Luciano Albertini (November 30, 1882 – January 6, 1945) was an Italian film actor, producer, and director. Muscular and buoyant, he was a gym teacher in Turin, Italy, and later became a sailor before joining up with Circus Busch as an artist (he had created a famous number on the flying trapeze featuring eight persons). He then turned to the motion picture industry as an actor, producer, and director, first in Italy (where strongmen like him were then in favor), then in Germany (where his Latin appeal made German ladies swoon). After initially appearing in Italian films, he moved to Germany following the First World War. In 1921, he founded a production company, Albertini-Film, in partnership with Ernst Hugo Correll. During the Weimar era, he appeared in a number of silent thriller and adventure films.
He also was popular in both the capitalistic USA
(where he was the hero of a serial) and in the communist USSR (appearing
in Aleksandr Dovzhenko's, Arsenal (1929)).
Unfortunately for him, the style of films he made became outdated when sound arrived
and, after a last film in Germany in 1932, he disappeared from the screen. His
career came to an end because of a combination of the advent of the sound film
and his severe alcoholism, which resulted in his being placed in a mental
institution for a time. When he was released he began suffering from
dementia--from the effects of his heavy drinking over the years--and was again
placed in a mental institution. He died in 1945 in the San Gaetano psychiatric
hospital in Budrino, Italy.
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).