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Salka Viertel

Salka Viertel (15 June 1889 – 20 October 1978) was an Austrian actress and Hollywood screenwriter. While under contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer from 1933 to 1937, Viertel co-wrote the scripts for many movies, particularly those starring her close friend Greta Garbo, including Queen Christina (1933) and Anna Karenina (1935). She also played opposite Garbo in MGM's German-language version of Anna Christie in 1930.[1]

Salka Viertel
Born
Salomea Sara Steuermann

(1889-06-15)15 June 1889
Died20 October 1978(1978-10-20) (aged 89)
Klosters, Switzerland
OccupationActress/Screenwriter
Years active1929–1959
Spouse
(m. 1918; div. 1947)
Children3, including Peter Viertel

Early life and career edit

Viertel was born Salomea Sara Steuermann in Sambor, a city then in the province of Galicia,[2] which was a part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, but today is in western Ukraine. Her father, Joseph Steuermann, was a lawyer and the mayor of Sambor[2] before antisemitism forced him to renounce his office. Her mother, Auguste (née Amster) Steuermann, died in 1952 at Viertel's home in Santa Monica. Her siblings were the composer and pianist Eduard Steuermann; Rosa (1891–1972), married from 1922 until her death to the actor and director Josef Gielen; and Polish national football player Zygmunt Steuermann, who perished during the Holocaust.[3]

After debuting as Salome Steuermann at the Pressburg Stadttheater (regional theater), Viertel had engagements in typical spas of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. In 1911 she played briefly under Max Reinhardt in Berlin, whereupon she followed an offer in 1913 to go to Vienna to work on the Neue Wiener Bühne. There she met her husband, author and director Berthold Viertel, and they married in 1918.[2] They raised three sons—Hans, Peter, and Thomas—before divorcing in 1947. In 1920, Salka Viertel went to Hamburg to the Great Theater, later to Düsseldorf. Her husband worked from 1920 in Berlin, where he founded the collective theatre "Die Troupe" and worked for UFA, the major German film production company.

The Viertels were part of “Hitler’s gift to America,” according to one biographer, since so many film artists throughout Europe and the German-speaking artistic community in particular fled his regime, including, notably, fellow Austrian writer Vicki Baum.[4] As was the case with US universities in the 1930s, Saunders notes that Hollywood studios could be so selective "that the list of emigres reads almost as a who's who of Weimar production"; he places Berthold Viertel as "only marginally less significant" than other emigres whom he considers "without peer."[5] In 1928, at FW Murnau's instigation, the family went to Hollywood, where Berthold Viertel received a contract with Fox Film Corporation as a director and writer.[2]

Despite her success on German and Austrian stages, Salka Viertel was only modestly successful as an actor in movies. Agreeing with Max Reinhardt, whom the Viertels ran into in New York on their way to Los Angeles,[2] Viertel herself said she was "neither pretty nor young enough" for a career in film. One of her most successful roles was Marthy in the German version of Anna Christie, which she took over at the request of Garbo[2] (it was originally intended for Marie Dressler). She became a mentor and friend to Greta Garbo and contributed to scripts for the famous actress for such films as Queen Christina, Anna Karenina, and Two-Faced Woman.[2] However, the plan to write a commercial script for Hollywood together with Bertolt Brecht, who also lived in exile in the United States, failed.

Social activism edit

The Viertels, members of the intelligentsia in Europe, moved to the United States in 1928 for a planned four-year stay.[1] The Viertels initially lived on Fairfax Avenue in Los Angeles, before renting a house at 165 Mabery Road in Santa Monica, California.[2]

In 1932, following Hitler's rise, they decided to stay in Santa Monica, where their sons grew up. Their home in Santa Monica Canyon was the site of salons and meetings of the Hollywood intelligentsia and the émigré community of European intellectuals, particularly at their Sunday night tea parties.[1] Her guests included not only Sergei Eisenstein and Charlie Chaplin but also Arnold Schoenberg, Christopher Isherwood (who moved into Viertel's garage apartment with his boyfriend in 1946[4]), Hanns Eisler, Bertolt Brecht, Max Reinhardt, and Thomas Mann. Brecht met Charles Laughton at her house, where Ava Gardner was also a guest.[6]

Viertel not only acted as a diplomat among the politically diverse emigré community but often played a practical role as a go-between among the emigré and Hollywood communities.[6] She actively fundraised for Eisenstein's Que Viva Mexico! project. Composer Franz Waxman met director James Whale through her and wrote his first Hollywood soundtrack for Whale. Charles Boyer was among those whom she helped gain a foothold within the Hollywood film industry.[2]

