Это произведение находится в общественном достоянии, поскольку оно было опубликовано в США между 1929 и 1963 годами и авторское право на него не было возобновлено, вне зависимости от того, присутствовало ли изначально или нет уведомление об авторских правах. Если автор не умер определённое количество лет назад, то это произведение защищено авторским правом в странах и на территориях, не применяющих правило более короткого срока для произведений из США, например, в Канаде (70 p.m.a.), Континентальном Китае (50 p.m.a., не в Гонконге и Макао), Германии (70 p.m.a.), Мексике (100 p.m.a.), Швейцарии (70 p.m.a.), а также других странах в соответствии с индивидуальными соглашениями. См. дополнительные пояснения на странице Commons:Hirtle chart.
Photo credit in approx. 5 pt. type reads PHOTOGRAPH BY JOHN MIEHLE
A graphic banner on the lower left of the photo reads THE AMERICAN PICKS A FUTURE STAR
Text on the page reads as follows:
Loveliest Roman of them all We don't know exactly what it is that they do on a rainy night in Rio, but we can tell you what one film producer did on a rainy night in California. He looked at pictures of Valli, the Italian film star, which had been sent to him weeks before and he had been putting off. He, David O. Selznick, liked the pictures so much he sent for Valli, with the result that she is soon to make her American debut in the title role in The Paradine Case, a forthcoming Alfred Hitchcock thriller. Valli is the daughter of a professor of philosophy at the University of Milan. She was a starlet at 16, playing a variety of roles. When the Germans moved into Italy, they insisted she make pictures for them, and she refused, going into hiding. When the Americans came, she entertained troops in camps and hospitals. She is in her middle twenties, married to Oscar de Mejo, Italian pianist and composer.
Background "Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly began publishing in 1876. In 1904, it was renamed Leslie's Monthly Magazine, and then Leslie's Magazine in 1905. Later that year (in the middle of volume 60), it was renamed the American Illustrated Magazine, shortening to the American Magazine in 1906. It kept continuous volume numbering throughout its history. The magazine ceased publication in 1956. While no copyright renewals are known for the issues, a number of stories that appeared in the magazine had their copyrights renewed."
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{{Information |Description ={{en|1=Photograph of Alida Valli appearing in the "Interesting People" department of ''The American Magazine''}} |Source =Self scan from ''The American Magazine'' for...