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House on Haunted Hill (1959) Belgian Poster
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Frankenstein Created Woman (1964) Original French poster art
The Loch Ness Horror (1981)
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The 1942 Genesee Hotel Suicide.
“On May 7, 1942 I. Russel Sorgi, a photographer for the Buffalo Courier Express in Buffalo, New York was on his way back to the office from an assignment. Having taken a different route than usual, Sorgi was passed by police cars when he decided to follow them. The cars pulled up to the Genesee Hotel at 530 Main Street where Russell Sorgi noticed a woman “sitting on a ledge outside an eighth-floor window” on the corner of Gennesee and Pearl Street.
Sorgi’s recalled, “I snatched my camera from the car and took two quick shots as [the woman] seemed to hesitate… As quickly as possible I shoved the exposed film into the case and reached for a fresh holder. I no sooner had pulled the slide out and got set for another shot than she waved to the crowd below and pushed herself into space. Screams and shouts burst from the horrified onlookers as her body plummeted toward the street. I took a firm grip on myself, waited until the woman passed the second or third story, and then shot.”
The body of Mary Miller, surrounded by investigators.
Ms. Miller checked into the hotel under the name “M. Miller” and claimed she was from Chicago. She immediately went into the hotel’s communal women’s restroom, locked the door, and stepped out onto the ledge through the window. Mary Miller was a resident of Buffalo who lived with her sister and had checked into the Genesee Hotel after telling her sister she was traveling to Indiana to visit relatives.
Although there is not much information on Mary Miller available, what is known is that her sister was absolutely shocked by Mary’s suicide.
What makes her case so disturbing is that there is no known motive behind the suicide, no note was ever discovered.
In the photo, a police woman can be seen entering the hotel in what was most likely an attempt to reach Mary Miller before she could kill herself; perhaps seeing the officer enter the building prompted Mary to jump when she did, before she could be deterred.
The police woman seen running inside the Genessee Hotel was most likely one of the first women to work in law enforcement in Buffalo. Two men in the coffee shop, seemingly unaware of the panic occurring on the street outside are seen next to a World War II propaganda sign displayed in the window which reads, “Give till it hurts Hitler.”
Generally referred to as “The Despondent Divorcee” (but more correctly referred to as “The Genesee Hotel Suicide” as Miss Miller had never been married, let alone divorced) the famous photo was used in a psychological study. It was found that 96% of participants in the study did not notice Mary Miller falling to her death upon first examination of the photo.” - from the Vintage Everyday site.
by Vladimir Lebedev, 1966
(Source: babs71.livejournal.com, via antiqueanimals)
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