In the 1930s and 1940s, while fighting against National Socialism, she came to the aid of those trapped in Europe,[7] in part by helping to found the European Film Fund,[2] which brokered contracts with major Hollywood studios. Through the Fund's assistance, notable artists such as Leonhard Frank, Heinrich Mann, Alfred Polgar, Walter Mehring, and Friedrich Torberg received emergency visas that enabled them to escape the Nazis. Viertel also helped such emigrés "find their footing when they arrived."[6] Ross goes so far as to write that "Weimar on the Pacific might never have existed without her."[6]

With the onset of the Cold War and the McCarthy era, Viertel was among the Hollywood writers suspected of being communists who were blacklisted. As a result of government hostility raised by unfounded allegations of communism, she was denied a passport. Eventually she was granted a temporary one, but it arrived too late for her to travel to Europe to see her dying ex-husband before his death.[4]

Later life edit

After her divorce in 1947, Salka lived in Brentwood, Southern California. In 1953, she left the U.S. and settled in Klosters in Switzerland, where later, her son Peter and his second wife, actress Deborah Kerr,[2] lived.

In 1969, her autobiography, The Kindness of Strangers, was published; it was reissued in 2019.[6]

Salka Viertel died in Klosters, Switzerland, on 20 October 1978, aged 89.

Selected filmography edit

Actress

Screenwriter

Bibliography edit

  • Carola Bebermeier. (2021) "Sundays at Salka’s" – Salka Viertel’s Los Angeles Salon as a Space of (Music-)Cultural Translation, in: Musicologia Austriaca: Journal for Austrian Music Studies, Juni 2021, https://musau.org/parts/neue-article-page/view/113.
  • SateLIT 2: Salka Vietel. Berlin - Hollywood (2021). Exhibition Stiftung Brandenburger Tor im Max Liebermann Haus, Berlin. September 8 to November 21, 2021.
  • Añó, Núria. (2020) The Salon of Exiled Artists in California: Salka Viertel took in actors, prominent intellectuals and anonymous people in exile fleeing from Nazism, ISBN 9780463206126, ISBN 9798647624079, Los Gatos: Smashwords.
  • Prager, Katharina. (2007) "Ich bin nicht gone Hollywood!" Salka Viertel – Ein Leben in Theater und Film, ISBN 978-3-7003-1592-6, Wien: Braumüller Verlag.
  • Nottelmann, Nicole. (2011) Ich liebe dich. Fur immer: Greta Garbo und Salka Viertel. Berlin: Aufbau Verlag.
  • Rifkind, Donna (2020). The Sun and Her Stars: Salka Viertel and Hitler's Exiles in the Golden Age of Hollywood. New York: Other Press. ISBN 9781590517215. OCLC 1255775938.
  • Viertel, Salka (1969). The Kindness of Strangers (1st ed.). New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN 9780030764707. OCLC 1088134575. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  • Viertel, Salka (2019). The Kindness of Strangers. Introduction by Lawrence Weschler, afterword by Donna Rifkind (2nd ed.). New York: New York Review Books. ISBN 9781681372747. OCLC 1178807096.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Bahr, Erhardt (2008). Weimar on the Pacific: German Exile Culture in Los Angeles and the Crisis of Modernism. University of California Press. pp. 296–7. ISBN 978-0-520-25795-5. Retrieved 15 July 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Rickey, Carrie (5 February 2020). "Screenwriter for Garbo, savior for exiles fleeing Hitler". Forward. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  3. ^ Melnyk, Lidia (2021). "Steuermann, Gimpel, Baller – Between the Vienna Dream and Hollywood Reality: World-Famous Jewish Pianists and Their Routes From Galicia to Vienna and the USA". In Pijarowska, Aleksandra (ed.). Music – The Cultural Bridge: Essence, Context, References (PDF). Wrocław: Karol Lipiński Academy of Music. p. 113. Retrieved 30 June 2022.
  4. ^ a b c Rifkind, Donna (2020). The Sun and Her Stars: Salka Viertel and Hitler's Exiles in the Golden Age of Hollywood. New York: Other Press. ISBN 9781590517215. OCLC 1255775938.
  5. ^ Saunders, Thomas J. (1994). Hollywood in Berlin: American Cinema and Weimar Germany. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 197–98. ISBN 0-520-08354-7.
  6. ^ a b c d e Ross, Alex (9 March 2020). "Exodus: The Haunted Idyll of Exiled German Novelists in Wartime Los Angeles". The New Yorker. pp. 38–43. Retrieved 6 August 2020.
  7. ^ "German Exiles in Southern California – Berthold Viertel (1885–1953) & Salka Viertel (1889–1978)" 2007-08-29 at the Wayback Machine, Feuchtwanger Memorial Library, University of Southern California

