The Original Stock Photo Used in THE SHINING's Haunting Ending Has Been Found
For decades, that haunting black-and-white photo at the end of The Shining has been a cinematic enigma. Jack Torrance, grinning at the center of a 1921 July 4th ball, locked in a moment that’s both mysterious and unsettling.
Who were those people? Was the photo real? Where did it come from? Finally, we have the answer, and it’s been hiding in plain sight.
The original photo has been discovered in the Getty Images Hulton Archive, a find that not only confirms the photo’s authenticity but also reshapes how we understand one of horror’s most iconic endings.
The discovery comes courtesy of Alasdair Spark, a retired academic from the University of Winchester, who documented the breakthrough on Getty’s Instagram.
“At last, it has been found. Following the earlier identification by facial recognition software of the unknown man in the photograph at the end of The Shining as Santos Casani, a London ballroom dancer, I can reveal that the photo was one of three taken by the Topical Press Agency at a St. Valentines Day Ball, 14 February 1921, at the Empress Rooms, the Royal Palace Hotel, Kensington.”
This wasn’t an easy win. Spark and others spent years scouring newspaper archives, trying to match faces, venues, and events. And for a long time, it felt like a dead end.
“It was starting to seem impossible, every cross-reference to Casani failed to match. Other likely places that were suggested didn’t match. There were some places we could not find images for and we started to fear that meant the photo might be lost to history, and never be found.”
The turning point came through a bit of inside baseball. Spark reached out to Murray Close, the on-set photographer for The Shining, the man who snapped the image of Jack Nicholson that was inserted into the vintage print.
Close remembered that the original background image had been pulled from the BBC Hulton Library, which eventually folded into Getty’s archive.
“The photo (and others) was found following my contact with Murray Close (the official set photographer, who took the image of Jack Nicholson used in the version seen on screen), who recalled that the original had been sourced from the BBC Hulton Library.
“This reinforced a remark by Joan Smith, who did the retouching work – she had said in interviews that it came from the Warner Bros photo archive, which proves never to have existed. However, she also said in passing, and often unreported, that it might have come from the BBC Hulton Library.”
Turns out, after the Topical Press Agency was absorbed by the Hulton in 1958, and Hulton was acquired by Getty in 1996, the photo simply got buried among more than 94 million other images. But it was there all along.
The people in the photo are just regular Londoners enjoying a Monday night out. Nothing creepy and no deep symbolism.
Spark concluded: “Nobody was composited into it except Jack Nicholson. It shows a group of ordinary London people on a Monday evening. ‘All the best people’ as the manager of the Overlook Hotel said,” Spark concludes.
With The Shining celebrating its 45th anniversary this year, the timing of this discovery feels like great timing. It’s a reminder that even the most iconic pieces of movie mystery can come from the most mundane origins.