Harry
Halm (1901–1980) was a German film actor and was the son of theater
manager and film director. He was an actor and writer, known for Die verschwundene Frau (1929), Sein Scheidungsgrund (1931), and Im Weissen Rössl (1952). He took
acting lessons with Eduard von Winterstein and Hermann Vallentin
and began his stage career in 1919 at the Schauspielhaus in in Potsdam. Because of his hereditary influences, he launched an acting career
in the film industry in the 1920's, playing romantic leading roles in films often
opposite Lillian Harvey. At the beginning of the 1930's, he appeared in sound
films such as Hokuspokus (1930), Der wahre Jakob (1931), and Ein toller Fall (1932), after which he
disappeared completely from the screen and only surfaced again in 1948 for the film
Hin und her. He found roles hard to
come by during the national socialist era, ostensibly for reasons “pertaining
to race.” He then moved to Austria, where he operated a bar called the “Top Hat”
(in deference to the 1935 Astaire/Rogers musical) and later became a
tobacconist. Harry Halm died on November 22, 1980 in Munich, Bavaria, West
Germany.
Ross-Verlag in Berlin was a German publishing house specialized in photographs and photo postcards of artists. The owner of the company was Heinrich Ross (b. 10 August 1870; d. after 1954 as emigrant in the USA).