External links edit

  • Salka Viertel at IMDb
  • A webpage about Salka Viertel with images
  • Photographs of Viertel and her siblings; mainly of her brother Eduard Steuermann

salka, viertel, june, 1889, october, 1978, austrian, actress, hollywood, screenwriter, while, under, contract, with, metro, goldwyn, mayer, from, 1933, 1937, viertel, wrote, scripts, many, movies, particularly, those, starring, close, friend, greta, garbo, inc. Salka Viertel 15 June 1889 20 October 1978 was an Austrian actress and Hollywood screenwriter While under contract with Metro Goldwyn Mayer from 1933 to 1937 Viertel co wrote the scripts for many movies particularly those starring her close friend Greta Garbo including Queen Christina 1933 and Anna Karenina 1935 She also played opposite Garbo in MGM s German language version of Anna Christie in 1930 1 Salka ViertelBornSalomea Sara Steuermann 1889 06 15 15 June 1889Sambor Austro Hungarian EmpireDied20 October 1978 1978 10 20 aged 89 Klosters SwitzerlandOccupationActress ScreenwriterYears active1929 1959SpouseBerthold Viertel m 1918 div 1947 wbr Children3 including Peter Viertel Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Social activism 3 Later life 4 Selected filmography 5 Bibliography 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and career editThis 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 Find sources Salka Viertel news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Viertel was born Salomea Sara Steuermann in Sambor a city then in the province of Galicia 2 which was a part of the Austro Hungarian Empire but today is in western Ukraine Her father Joseph Steuermann was a lawyer and the mayor of Sambor 2 before antisemitism forced him to renounce his office Her mother Auguste nee Amster Steuermann died in 1952 at Viertel s home in Santa Monica Her siblings were the composer and pianist Eduard Steuermann Rosa 1891 1972 married from 1922 until her death to the actor and director Josef Gielen and Polish national football player Zygmunt Steuermann who perished during the Holocaust 3 After debuting as Salome Steuermann at the Pressburg Stadttheater regional theater Viertel had engagements in typical spas of the Austro Hungarian Empire In 1911 she played briefly under Max Reinhardt in Berlin whereupon she followed an offer in 1913 to go to Vienna to work on the Neue Wiener Buhne There she met her husband author and director Berthold Viertel and they married in 1918 2 They raised three sons Hans Peter and Thomas before divorcing in 1947 In 1920 Salka Viertel went to Hamburg to the Great Theater later to Dusseldorf Her husband worked from 1920 in Berlin where he founded the collective theatre Die Troupe and worked for UFA the major German film production company The Viertels were part of Hitler s gift to America according to one biographer since so many film artists throughout Europe and the German speaking artistic community in particular fled his regime including notably fellow Austrian writer Vicki Baum 4 As was the case with US universities in the 1930s Saunders notes that Hollywood studios could be so selective that the list of emigres reads almost as a who s who of Weimar production he places Berthold Viertel as only marginally less significant than other emigres whom he considers without peer 5 In 1928 at FW Murnau s instigation the family went to Hollywood where Berthold Viertel received a contract with Fox Film Corporation as a director and writer 2 Despite her success on German and Austrian stages Salka Viertel was only modestly successful as an actor in movies Agreeing with Max Reinhardt whom the Viertels ran into in New York on their way to Los Angeles 2 Viertel herself said she was neither pretty nor young enough for a career in film One of her most successful roles was Marthy in the German version of Anna Christie which she took over at the request of Garbo 2 it was originally intended for Marie Dressler She became a mentor and friend to Greta Garbo and contributed to scripts for the famous actress for such films as Queen Christina Anna Karenina and Two Faced Woman 2 However the plan to write a commercial script for Hollywood together with Bertolt Brecht who also lived in exile in the United States failed Social activism editThe Viertels members of the intelligentsia in Europe moved to the United States in 1928 for a planned four year stay 1 The Viertels initially lived on Fairfax Avenue in Los Angeles before renting a house at 165 Mabery Road in Santa Monica California 2 In 1932 following Hitler s rise they decided to stay in Santa Monica where their sons grew up Their home in Santa Monica Canyon was the site of salons and meetings of the Hollywood intelligentsia and the emigre community of European intellectuals particularly at their Sunday night tea parties 1 Her guests included not only Sergei Eisenstein and Charlie Chaplin but also Arnold Schoenberg Christopher Isherwood who moved into Viertel s garage apartment with his boyfriend in 1946 4 Hanns Eisler Bertolt Brecht Max Reinhardt and Thomas Mann Brecht met Charles Laughton at her house where Ava Gardner was also a guest 6 Viertel not only acted as a diplomat among the