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Ernst Lubitsch

Ernst Lubitsch (/ˈlbɪ/; January 29, 1892 – November 30, 1947) was a German-born film director, producer, writer, and actor. His urbane comedies of manners gave him the reputation of being Hollywood's most elegant and sophisticated director; as his prestige grew, his films were promoted as having "the Lubitsch touch". Among his best known works are Trouble in Paradise (1932), Design for Living (1933), Ninotchka (1939), The Shop Around the Corner (1940), To Be or Not to Be (1942) and Heaven Can Wait (1943).

Ernst Lubitsch
Born(1892-01-29)January 29, 1892
DiedNovember 30, 1947(1947-11-30) (aged 55)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale)
Occupations
  • Film director
  • producer
  • writer
  • actor
Years active1913–1947
Spouses
Helene Kraus
(m. 1922; div. 1930)
Vivian Gaye
(m. 1935; div. 1944)
Children1
Signature

He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Director three times for The Patriot (1928), The Love Parade (1929), and Heaven Can Wait (1943). In 1946, he received an Honorary Academy Award for his distinguished contributions to the art of the motion picture.

Early life edit

Lubitsch was born in 1892 in Berlin,[1] the son of Simon Lubitsch, a tailor, and Anna (née) Lindenstaedt. His family was Ashkenazi Jewish; his father was born in Grodno in the Russian Empire (now Belarus), and his mother was from Wriezen outside Berlin. He turned his back on his father's tailoring business to enter the theater, and by 1911 was a member of Max Reinhardt's Deutsches Theater.

Career edit

Early work, 1913–1921 edit

 
Lubitsch, c. 1920

In 1913, Lubitsch made his film debut as an actor in The Ideal Wife. He gradually abandoned acting to concentrate on directing. He appeared in approximately 30 films as an actor between 1912 and 1920. His last film appearance as an actor was in the 1920 drama Sumurun, opposite Pola Negri and Paul Wegener, which he also directed.

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 alternated between escapist comedies and large-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 (released as Gypsy Blood in the U.S. in 1921) were selected by The New York Times on its list of the 15 most important movies of 1921.

With glowing reviews under his belt and American money flowing his way, Lubitsch formed his own production company and set to work on the high-budget spectacular The Loves of Pharaoh (1921). Lubitsch sailed to the United States for the first time in December 1921 for what was intended as a lengthy publicity and professional factfinding tour, scheduled to culminate in the February premiere of Pharaoh. However, with World War I still fresh, and with a slew of German "New Wave" releases encroaching on American movie workers' livelihoods, Lubitsch was not gladly received. He cut his trip short after little more than three weeks and returned to Germany. But he had already seen enough of the American film industry to know that its resources far outstripped the spartan German companies.

Hollywood silent films, 1922–1927 edit

 
Pola Negri and Ernst Lubitsch on set of Forbidden Paradise (1926)

Lubitsch finally left Germany for Hollywood in 1922, contracted as a director by Mary Pickford. He 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 marginally profitable for Warner Brothers, and Lubitsch's contract was eventually dissolved by mutual consent, with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Paramount buying out the remainder. His first film for MGM, The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg (1927), was well regarded, but lost money. The Patriot (1928), produced by Paramount, earned him his first Academy Award nomination for Best Directing.

Sound films, 1928–1940 edit

 
Lubitsch and his wife, Helene Kraus

Lubitsch seized upon the advent of sound films 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 (and earned himself another Oscar nomination). The Love Parade (1929), Monte Carlo (1930), and The Smiling Lieutenant (1931) were hailed by critics as masterpieces of the newly emerging musical genre. Lubitsch served on the faculty of the University of Southern California for a time.

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,[2] 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. The film was never available on videocassette and only became available on DVD in 2003.

“Lubitsch was perhaps the most successful of all the European talent imported by Hollywood. He had quickly developed the recognizable style of romantic comedy which came to be named after him, the pointed and patented “Lubitsch Touch,” and was widely recognized by audiences and adored by critics...One major reason for the ease of Lubitsch’s transition from Germany to America, and from silents to sound, was the carefully programmed way he approached the production of his films, [creating] a blueprint for a film that was followed on the set with the precision of a great master craftsman. Perhaps only Hitchcock approached the degree of pre-planning practised by Lubitsch, an approach responsible for a good deal of the similarities in their style...”—Film historian Richard Koszarski in Hollywood Directors: 1914–1940 (1976)[3]

Writing about Lubitsch's work, critic Michael Wilmington observed:

At once elegant and ribald, sophisticated and earthy, urbane and bemused, frivolous yet profound. They were directed by a man who was amused by sex rather than frightened of it – and who taught a whole culture to be amused by it as well.[4]

Whether with music, as in MGM's opulent The Merry Widow (1934) and 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 (also known as The Man I Killed, 1932).

