:30 pm

JFK wrote:Mr. Berry in a part, and costume, made famous - and filmed twice - by another


That's Prof. Eustace MacGargle in Poppy, played by W. C. Fields on the stage in 1923-24 (IIRC) and on film in SALLY OF THE SAWDUST (1925) and POPPY (1936). There is a publicity still of Fields from POPPY which bears a remarkable similarity to this picture.
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silentfilm

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Re: Silent Era Postcards

PostSun Mar 03, 2013 10:25 pm

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Colleen Moore & Kenneth Harlan in "TWINKLETOES" (1926)

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Edith Storey

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Helen Holmes in THE GIRL AND THE GAME (1915)
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