Entitled: "Souvenir strip of Edison Kinetoscope Eugen Sandow, the modern Hercules taken and copyrighted by W.K.L. Dickson, 1894." Includes portrait of Edison above the strip. Eugen Sandow (April 2, 1867 - October 14, 1925) was a German bodybuilder. Flo Ziegfeld Jr. hired Sandow for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition and found that the audience was more fascinated by his bulging muscles than by the amount of weight he was lifting. He quickly became Ziegfeld's first star. In 1894, he appeared in a short Kinetoscope film that was part of the first commercial motion picture exhibition in history. Sandow's resemblance to the physiques found on classical Greek and Roman sculpture was no accident, as he measured the statues in museums and helped to develop "The Grecian Ideal" as a formula for the "perfect physique." He is considered the father of modern bodybuilding, as one of the first athletes to intentionally develop his musculature to predetermined dimensions. He travelled all around the world on tours to countries as varied as South Africa, India, Japan, Australia, New Zealand. He died in 1925 of what newspapers announced as a brain hemorrhage at the age of 58. He was buried in an unmarked grave at the request of his wife.

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Details

Creative#:

TOP22147766

Source:

達志影像

Authorization Type:

RM

Release Information:

須由TPG 完整授權

Model Release:

N/A

Property Release:

No

Right to Privacy:

No

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