In 1935, he was appointed Paramount's production manager,[5] 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 full-time moviemaking. In 1936, he became a naturalized citizen of the United States.

On July 27, 1935, he married British actress Vivian Gaye. They had one daughter, Nicola Anne Patricia Lubitsch, on October 27, 1938. When war was declared in Europe, Vivian Lubitsch and her daughter were staying in London. Vivian sent her baby daughter, accompanied by her nursemaid, Consuela Strohmeier, to Montreal aboard the Donaldson Atlantic Line's SS Athenia, which was sunk by a German submarine on September 3, 1939 with a loss of 118 passengers. The child and the nurse survived.

In 1939, Lubitsch moved to MGM, and 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 serious actress' laughing scene was promoted by studio publicists with the tagline "Garbo Laughs!"

In 1940, he directed The Shop Around the Corner, a 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 co-workers in Budapest, each unaware that the other is their secret romantic correspondent. David Thomson wrote:

The Shop Around the Corner...is among the greatest of films...This is a love story about a couple too much in love with love to fall tidily into each other's arms. Though it all works out finally, a mystery is left, plus the fear of how easily good people can miss their chances. Beautifully written (by Lubitsch's favorite writer, Samson Raphaelson), Shop Around the Corner is a treasury of hopes and anxieties based in the desperate faces of Stewart and Sullavan. It is a comedy so good it frightens us for them. The café conversation may be the best meeting in American film. The shot of Sullavan's gloved hand, and then her ruined face, searching an empty mail box for a letter is one of the most fragile moments in film. For an instant, the ravishing Sullavan looks old and ill, touched by loss.

Later films, 1941–1947 edit

Lubitsch next directed That Uncertain Feeling (1941), a remake of his 1925 film Kiss Me Again; an independent production by Lubitsch with Sol Lesser, it was not a commercial success. Lubitsch followed with a film that has become one of his best regarded comedies, To Be or Not to Be, a witty, dark and insightful film about a troupe of actors in Nazi-occupied Poland. He spent the balance of his career at 20th Century Fox, but a heart condition curtailed his activity, and he spent much of his time in supervisory capacities. His next picture was Heaven Can Wait (1943), his first color film and another Raphaelson collaboration.[6] The film is about Henry Van Cleve (played by Don Ameche), who presents himself at the gates of Hell to recount his life and the women he has known from his mother onward, concentrating on his happy but sometimes difficult 25 years of marriage to Martha (Gene Tierney).

After Heaven Can Wait, Lubitsch began work on A Royal Scandal (1945), a remake of his silent film Forbidden Paradise. Edwin Justus Mayer wrote the screenplay for A Royal Scandal and had worked with Lubitsch on To Be or Not to Be (1942). A Royal Scandal's pre-production and rehearsals were completed under Lubitsch, the original director of this film. He became ill during shooting, so Lubitsch hired Otto Preminger to finish the film. After A Royal Scandal, Lubitsch regained his health, and directed Cluny Brown (1946), with Charles Boyer and Jennifer Jones.

In March 1947, Lubitsch was awarded a Special Academy Award for his "25-year contribution to motion pictures". Presenter Mervyn LeRoy, calling Lubitsch "a master of innuendo", described some of his attributes as a filmmaker: "He had an adult mind and a hatred of saying things the obvious way." Lubitsch was the subject of several interviews at that time, and consistently cited The Shop Around the Corner as his favorite of his films. Considering his overall career, he mused "I made sometimes pictures which were not up to my standard, but then it can only be said about a mediocrity that all his works live up to his standard."

Death edit

Lubitsch died of a heart attack on November 30, 1947, in Hollywood at the age of 55.[7] His last film, That Lady in Ermine with Betty Grable, was completed by Otto Preminger and released posthumously in 1948.

