Erik Charell

Erik Charell
Born Erich Karl Löwenberg
(1894-04-08)8 April 1894
Breslau, Germany
Died 15 July 1974(1974-07-15) (aged 80)
Munich, Germany
Occupation Actor, Director

Erik Charell (April 8, 1894 – July 15, 1974), born as Erich Karl Löwenberg,[1] was a German theatre and film director, dancer and actor. He is best known as the creator of musical revues and operettas, such as White Horse Inn (Im weißen Rössl) and The Congress Dances (Der Kongress tanzt).

Life and career

Charell was born as Erich Karl Löwenberg in Breslau. He was the first child of Markus Löwenberg and Ida Korach. He also had a sister, Betti, who was born in 1886, and a younger brother named Ludwig, who was born in 1889 and later became Charell's manager.

Charell studied dance in Berlin. He was discovered, according his own account, by the press in 1913 during a performance of the ballet-pantomime Venezianische Abenteuer eines jungen Mannes by playwright Karl Vollmöller in a production of director Max Reinhardt at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin.[2] He founded his own company, the Charell-Ballett, and toured Europe during and after the World War I. The musical director of his company was the young Friedrich Holländer (later a famous film composer.) In two silent movies, Paul Lenis' Prinz Kuckuck – Die Höllenfahrt eines Wollüstlings (1919) and Richard Oswald's Nachtgestalten (1920) he demonstrated his brilliance as an actor. Reinhardt appointed Charell as assistant stage manager for the tour production of Vollmöller's The Miracle in New York in 1923. After his return to Germany in 1924, Charell and his brother Ludwig were offered to take over the management of the Großes Schauspielhaus in Berlin, which belonged to Reinhardt's theatre empire, the so called Reinhardt Bühnen.

In 1924 Charell presented his first revue, An Alle. He managed to engage the “Tiller-Girls”, an internationally famous girl group from London. His aim was to mix German operetta with exotic ingredients such as jazz, "negro music" and "the most enchanting Dancing-Girls with divine legs", in order to show that revue made in Berlin could be "as contemporary as the jazz band, that turns the Siegmund-jodeling and Siegfried-screaching to laughter" and is "as modern as Mozart or the mini-automobile", as Charell's personal friend and PR genius Alfred Flechtheim phrased it in the 1924 article "Vom Ballet zur Revue" in the magazine Der Querschenitt. "Charell wants us to witness the many different facets from all around the world”.[3]

This show was followed by the revues Für Dich (1925) and Von Mund zu Mund (1926), which were arranged by composer Ralph Benatzky and contained music by Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern and many others.

After the series of revues, Charell began adapting classic operettas such as The Mikado, Wie einst im Mai, Madame Pompadour and Die lustige Witwe and turned them into modern jazzy revue operettas, claiming that he needed a plot line for his show, that had been missing in the pure revues before. A few years later, he decided to create his very own operettas with composer Ralph Benatzky. Together they wrote the trilogy of historical revue-operettas, which made Charell famous to this day: Casanova (1928), Die drei Musketiere (1929) and Im weißen Rößl/The White Horse Inn (1930). Especially Im weißen Rößl was one of the most successful creations of Charell's career. In the following years he himself staged the show in London (1931), Paris (1932) and New York (1936), where each production was newly conceived, the script translated differently, and new music and instrumentation were added in some parts.

Many actors and singers, such as Marlene Dietrich, Joseph Schmidt, Max Hansen and Camilla Spira, who all became famous later, first appeared in major roles in Charell productions. Charell also discovered the boy group Comedian Harmonists and presented them for the first time in Casanova at the Große Schauspielhaus. The reaction of the international press was positive, the New York Times noting that “Erik Charell seems to have done it again. 'Casanova', his latest operetta production at the Grosses Schauspielhaus, is filling this huge circus to its stylized rafters”.[4] After this string of stage successes, Charell moved on to the new and innovative genre of sound film operetta. In 1931, Universum Film AG (Ufa) producer Erich Pommer invited Charell to direct Der Kongreß tanzt, (sets by Ernst Stern, music by Werner Richard Heymann), one of the most successful films of the early era of sound film, with one review in the New York Times saying that “[it] is a stupendous pictorial film. […] it is […] an exceptional film entertainment. The director, Erik Charell, is the Ziegfeld of the German musical comedy stage”[5] and another noting that “It is a charming spectacle of Vienna in 1814, filled with tuneful melodies that one likes to remember and blessed with pleasing light comedy”.[6] The international success of Der Kongreß tanzt led to an engagement in Hollywood, where Charell directed the movie Caravan, again with sets by Ernst Stern and music by Werner Richard Heymann.

