By
Ed Garea
In
the mid-Thirties, a meteor burned brightly over Hollywood. And like
most meteors, it burned out quickly, but while it was active, it was
one of the brightest ever to be seen in that town. That meteor was
named Luise Rainer.
Rainer
was the first actor to win multiple Academy Awards and the first to
win them consecutively. She won the Best Actress statue for her
performance as Anna Held in 1936’s The Great Ziegfeld,
and Best Actress the next year for her performance as O-Lan in The
Good Earth. Yet, her stay at the top of her craft was short, and
by 1938, her career at MGM was over. She tried a comeback for
Paramount in 1943 in the film Hostages, but we would not
see her again on the silver screen until 1997 in the film The
Gambler.
Rainer
(pronounced “rye-ner”) was born on January 12, 1910, in
Dusseldorf, Germany, into an upper-class Jewish family. Her father,
Heinrich, was a businessman who settled in Europe after spending most
of his childhood in Texas, where he was sent at the age of six as an
orphan. Her mother Emilie (nee Konigsberger) was a pianist from a
cultured family.
Her
father wanted her to attend finishing school and eventually marry the
“right sort” of man, but Luise, who was rebellious by nature,
fell in love with the world of entertainment, inspired at the age of
six by the circus. At the age of 16, she decided to follow her dream
and become an actress. She began studying acting under the great Max
Reinhardt, and by the age of 18, many critics were hailing her
talent. She became a member of Reinhardt’s Vienna theater ensemble
and scored several major successes on the Berlin stage, including
George Bernard Shaw’s Saint Joan, Shakespeare’s Measure
for Measure, and Pirandello’s Six Characters in Search
of an Author.
She
began her film career in Germany in 1930, and in 1934, was signed by
MGM talent scout Phil Berg, who offered her a three-year contract,
thinking she would appeal to the same audience that flocked to see
Greta Garbo. Rainer, for her part, stated in an interview that she
had no real interest in films until she saw the 1932 production of A
Farewell to Arms. After that, she said, film moved to the
forefront in her career. Her decision to leave Europe for America was
made easier by the ascension of Adolf Hitler in Germany and his
draconian anti-Semitic laws, which would have made it impossible for
her to work in Germany.
She
sailed to America aboard the Ile de France in 1935.
The first thing her handlers at MGM had to do was to subdue her
rather pronounced Mittel-European accent. Actress Constance Collier
was given the assignment, and under her tutelage, Rainer’s command
of English grew rapidly. She was then cast in MGM’s 1935
comedy-romance Escapade, after Myrna Loy turned the role
down. It was a remake of the 1934 Austrian film Masquerade,
starring William Powell as an artist who persuades the married Rainer
to pose semi-nude for him, but when the illustrated poster is
printed, it causes a potential scandal.
Her
next film was The Great Ziegfeld, again co-starring
Powell, in which she played the real-life character of Anna Held, the
actress, singer and (scorned) common-law wife of the showman Florenz
Ziegfeld, played by Powell. She almost didn’t get the part. MGM
chief Louis B. Mayer thought the part was too small for such a star,
but Irving Thalberg felt she was the only actress on the MGM lot that
could play it. Shortly after filming began in 1935, doubts about
Rainer’s ability to play Held began to circulate in the press,
mainly centering on the fact that she didn’t resemble the
Polish-born Held.
But
as Thalberg predicted, Rainer more than held her own in the part. In
what may be the most famous telephone scene in film history, the
heartbroken Anna attempts to congratulate Ziegfeld on his marriage to
Billie Burke (Loy). As the camera records her, she smiles through
tears with a voice alternating between false gaiety and utter
despair. As she hangs up that camera catches her breaking down into
rivers of tears.
Later
Hollywood legend would have Rainer writing the teary telephone scene
for the film, and Mayer, thinking it too dreary, trying his best to
excise it from the picture. Ironically, it is widely believed that it
was that very scene, and Rainer’s tour de force performance
in it, that clinched the Oscar. Rainer later said in an
interview that she based her interpretation of the scene on Jean
Cocteau’s play La Voix Humaine: "Cocteau's
play is just a telephone conversation about a woman who has lost her
beloved to another woman."
On
the evening of the Oscar ceremonies, Rainer stayed home, not
expecting to win. When Mayer learned she had won the award, he sent
MGM publicity head Howard Strickling to her home to fetch her. As she
finally arrived, master of ceremonies George Jessel mistakenly
introduced her, a task that was originally scheduled for Bette Davis.
Now
that she had the Oscar, pundits wondered how she would follow it up.
Rainer’s next film was The Good Earth (1937), in
the role of O-Lan. Her co-star was Paul Muni, playing her husband,
Wang Lung. Muni’s casting actually opened the door for Rainer to
play O-Lan. Thalberg’s original choice was actress Anna May Wong,
but once Muni was signed, Thalberg knew the Hays Office would
not allow even the slightest hint of miscegenation, even between an
actual Chinese woman and a Caucuasian actor in yellow-face drag.
