The shadow under the nose is often considered to be directly under the nose. The shadow does center at the philtrum but the nose is not on center. Oswald's head is turned about two degrees to his left. If you draw a line from the tip of his nose to the tip of the shadow it is a 4 degree angle.
Oswald had to turn 22 degrees South of West to face Marina. The Sun was at about 35 degrees South of West or Azimuth 235( Azimuth starting in the North). So Oswald was facing about 13 degrees away from the Sun. But his head was turned an additional 2 degrees to his left which lessens the angle of shadow under his nose to 11 degrees. So we should see about 11 degrees of angle if drawing a line from the tip of his off center nose to the tip of the shadow. (Regardless of the Suns elevation it's shadow will fall directly below the nose when a persons turns to face directly towards the Sun.)
But there is one more factor. Just as turning you head on a horizontal axis to the direction of the Sun causes a shadow that matches a high noon shadow, the same effect happens if you tilt your head to the side. If you tilt your head towards the sun and the angle of you head matches the elevation angle of the Sun, you will again have a shadow that falls directly below the nose the same as high Noon. This happens when you rotate horizontally or tilt your head on the vertical axis.
Oswald facing 13 degrees away from the Sun should create a little less than a 11 degree shadow under his nose. (The change of shadow relative to the change of facial angle is not a one for one relationship). We should see 11 degrees but because his head is rotated 2 degrees left it cancels out 2 degrees and we should see only 9 degrees. With his nose rotated 2 degrees left the angle from the tip of the nose to the tip of the shadow centered at the philtrum is 4 degrees. The fact that his head is tilted 4 degrees toward the Sun cancels out 4 degrees of the shadow we should see.
So 11 degrees total shadow is seen in 4 degrees of shadow angle under the nose, 4 more degrees cancelled out by the head tilt and 2 more degree cancelled by the 2 degree horizontal head rotation toward the Sun. That pretty much accounts for the position of the nose shadow.
When people attempt to dupllcate Oswald's lean they generally hold the hips at a 35 degree angle to the camera(right hip farther back). They also tend to ignore the angle of the right foot and turn it farther than Oswald.
Last year I noticed that the shadow of the telephone lines crossing Oswald's hips are at a 9 degree angle compared to the direction of the shadow on the ground. This turns out to be a measure of how much Oswald's hip are angled back from the camera. It turns out his hips were facing almost directly at the camera, no more than 7 degrees away from facing directly at the camera.
It is hard enough to duplicate the stance with the hips at 35 degrees. It becomes very painful and nearly impossible at 20 degrees. If you restrict the hips to 7 degrees it is imo impossible. So if you try to lean over with the right shin and knee aligned vertically and bring your belt buckle or the snap on your pants within one inch that same vertical line it becomes impossible. If anyone wants to attempt it you wwill need to keep your right foot swung out to no more than 45 degrees. !33a will measure 68 degrees out but that is due to perspective. A 45 degree angle seen from above(The accurate measure) will look like a 68 or 70 degree angle from Marinas position at 10'4" away.