When leaving Lubitsch's funeral, William Wyler said "No more Lubitsch." Billy Wilder responded "Worse than that. No more Lubitsch pictures."[6] Lubitsch is interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park. On February 8, 1960, Lubitsch received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contributions to the motion pictures industry, at 7040 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood.[8][9][10]

Lubitsch touch edit

Biographer Scott Eyman attempted to characterize the famed "Lubitsch touch":

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.[citation needed]

Career assessment and legacy edit

In 1946, he received an Honorary Academy Award for his distinguished contributions to the art of the motion picture. He was nominated three times for Best Director.[11]

The Ernst-Lubitsch-Prize, a German Comedy prize, was established in 1958 in an effort of Billy Wilder to keep the memory of his friend alive.[12]

Filmography edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Eyman 1993, p. 22.
  2. ^ Phillips, Michael (October 5, 2017). "'Trouble in Paradise' review: The Lubitsch touch, newly polished". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved March 1, 2020.
  3. ^ Koszarski, 1976.Hollywood Directors: 1914–1940 Oxford University Press. Library of Congress Catalog Number: 76-9262. p. 270.
  4. ^ "MOVIE REVIEWS : LACMA Marks Lubitsch Centenary". Los Angeles Times. May 29, 1992. Retrieved March 1, 2020.
  5. ^ Weinberg 1968, p. 348.
  6. ^ a b "That Certain Sophisticated Something". Los Angeles Times. April 15, 2001. Retrieved March 1, 2020.
  7. ^ Eyman 1993, p. 358.
  8. ^ Katz, Ephraim (2001). The Film Encyclopedia (4th ed.). Toledo, Ohio: Collins. ISBN 978-0-062-73755-7.
  9. ^ "Ernst Lubitsch | Hollywood Walk of Fame". www.walkoffame.com. Retrieved June 19, 2016.
  10. ^ "Ernst Lubitsch". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 19, 2016.
  11. ^ . Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Archived from the original on February 8, 2009. Retrieved January 2, 2015.
  12. ^ "Der Preis – Ernst Lubitsch Preis". lubitsch-preis.de.

Sources edit

  • Eyman, Scott (1993). Ernst Lubitsch: Laughter in Paradise. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-74936-1.
  • Weinberg, Herman G. (1968). The Lubitsch Touch: A Critical Study. New York: Dutton. ISBN 978-0-486-23483-0.

External links edit

  • Ernst Lubitsch at IMDb
  • Ernst Lubitsch at Find a Grave
  • The Cinema of Ernst Lubitsch
  • Virtual History