O-Lan
presented a challenge to Rainer, as the character was the complete
opposite of Anna Held. Whereas Held was talkative, O-Lan was
practically mute, speaking only a few lines of dialogue throughout
the movie, which required Rainer to do a complete turnaround. Again
Mayer opposed her casting, wanting her to remain a glamorous star,
while Thalberg enthusiastically supported her in her desire to
stretch out in unaccustomed roles. She refused to wear heavy makeup
or don a Chinese mask made especially for her by the makeup
department, preferring to express herself without prosthetics.
The
results of Rainer’s decision helped her to portray a Chinese
woman far superior to those Loy assayed in her Oriental vamp
phase or Katharine Hepburn in 1944’s Dragon Seed. In an
interview in the late '90s, Rainer praised her director, Sidney
Franklin, as "wonderful," and explained that she used an
acting technique similar to "The Method" being pioneered by
husband Clifford Odet's Group Theatre.
At
any rate, she collected another Oscar as Best Actress, becoming the
first actor to win in consecutive years and establishing a record for
actresses that lasted 30 years before Hepburn matched it. Her win was
considered something of an upset, the favorite being Garbo for her
performance in Camille. She was on the threshold of greatness:
the public adored her, and even rivals like Carole Lombard, Norma
Shearer, and Loy concurred. But suddenly her career went into
free-fall. She came to see her Oscars not as a blessing, but as a
curse, setting expectations so high as to be impossible to achieve.
She made five more films for MGM, but with the exception of
1938’s The Great Waltz, they were critical and box
office failures.
Because
Reiner refused to be stereotyped and knuckle under to the studio
system, Mayer refused to be sympathetic to her demands for serious
roles. The fact that she was also fighting for a higher salary didn’t
help matters either. She soon acquired the label of being difficult
and temperamental, which caused her to miss out on serious roles such
as the female lead in the Edward G. Robinson opus, The Last
Gangster (1937), which, ironically went to Viennese actress
Rose Stradner. Her last film for MGM was the disappointing Dramatic
School (1938). By this time, Rainer was listed, along with
Garbo, Joan Crawford, Shearer, Mae West, Marlene Dietrich, Hepburn,
Fred Astaire, Kay Francis, and others, as “Box Office Poison” by
the Independent Theatre Owners of America.
After
finishing Dramatic School, Rainer abandoned Hollywood for
New York, where her then-husband, playwright Odets, was living.
Rainer
was also unhappy off the set as well. Her marriage to Odets, whom she
met at the Brown Derby while
dining with Gershwin and composer Harold Arlen, and
married in 1937, was also in free-fall. Odets cheated on her and, as
she told Vanity Fair, reacted so coldly to the news she
was pregnant that she opted for an abortion. Odets was also extremely
jealous, even accusing Rainer’s friend Albert Einstein of having an
affair with his wife. She and Odets divorced in 1940.
Her
unhappiness also extended to Hollywood itself, which she saw
as intellectually shallow and absurdly materialistic. In a 2009
interview with The Daily Telegraph, she said Robert
Taylor had once invited her to lunch. When she asked him his
ambition, he replied that he wanted to own 10 very good suits. That
was why, she said, she preferred the company of George Gershwin,
Thomas Mann, Frank Lloyd Wright, Einstein and other intellectuals and
artists to that of Hollywood people. It all boiled over in her
oft-repeated account of her last meeting with Mayer, which over the
years became a Hollywood legend.
"Louis
B. sent for me and said, 'I understand that you want to leave us.' I
said, 'Yes, Mr. Mayer, my source is dried out.'" She explained
that she had run out of inspiration. "He looked at me and he
said, 'What do you need a source for? Don't you have a director?'
What could I say? He looked at me for a long time," and then he
delivered his you'll-never-work-in-Hollywood-again threat. She
managed a dignified reply and left, heading
first to New York City, and later relocating to Europe. She was not
yet 30, and yet her Hollywood career was over. While in Europe,
she studied medicine, aided orphaned refugees of the Spanish
Civil War, appeared at war bond rallies in the United States and
entertained Allied troops in North Africa and Italy during World War
II.
When
World War II broke out in Europe, Rainer fled to America with her
family. Her German-born father was also an American citizen, allowing
them all to escape Hitler and the Holocaust. Rainer returned to
Hollywood in 1942, her contract at MGM long expired. David Rose, head
of Paramount, offered her the starring role in an English film shot
on location, but war conditions prevented her from accepting the
role. Rose then suggested her in 1942 to take a screen test for
the lead role in For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943), but
Ingrid Bergman was cast. Rainer eventually settled on a role
in Hostages (1943), telling the press during
interviews that while it was something unspectacular, she
nevertheless hoped it was a step back in the right direction. Alas,
it was not to be and it wasn’t until 1997 that she would again
appear in a film, taking a small role in the English production
of The Gambler.
It’s
not that she wasn’t tempted. Director Federico Fellini pursued her
to play “Delores,” a cameo role he wrote for her in his 1960
film La Dolce Vita. But it never came off, even though
she came to Rome, with the reasons still unclear to this day. One
story has it that she insisted on writing the part herself, which for
Fellini was a no-no. Another has it that she refused because the role
required an on-set sex scene with co-star Marcello Mastroianni.