When the Nazis took over in January 1933, the Ufa immediately annulled their contract with Charell because of his Jewish descent. They also cancelled all plans for two further contractually agreed upon film projects, one a film operetta based on the Odyssey with Hans Albers in the male lead. Three years later a German court even sentenced Charell to return the 26.000 Reichsmark, which had been paid to him as an advance.[7] When Caravan flopped in the US and internationally, his Hollywood career and all other American film projects came to an immediate halt. The New York Times noted “If lyric loveliness and photographic charm were all a picture needed to keep an audience enthralled, Mr. Charell could be toasted in good tokay this morning, and 'Caravan' could be applauded until the bottle is dry. But the sober fact is that the new film is an exceptionally tedious enterprise”.[8] One of the cancelled projects was a film about ballet dancer Vaslav Nijinsky for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). It would have been an interesting project, since Charell in his dancing days was often compared by the German press to Nijinsky.

In 1936, Charell staged a successful Broadway production of White Horse Inn. The New York Times noted that it “involves mountain scenery and hotel architecture, costumes beautiful and varied enough to bankrupt a designer's imagination, choruses that can do anything from the hornpipe to a resounding slap-dance, grand processionals with royalty loitering before the commoners, a steamboat, a yacht, a char-à-banc, four real cows and a great deal more of the same. Indeed, the enthusiasm with which 'White Horse Inn' has been created has virtually transformed the enormous Center Theatre into a Tyrol village”.[9] The Daily Mirror mentioned that “it is difficult to give you an idea of the immensity of 'White Horse Inn'. It is gargantuan. It is the Queen Mary of extravaganzas. […] It boasts acres of settings, hundreds of performers. It is a grand and glittering sight for the eyes.”[10] There was even talk of a film version with Eddie Cantor as the head waitor. (Warner Brothers were co-producers of the Broadway staging.)

Spurred by the success of White Horse Inn, Charell adapted Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream as a jazz operetta and presented it as Swinging the Dream on Broadway at the Center Theatre in 1939.[11] It was a daring and innovative production, because Charell used only black actors and singers, including Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Maxine Sullivan, Moms Mabley, Dorothy Dandridge and Butterfly McQueen. Furthermore, the stage sets were based on Walt Disney motifs. The music was written by Jimmy van Heusen, Benny Goodman conducted his own band and the choreography was by Agnes de Mille. But the production closed after only 13 performances, mainly because white Broadway audiences at the time were not ready for an all-black cast. A review in the New York Times described the show as a “negro carnival”, noting that “between Shakespeare and Goodman, Goodman wins”.[12]

After the war, Charell returned to Europe. In Munich he had a big success with the musical comedy Feuerwerk (music by Paul Burkhard) at the Staatstheater am Gärtnerplatz. The song O mein Papa became an international hit. In the 1950s, Charell created a stage version of Der Kongreß tanzt, which was performed in France, but the French public was not enthusiastic. His two big productions were the film versions of Im weißen Rößl with Nazi operetta star Johannes Heesters in 1952, and Feuerwerk with Lilli Palmer and the young Romy Schneider in 1954. After failing to write a sequel to Im weißen Rößl with his original librettist Robert Gilbert, Charell spend most of his time of the 1960s buying and selling art. Together with his brother Ludwig he owned a collection of Toulouse-Lautrec-lithographs, which was exhibited in Canada in 1953[13] and in other major museums of the world.

In 1969 he received the German movie prize, the Filmband in Gold, for his “excellent works and outstanding contributions to the history of the German movie”. He died on July 15, 1974 in Munich and was cremated on the Eastern cemetery. In his obituary it says: “28 friends gave him the last farewell in the city, to which he had a special love. A movie producer spoke to his memories, and to honour this charmer, who consciously and prudently managed his graceful talents, the triumph march of Verdi's opera 'Aida' sounded across the cemetery”.[14] The urn was interred in a cemetery in Grünwald near Munich. Charell's partner Friedrich Zanner and Dr. Wolf Schwarz, a lawyer and friend, were appointed to manage the estate and the personal property.[15]

His collection of Lautrec-lithographs was sold by Sotheby's in 1978.

The Schwules Museum Berlin dedicated an exhibition to Charell and his work from July 7 to September 27, 2010. It was curated by Kevin Clarke.

On 18 November 2015, Friedrichstadt-Palast Berlin inaugurated a memorial at Friedrichstraße 107 dedicated to the theatre’s founders, Max Reinhardt, Hans Poelzig and Erik Charell.