ernst, lubitsch, january, 1892, november, 1947, german, born, film, director, producer, writer, actor, urbane, comedies, manners, gave, reputation, being, hollywood, most, elegant, sophisticated, director, prestige, grew, films, were, promoted, having, lubitsc. Ernst Lubitsch ˈ l uː b ɪ tʃ January 29 1892 November 30 1947 was a German born film director producer writer and actor His urbane comedies of manners gave him the reputation of being Hollywood s most elegant and sophisticated director as his prestige grew his films were promoted as having the Lubitsch touch Among his best known works are Trouble in Paradise 1932 Design for Living 1933 Ninotchka 1939 The Shop Around the Corner 1940 To Be or Not to Be 1942 and Heaven Can Wait 1943 Ernst LubitschBorn 1892 01 29 January 29 1892Berlin Kingdom of Prussia German EmpireDiedNovember 30 1947 1947 11 30 aged 55 Los Angeles California U S Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park Glendale OccupationsFilm directorproducerwriteractorYears active1913 1947SpousesHelene Kraus m 1922 div 1930 wbr Vivian Gaye m 1935 div 1944 wbr Children1SignatureHe was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Director three times for The Patriot 1928 The Love Parade 1929 and Heaven Can Wait 1943 In 1946 he received an Honorary Academy Award for his distinguished contributions to the art of the motion picture Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Early work 1913 1921 2 2 Hollywood silent films 1922 1927 2 3 Sound films 1928 1940 2 4 Later films 1941 1947 2 5 Death 3 Lubitsch touch 4 Career assessment and legacy 5 Filmography 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 External linksEarly life editLubitsch was born in 1892 in Berlin 1 the son of Simon Lubitsch a tailor and Anna nee Lindenstaedt His family was Ashkenazi Jewish his father was born in Grodno in the Russian Empire now Belarus and his mother was from Wriezen outside Berlin He turned his back on his father s tailoring business to enter the theater and by 1911 was a member of Max Reinhardt s Deutsches Theater Career editEarly work 1913 1921 edit nbsp Lubitsch c 1920In 1913 Lubitsch made his film debut as an actor in The Ideal Wife He gradually abandoned acting to concentrate on directing He appeared in approximately 30 films as an actor between 1912 and 1920 His last film appearance as an actor was in the 1920 drama Sumurun opposite Pola Negri and Paul Wegener which he also directed 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 alternated between escapist comedies and large 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 released as Gypsy Blood in the U S in 1921 were selected by The New York Times on its list of the 15 most important movies of 1921 With glowing reviews under his belt and American money flowing his way Lubitsch formed his own production company and set to work on the high budget spectacular The Loves of Pharaoh 1921 Lubitsch sailed to the United States for the first time in December 1921 for what was intended as a lengthy publicity and professional factfinding tour scheduled to culminate in the February premiere of Pharaoh However with World War I still fresh and with a slew of German New Wave releases encroaching on American movie workers livelihoods Lubitsch was not gladly received He cut his trip short after little more than three weeks and returned to Germany But he had already seen enough of the American film industry to know that its resources far outstripped the spartan German companies Hollywood silent films 1922 1927 edit nbsp Pola Negri and Ernst Lubitsch on set of Forbidden Paradise 1926 Lubitsch finally left Germany for Hollywood in 1922 contracted as a director by Mary Pickford He 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 marginally profitable for Warner Brothers and Lubitsch s contract was eventually dissolved by mutual consent with Metro Goldwyn Mayer and Paramount buying out the remainder His first film for MGM The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg 1927 was well regarded but lost money The Patriot 1928 produced by Paramount earned him his first Academy Award nomination for Best Directing Sound films 1928 1940 edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Lubitsch and his wife Helene KrausLubitsch seized upon the advent of sound films 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 and earned himself another Oscar nomination The Love Parade 1929 Monte Carlo 1930 and The Smiling Lieutenant 1931 were hailed by critics as masterpieces of the newly emerging musical genre Lubitsch served on the faculty of the University of Southern California for a time 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 2 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 The film was never available on videocassette and only became available on DVD in 2003 Lubitsch was perhaps the most successful of all the European talent imported by Hollywood He had quickly developed the recognizable style of romantic comedy which came to be named after him the pointed and patented Lubitsch Touch and was widely recognized by audiences and adored by critics One major reason for the ease of Lubitsch s transition from Germany to America and from silents to sound was the carefully programmed way he approached the production of his films creating a blueprint for a film that was followed on the set with the precision of a great master craftsman Perhaps only Hitchcock approached the degree of pre planning practised by Lubitsch an approach responsible for a good deal of the similarities in their style Film historian Richard Koszarski in Hollywood Directors 1914 1940 1976 3 Writing about Lubitsch s work critic Michael Wilmington observed At once elegant and ribald sophisticated and earthy urbane and bemused frivolous yet profound They were directed by a man who was amused by sex rather than frightened of it and who taught a whole culture to be amused by it as well 4 Whether with music as in MGM s opulent The Merry Widow 1934 and 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 also known as The Man I Killed 1932 In 1935 he was appointed Paramount s production manager 5 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 full time moviemaking In 1936 he became a naturalized citizen of the United States On July 27 1935 he married British actress Vivian Gaye They had one