At any rate, after her refusal, the role was excised from the
screenplay.
She
made sporadic television and stage appearances following her and her
husband's move to Britain, appearing as Countess De Roy in an episode
titled “Finest Hour” for the World War II television
series Combat! It aired on December 21, 1965. In
1983, she played Dorothy Fielding in an episode of The Love
Boat that aired on March 3.
Regarding
her personal life, things took a turn for the better in 1945. Rainer
married publisher Robert Knittel. The marriage was a very happy one,
lasting until Knittel’s death in 1989. In 1946. they welcomed
daughter Francesca. Rainer abandoned filmmaking, though, as
previously mentioned, she did make occasional appearances on the
stage and television. She and Knittel split their time between
residences in Geneva, Switzerland and Eaton Square, London. Their
London residence was an apartment in a building once inhabited by
actress Vivien Leigh.
The
couple loved travel, books, plays, and music. Their friends reflected
their interests and included such luminaries as Arturo Toscanini,
Marian Anderson, Thomas Mann and Bertolt Brecht. Of special interest
to the couple was climbing in the Alps. “He was a mountain climber,
and he taught me how to climb,” she recalled years after her
husband’s death in 1989. “Robert went with a fiddle up to the
Matterhorn, and at the top of the Matterhorn he played a Bach
sonata.”
In
the early 1980s, Rainer memorized all 900 lines of "Enoch
Arden," Tennyson's epic poem, which she performed in Europe and
the United States, including at UCLA's Schoenberg Hall. After Knittel
died, she maintained an active life in London.
Rainer
returned to Hollywood for the 1998 and 2003 Academy Awards shows
honoring previous Oscar winners, and in 2010 for the TCM Classic Film
Festival, where she was interviewed by Robert Osborne and presented a
screening of The Good Earth. 2010 was a special year for
her, as she celebrated her centenary. She was feted at the British
Film Institute, where she was interviewed before screenings
of The Good Earth and The Great Waltz.
In
2011, Rainer was at the center of a controversy involving her
inclusion on the Boulevard der Stars in Berlin, which was created to
honor actors and directors from German film and television. Despite
being Germany's only Academy Award winning actress, Rainer had been
overlooked when the Boulevard opened in 2010. In 2011, she was
nominated, but initially rejected by the jury (Senta Berger, Gero
Gandert, Uwe Kammann, Dieter Kossliock, and Hans Helmut Prinzler).
In
October 2010, New Zealand music executive Paul Baylay, who had
noticed Rainer's omission on the Boulevard, began a campaign to get
the actress a star. Baylay campaigned in Germany, lobbying press and
politicians to have the actress and her work recognized. Baylay also
picked up a key supporter when the Central Council of Jews threw
their weight behind the campaign. In August 2011, the Boulevard der
Stars finally relented, acknowledging Baylay’s Facebook, e-mail and
letter campaign had been key in their decision to awarding an extra
star to Rainer. And on September 5, 2011, Rainer traveled to Berlin
to receive her star on the Boulevard der Stars.
The
lights finally went out for Luise Rainer on December 30, 2014. She
died at her home in London from complications from pneumonia. Besides
daughter Francesca Knittel-Bowyer, granddaughters, Luisa and Nicole,
and great-grandchildren, Luca and Hunter also survive Rainer.
TCM
will honor Rainer with a marathon of her films on January 12 that was
originally to celebrate her birthday. The schedule is as follows:
6:00
am – THE GREAT ZIEGFIELD (MGM, 1936): William Powell,
Luise Reiner, & Myrna Loy. This lavishly filmed biography of
Broadway’s great showman won Reiner her first Oscar.
9:00
am – BIG CITY (MGM, 1937): Spencer Tracy, Luise Rainer
When officials attempt to pin a bombing on a taxi driver’s
foreign-born wife and deport her. Tracy takes it to heart and fights
back.
10:30
am – THE EMPEROR’S CANDLESTICKS (MGM, 1937): William
Powell, Luise Rainer. Spies on opposite sides fall in love in
pre-Revolution Russia.
12:00
pm – THE GOOD EARTH (MGM, 1936): Paul Muni, Luise Rainer.
Sidney Franklin and Victor Fleming directed this epic adaptation of
Pearl Buck’s classic novel about Chinese farmers battling the
elements.
2:30
pm – DRAMATIC SCHOOL (MGM, 1938): Luise Rainer, Paulette
Goddard. This ensemble piece about the struggles of a young actress
on the stage and in marriage could’ve been better, but Rainer sinks
it.
4:00
pm – THE GREAT WALTZ (MGM, 1938): Luise Reiner, Fernand
Gravey. The story of waltz king Johann Strauss II.
5:45
pm – THE TOY WIFE (MGM, 1938): Luise Rainer, Melvyn
Douglas, & Robert Young. Southern belle Rainer finds herself torn
between two suitors.
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