Nudity on stage

When Charell visited New York for the first time, working at the Century Theatre for Max Reinhardt, he was impressed and inspired by the American revues, especially the Ziegfeld Follies on Broadway. He decided, upon his return to Berlin, to combine European operetta music with the music and ideas of the American music theatre, to create a more 'cosmopolitan German' style. He established a revue style in which “word, sound, image, costume, colour, the art of illumination [work together] as a single rousing burning mirror”.[16] Charell wanted to make “modern” pieces and bring them to Germany to challenge the conservative mindset, which still prevailed in Europe after the First World War (“Germany is still suffering from the blockage. After being isolated from the rest of the world for ten years, it finally needs to breathe freely and realize what was going on in those ten long years, not only in science […], but also in things, which take a look on the bright side of life”).[17] His way of using contemporary syncopated music – from the German charts and the USA (the first European performance of Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue took place within Charell's first revue, An Alle) –,the risqué jokes and the inclusion of attractive boy groups (dancing and singing) in addition to the then standard heterosexual display of female nudity were all new to the Berlin theatre scene. He also presented renowned Lesbian stars such as Claire Waldoff to draw in additional crowds.

Especially the sexually provocative sketches between the songs made his reviews and revue operettas famous. The comedians Claire Waldoff and Wilhelm Bendow were hired to perform slapstick and dialectic humour similar of the likes of Charlie Chaplin and Karl Valentin. They provided an ironic view on different topics and cheeky 'hidden' references to e.g. sex practices of heteros and homosexuals. Besides, there were also jokes about sexuality woven into the song texts by the lyricists. This made the heterosexual audience laugh, especially those who understood the insider jokes, and it especially catered to the homosexual crowd. Bendow was particularly famous for his camp acting and double entendres. Furthermore, on Charell used sexually suggestive imagery, like in Von Mund zu Mund in which ancient Roman soldiers were portrayed semi-naked holding lances and swords.[18]

Charell revolutionized the German musical theatre by developing the idea of 'staged nudity' further than had been standard until then. He discovered modern female chorus lines in New York and was the first to bring them to Berlin, where they fuelled his stunning success. When the other theatre managers tried to copy Charell and also hired female chorus groups, they presented them as nude as possible. While the fight over who had the 'most naked' women in Berlin was raging, Charell's staging of nudity moved into a wholly different direction: when the audience became tired and bored of a straightforward display of naked bodies ("Yes, we are all pretty tired of those flesh exhibitions. The audience is sated with thighs. Not to mention, how fed up we are of the mass display of female bosoms."),[19] he started to artfully arrange the nudity. Charell wanted “to reawaken aesthetic feelings” in the spectator “by artistic composition”.[20] In addition and as a contrast to the omnipresent female nudity, Charell also hired boy groups, e.g. the Tyrolean dancers, the “Schuhplattler and Watschentänzer”, for Im weißen Rössl, or the “Jackson” and the “Sunshine Boys”. In the first case homoeroticism is quite obvious, the tabloid newspaper BZ am Mittag noting “juicy guys in leather trousers, who slap each other in time. […] My God, they have the right cheeks for it!”

Charell also used famous male sex symbols in his operettas, like Alfred Jerger, Max Hansen and Siegfried Arno, the latter doing a famous striptease in The Three Musketeers when comparing his battle wounds with the others, critic Erich Urban noted that “when [Arno] unveils his perforated body to Hansen […] the whole theatre screams and gasp, not just the upper balconies”.[21] Im weißen Rössl contains a similar scene, in which Arno presents himself as a “gorgeous bathing beauty” and undresses, before plunging into the Wolfgangsee.

Even though Charell's revues were inspired by America and England, this kind of nudity and sexual liberation was only found in Berlin during the Roaring Twenties. After 1933, the Nazis suppressed such most of the sexual freedom in operetta, because it was seen as "Jewish" and "degenerate". Unfortunately, 1945 the German operetta scene never returned to the liberated ideals of the 1920s and adapted many of the famous shows from that era to fit the new 'innocent' style of the post-war period. This eventually led Charell to leave the theatre and film business entirely, and focus on his art collection instead.

Film and stage work

Actor

Stage director

Film director

Producer

References

  1. Reports of Deaths of American Citizens Abroad, 1960, 1963-1974 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009.
  2. Hennenberg, Fritz, Ralph Benatzky. Operette auf dem Weg zum Musical, Wien 2009.
  3. Flechtheim, Alfred, „Vom Ballett zur Revue“, in: Alfred Flechtheim: »Nun mal Schluß mit den blauen Picassos!«. Sämtliche Schriften, published by Rudolf Schmitt-Föller, Bonn, Weidle Verlag 2010, p. 210-215. http://www.ralph-benatzky.com/main.php?cat=4&sub_cat=10&task=3&art_id=000333
  4. Trask, C. