Marlene Dietrich |
The film that set her career on fire was von Sternberg's The Blue Angel, of which the director produced both German and English versions. Her role as Lola-Lola garnered for her a contract with Paramount and she became one of the highest paid actresses in Hollywood.
I discovered von Sternberg through a reference by Orson Welles who had the upmost respect for the Austrian-born director who was also an artist with the camera. Welles himself gave Marlene Dietrich some limelight in his distinctively dark Touch of Evil, which critics have ranked #2 in his directorial oeuvre, a notch behind his epic Citizen Kane.
Marlene Dietrich was famous for her husky, sultry voice and seductive good looks. There was, however, more to her than meets the eyes. Though she was not a central character in Touch of Evil, but she was definitely a memorable one. All her scenes packed a punch. Here's a snippet from her last dialogue with Orson Wells:
Quinlan: Come on, read my future for me.
Tanya: You haven't got any.
Quinlan: Hmm? What do you mean?
Tanya: Your future's all used up.
You could read the whole story in these four lines.
As Tanya, the fortune teller in Touch of Evil |
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Here are some Marlene Dietrich quotes to bring you home.Dietrich as the Blue Angel, Lola-Lola. I am reminded of Liza Minnelli in Cabaret. |
On Forgiveness: "Once a woman has forgiven her man, she must not reheat his sins for breakfast."
"Most women set out to try to change a man, and when they have changed him they do not like him."
"America took me into her bosom when there was no longer a country worthy of the name, but in my heart I am German – German in my soul."
"The Germans and I no longer speak the same language."
Ms. Dietrich came to the U.S. during the turbulent period between the two world wars.
"The tears I have cried over Germany have dried. I have washed my face."
"The average man is more interested in a woman who is interested in him than he is in a woman with beautiful legs."
"Think twice before burdening a friend with a secret."
"Without tenderness, a man is uninteresting."
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Born in December 1901, the German-American actress passed away in May of 1992.
The only star past or present I would have liked to have met.
ReplyDeleteMarlene Dietrich for sure. She has always fascinated me.
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