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(28 January 1892, Berlin, Germany -
30 November 1947, Hollywood, California)
By
1911 Lubitsch was a member of Max Reinhardt's Deutsches Theater. He
made his film debut the following year as an actor, but he gradually
abandoned acting to concentrate on directing.
In 1918 he made his mark as a serious director with Die Augen der
Mumie Ma (The Eyes of the Mummy), starring Pola Negri. Lubitsch
subsequently alternated between escapist comedies and grand-scale
historical dramas, enjoying great international success with both.
His reputation as a grand master of world cinema reached a new peak
after the release of his spectacles Madame Du Barry (retitled
"Passion," 1919) and Anna Boleyn ("Deception," 1920). Both of these
films found American distributorship by early 1921. They, along with
Lubitsch's Carmen ("Gypsy Blood," 1920) were selected by the New
York Times on its list of the 15 most important movies of 1921.
Lubitsch left Germany for Hollywood in 1922, contracted as a
director by Mary Pickford. Lubitsch directed Pickford in the film
Rosita; the result was a critical and commercial success, but
director and star clashed during its filming, and it ended up as the
only project that they made together. A free agent after just one
American film, Lubitsch was signed to a remarkable three-year,
six-picture contract by Warner Brothers that guaranteed the director
his choice of both cast and crew, and full editing control over the
final cut.
Settling in America, Lubitsch established his reputation for
sophisticated comedy with such stylish films as The Marriage Circle
(1924), Lady Windermere's Fan (1925), and So This Is Paris (1926).
But his films were only marginably profitable for Warner Brothers,
and Lubitsch's contract was eventually dissolved by mutual consent,
with MGM-Paramount buying out the remainder. His first film for MGM,
The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg (1927), was well-regarded but
lost money.
Lubitsch seized upon the advent of talkies to direct musicals. With
his first sound film, The Love Parade (1929), starring Maurice
Chevalier and Jeanette MacDonald, Lubitsch hit his stride as a maker
of worldly musical comedies. The Love Parade (1929), Monte Carlo
(1930), and The Smiling Lieutenant (1931) were hailed by critics as
masterpieces of the newly emerging musical genre.
His next film was a romantic comedy, written with Samson Raphaelson,
Trouble in Paradise (1932). Later described (approvingly) as "truly
amoral" by critic David Thomson, the cynical comedy was popular both
with critics and with audiences. But it was a project that could
only have been made before the enforcement of the production code,
and after 1935, Trouble in Paradise was withdrawn from circulation.
It was not seen again until 1968.
Whether with music, as in MGM's opulent The Merry Widow (1934) or
Paramount's One Hour with You (1932), or without, as in Design for
Living (1933), Lubitsch continued to specialize in comedy. He made
only one other dramatic film, the antiwar Broken Lullaby (aka The
Man I Killed, 1932).
In 1935, he was appointed that studio's production manager, thus
becoming the only major Hollywood director to run a large studio.
Lubitsch subsequently produced his own films and supervised the
production of films of other directors. But Lubitsch had trouble
delegating authority, which was a problem when he was overseeing
sixty different films. He was fired after a year on the job, and
returned to fulltime moviemaking. In 1936, he became a naturalized
citizen of the United States.
In 1939, Lubitsch directed Greta Garbo in Ninotchka. Garbo and
Lubitsch were friendly and had hoped to work together on a movie for
years, but this would be their only project. The film, co-written by
Billy Wilder, is a satirical comedy in which the famously sullen
actress' laughing scene was heavily promoted by studio publicists
with the tagline "Garbo Laughs!"
In 1940, he directed The Shop Around the Corner, an artful comedy of
cross purposes. The film reunited Lubitsch with his Merry Widow
screenwriter Raphaelson, and starred James Stewart and Margaret
Sullavan as a pair of bickering coworkers in Budapest, each unaware
that the other is their secret romantic correspondent.
With few exceptions Lubitsch's movies take place neither in Europe
nor America but in Lubitschland, a place of metaphor, benign grace,
rueful wisdom... What came to preoccupy this anomalous artist was
the comedy of manners and the society in which it transpired, a
world of delicate sangfroid, where a breach of sexual or social
propriety and the appropriate response are ritualized, but in
unexpected ways, where the basest things are discussed in elegant
whispers; of the rapier, never the broadsword... To the
unsophisticated eye, Lubitsch's work can appear dated, simply
because his characters belong to a world of formal sexual protocol.
But his approach to film, to comedy, and to life was not so much
ahead of its time as it was singular, and totally out of any time. |