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  • βœ‡Antiques and Vintage - flickr
  • Martha Orlanda Truus, Bob & Jan too!
    Truus, Bob & Jan too! posted a photo: German postcard by Photochemie, no. K. 2255. Photo: Mac Walten, Berlin. Martha Orlanda (1886- 1970) was a German silent film actress and screenwriter. Martha Orlanda was born Matyha Schlinkmann in 1886 in Marchienne-au-Pont, Belgium. She first attended elementary school and then a secondary school for girls. There are claims that she auditioned at the age of 13 at the Residenz Theatre in Cologne to perform there. The girl was eventually hired for a
     

Martha Orlanda

Truus, Bob & Jan too! posted a photo:

Martha Orlanda

German postcard by Photochemie, no. K. 2255. Photo: Mac Walten, Berlin.

Martha Orlanda (1886- 1970) was a German silent film actress and screenwriter.

Martha Orlanda was born Matyha Schlinkmann in 1886 in Marchienne-au-Pont, Belgium. She first attended elementary school and then a secondary school for girls. There are claims that she auditioned at the age of 13 at the Residenz Theatre in Cologne to perform there. The girl was eventually hired for a monthly salary of 75 marks. However, her relatives ended this β€˜experiment’ after a year. In 1917, the 30-year-old moved to Berlin with her mother, Josephine Schlinkmann, where William Kahn discovered her and brought her in front of the camera. Martha Orlanda made her silent film debut alongside Izza Dombronowska in Der Fall Dombronowska-Clemenceau, the film adaptation of a literary work by Alexandre Dumas. That year, another film adaptation was made in Italy, called Il processo Clemenceau (1917), starring the diva Francesca Bertini.

By the end of 1921, Martha Orlanda had made twelve films, for which she also wrote the screenplays. Otto Rippert's highly speculative two-part educational and social drama Der Weg, der zur Verdammnis fΓΌhrt / The Road to Damnation (1919) caused a major scandal when it premiered. Her other silent films also dealt predominantly with dramatic or melodramatic themes. In 1922, Martha Orlanda ended her short-lived film career. On 26 September 1924, she married Theodor Schulte-Holthausen (1889–1945), a lawyer and then senior government official at the Reichsversorgungsgericht (Reich Supply Court). They had a son in 1926. Her husband died in Soviet captivity a few months after the end of the Second World War. Martha Orlanda continued to live in Berlin-Wilmersdorf until the mid-1950s, before moving to Heessen in Westphalia to be with her son and his family. At the age of 80, she finally moved to a retirement home in the pilgrimage town of Neviges, where she had many friends. The former actress died there in May 1970.

Sources: IMDb and Wikipedia (German).

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

  • βœ‡Antiques and Vintage - flickr
  • Magda Schneider Truus, Bob & Jan too!
    Truus, Bob & Jan too! posted a photo: Vintage postcard. Filmex NV. Ed. Takken, Utrecht. Magda Schneider in Robinson soll nicht sterben/ The Girl and the Legend (Josef von Baky, 1957), released in The Netherlands as Droom-eiland (Dream Island). German singer and actress Magda Schneider (1909-1996) is best known as the mother of film star Romy Schneider, but in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s s she herself starred in some 40 films. First she appeared on the screen as a charming Wiener mΓ€del (
     

Magda Schneider

Truus, Bob & Jan too! posted a photo:

Magda Schneider

Vintage postcard. Filmex NV. Ed. Takken, Utrecht. Magda Schneider in Robinson soll nicht sterben/ The Girl and the Legend (Josef von Baky, 1957), released in The Netherlands as Droom-eiland (Dream Island).

German singer and actress Magda Schneider (1909-1996) is best known as the mother of film star Romy Schneider, but in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s s she herself starred in some 40 films. First she appeared on the screen as a charming Wiener mΓ€del (Viennese girl) and after the war she often played the understanding mother or aunt.

  • βœ‡The Daily Cartoonist
  • CSotD: Brushing Against the Ridiculous Mike Peterson
    I’ve often observed here that it’s tough to do multi-panel political cartoons because the news rarely cooperates by producing enough examples to fit the format. Granted, Tom Tomorrow generally does better than average at it anyway, but here’s an example of the subject matter cooperating with plenty of material that only needed a clever twist […]
     

CSotD: Brushing Against the Ridiculous

2 June 2026 at 11:23
I’ve often observed here that it’s tough to do multi-panel political cartoons because the news rarely cooperates by producing enough examples to fit the format. Granted, Tom Tomorrow generally does better than average at it anyway, but here’s an example of the subject matter cooperating with plenty of material that only needed a clever twist […]

  • βœ‡The Daily Cartoonist
  • CSotD: And the Beat Goes On Mike Peterson
    Bennett specializes in understatement, using bland illustrations that force the reader to fill in the meaning. It’s dangerous in that some readers have problems understanding even clearly stated messages, but you can dismiss that crowd for just that reason: They aren’t going to get it anyway.For those able to process subtlety, this type of messaging […]
     

CSotD: And the Beat Goes On

4 June 2026 at 12:22
Bennett specializes in understatement, using bland illustrations that force the reader to fill in the meaning. It’s dangerous in that some readers have problems understanding even clearly stated messages, but you can dismiss that crowd for just that reason: They aren’t going to get it anyway.For those able to process subtlety, this type of messaging […]

  • βœ‡The Daily Cartoonist
  • CSotD: Stating What Should Be Obvious Mike Peterson
    I wish more cartoonists had spoken up before Dear Leader reached his out-of-court settlement, but my impression is that it isn’t a done-deal yet, at least in part because his lawyers failed to file the appropriate papers. Which is the sort of thing that happens when you hire people who won’t tell you when you […]
     

CSotD: Stating What Should Be Obvious

19 May 2026 at 10:25
I wish more cartoonists had spoken up before Dear Leader reached his out-of-court settlement, but my impression is that it isn’t a done-deal yet, at least in part because his lawyers failed to file the appropriate papers. Which is the sort of thing that happens when you hire people who won’t tell you when you […]

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