politically diverse emigre community but often played a practical role as a go between among the emigre and Hollywood communities 6 She actively fundraised for Eisenstein s Que Viva Mexico project Composer Franz Waxman met director James Whale through her and wrote his first Hollywood soundtrack for Whale Charles Boyer was among those whom she helped gain a foothold within the Hollywood film industry 2 In the 1930s and 1940s while fighting against National Socialism she came to the aid of those trapped in Europe 7 in part by helping to found the European Film Fund 2 which brokered contracts with major Hollywood studios Through the Fund s assistance notable artists such as Leonhard Frank Heinrich Mann Alfred Polgar Walter Mehring and Friedrich Torberg received emergency visas that enabled them to escape the Nazis Viertel also helped such emigres find their footing when they arrived 6 Ross goes so far as to write that Weimar on the Pacific might never have existed without her 6 With the onset of the Cold War and the McCarthy era Viertel was among the Hollywood writers suspected of being communists who were blacklisted As a result of government hostility raised by unfounded allegations of communism she was denied a passport Eventually she was granted a temporary one but it arrived too late for her to travel to Europe to see her dying ex husband before his death 4 Later life editAfter her divorce in 1947 Salka lived in Brentwood Southern California In 1953 she left the U S and settled in Klosters in Switzerland where later her son Peter and his second wife actress Deborah Kerr 2 lived In 1969 her autobiography The Kindness of Strangers was published it was reissued in 2019 6 Salka Viertel died in Klosters Switzerland on 20 October 1978 aged 89 Selected filmography editActress Seven Faces 1929 as Catherine the Great Anna Christie 1930 German language version as Marty Owens The Mask Falls 1931 The Sacred Flame 1931 Screenwriter Queen Christina 1933 The Painted Veil 1934 Anna Karenina 1935 Conquest 1937 Two Faced Woman 1941 Deep Valley 1947 Loves of Three Queens 1954 Prisoner of the Volga 1958 Bibliography editCarola Bebermeier 2021 Sundays at Salka s Salka Viertel s Los Angeles Salon as a Space of Music Cultural Translation in Musicologia Austriaca Journal for Austrian Music Studies Juni 2021 https musau org parts neue article page view 113 SateLIT 2 Salka Vietel Berlin Hollywood 2021 Exhibition Stiftung Brandenburger Tor im Max Liebermann Haus Berlin September 8 to November 21 2021 Ano Nuria 2020 The Salon of Exiled Artists in California Salka Viertel took in actors prominent intellectuals and anonymous people in exile fleeing from Nazism ISBN 9780463206126 ISBN 9798647624079 Los Gatos Smashwords Prager Katharina 2007 Ich bin nicht gone Hollywood Salka Viertel Ein Leben in Theater und Film ISBN 978 3 7003 1592 6 Wien Braumuller Verlag Nottelmann Nicole 2011 Ich liebe dich Fur immer Greta Garbo und Salka Viertel Berlin Aufbau Verlag Rifkind Donna 2020 The Sun and Her Stars Salka Viertel and Hitler s Exiles in the Golden Age of Hollywood New York Other Press ISBN 9781590517215 OCLC 1255775938 Viertel Salka 1969 The Kindness of Strangers 1st ed New York Holt Rinehart and Winston ISBN 9780030764707 OCLC 1088134575 Retrieved 7 July 2022 Viertel Salka 2019 The Kindness of Strangers Introduction by Lawrence Weschler afterword by Donna Rifkind 2nd ed New York New York Review Books ISBN 9781681372747 OCLC 1178807096 References edit a b c Bahr Erhardt 2008 Weimar on the Pacific German Exile Culture in Los Angeles and the Crisis of Modernism University of California Press pp 296 7 ISBN 978 0 520 25795 5 Retrieved 15 July 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k Rickey Carrie 5 February 2020 Screenwriter for Garbo savior for exiles fleeing Hitler Forward Retrieved 5 February 2020 Melnyk Lidia 2021 Steuermann Gimpel Baller Between the Vienna Dream and Hollywood Reality World Famous Jewish Pianists and Their Routes From Galicia to Vienna and the USA In Pijarowska Aleksandra ed Music The Cultural Bridge Essence Context References PDF Wroclaw Karol Lipinski Academy of Music p 113 Retrieved 30 June 2022 a b c Rifkind Donna 2020 The Sun and Her Stars Salka Viertel and Hitler s Exiles in the Golden Age of Hollywood New York Other Press ISBN 9781590517215 OCLC 1255775938 Saunders Thomas J 1994 Hollywood in Berlin American Cinema and Weimar Germany Berkeley University of California Press pp 197 98 ISBN 0 520 08354 7 a b c d e Ross Alex 9 March 2020 Exodus The Haunted Idyll of Exiled German Novelists in Wartime Los Angeles The New Yorker pp 38 43 Retrieved 6 August 2020 German Exiles in Southern California Berthold Viertel 1885 1953 amp Salka Viertel 1889 1978 Archived 2007 08 29 at the Wayback Machine Feuchtwanger Memorial Library University of Southern CaliforniaExternal links editSalka Viertel at IMDb A webpage about Salka Viertel with images Photographs of Viertel and her siblings mainly of her brother Eduard Steuermann Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Salka Viertel amp oldid 1185069835, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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