daughter Nicola Anne Patricia Lubitsch on October 27 1938 When war was declared in Europe Vivian Lubitsch and her daughter were staying in London Vivian sent her baby daughter accompanied by her nursemaid Consuela Strohmeier to Montreal aboard the Donaldson Atlantic Line s SS Athenia which was sunk by a German submarine on September 3 1939 with a loss of 118 passengers The child and the nurse survived In 1939 Lubitsch moved to MGM and 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 serious actress laughing scene was promoted by studio publicists with the tagline Garbo Laughs In 1940 he directed The Shop Around the Corner a 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 co workers in Budapest each unaware that the other is their secret romantic correspondent David Thomson wrote The Shop Around the Corner is among the greatest of films This is a love story about a couple too much in love with love to fall tidily into each other s arms Though it all works out finally a mystery is left plus the fear of how easily good people can miss their chances Beautifully written by Lubitsch s favorite writer Samson Raphaelson Shop Around the Corner is a treasury of hopes and anxieties based in the desperate faces of Stewart and Sullavan It is a comedy so good it frightens us for them The cafe conversation may be the best meeting in American film The shot of Sullavan s gloved hand and then her ruined face searching an empty mail box for a letter is one of the most fragile moments in film For an instant the ravishing Sullavan looks old and ill touched by loss Later films 1941 1947 edit Lubitsch next directed That Uncertain Feeling 1941 a remake of his 1925 film Kiss Me Again an independent production by Lubitsch with Sol Lesser it was not a commercial success Lubitsch followed with a film that has become one of his best regarded comedies To Be or Not to Be a witty dark and insightful film about a troupe of actors in Nazi occupied Poland He spent the balance of his career at 20th Century Fox but a heart condition curtailed his activity and he spent much of his time in supervisory capacities His next picture was Heaven Can Wait 1943 his first color film and another Raphaelson collaboration 6 The film is about Henry Van Cleve played by Don Ameche who presents himself at the gates of Hell to recount his life and the women he has known from his mother onward concentrating on his happy but sometimes difficult 25 years of marriage to Martha Gene Tierney After Heaven Can Wait Lubitsch began work on A Royal Scandal 1945 a remake of his silent film Forbidden Paradise Edwin Justus Mayer wrote the screenplay for A Royal Scandal and had worked with Lubitsch on To Be or Not to Be 1942 A Royal Scandal s pre production and rehearsals were completed under Lubitsch the original director of this film He became ill during shooting so Lubitsch hired Otto Preminger to finish the film After A Royal Scandal Lubitsch regained his health and directed Cluny Brown 1946 with Charles Boyer and Jennifer Jones In March 1947 Lubitsch was awarded a Special Academy Award for his 25 year contribution to motion pictures Presenter Mervyn LeRoy calling Lubitsch a master of innuendo described some of his attributes as a filmmaker He had an adult mind and a hatred of saying things the obvious way Lubitsch was the subject of several interviews at that time and consistently cited The Shop Around the Corner as his favorite of his films Considering his overall career he mused I made sometimes pictures which were not up to my standard but then it can only be said about a mediocrity that all his works live up to his standard Death edit Lubitsch died of a heart attack on November 30 1947 in Hollywood at the age of 55 7 His last film That Lady in Ermine with Betty Grable was completed by Otto Preminger and released posthumously in 1948 When leaving Lubitsch s funeral William Wyler said No more Lubitsch Billy Wilder responded Worse than that No more Lubitsch pictures 6 Lubitsch is interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park On February 8 1960 Lubitsch received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contributions to the motion pictures industry at 7040 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 8 9 10 Lubitsch touch editBiographer Scott Eyman attempted to characterize the famed Lubitsch touch 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 citation needed Career assessment and legacy editIn 1946 he received an Honorary Academy Award for his distinguished contributions to the art of the motion picture He was nominated three times for Best Director 11 The Ernst Lubitsch Prize a German Comedy prize was established in 1958 in an effort of Billy Wilder to keep the memory of his friend alive 12 Filmography editMain article Ernst Lubitsch filmographyReferences editCitations edit Eyman 1993 p 22 Phillips Michael October 5 2017 Trouble in Paradise review The Lubitsch touch newly polished chicagotribune com Retrieved March 1 2020 Koszarski 1976 Hollywood Directors 1914 1940 Oxford University Press Library of Congress Catalog Number 76 9262 p 270 MOVIE REVIEWS LACMA Marks Lubitsch Centenary Los Angeles Times May 29 1992 Retrieved March 1 2020 Weinberg 1968 p 348 a b That Certain Sophisticated Something Los Angeles Times April 15 2001 Retrieved March 1 2020 Eyman 1993 p 358 Katz Ephraim 2001 The Film Encyclopedia 4th ed Toledo Ohio Collins ISBN 978 0 062 73755 7 Ernst Lubitsch Hollywood Walk of Fame www walkoffame com Retrieved June 19 2016 Ernst Lubitsch Los Angeles Times Retrieved June 19 2016 The Official Academy Awards Database Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Archived from the original on February 8 2009 Retrieved January 2 2015 Der Preis Ernst Lubitsch Preis lubitsch preis de Sources edit Eyman Scott 1993 Ernst Lubitsch Laughter in Paradise New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 74936 1 Weinberg Herman G 1968 The Lubitsch Touch A Critical Study New York Dutton ISBN 978 0 486 23483 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ernst Lubitsch Ernst Lubitsch at IMDb Ernst Lubitsch at Find a Grave The Cinema of Ernst Lubitsch Virtual History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ernst Lubitsch amp oldid 1193990545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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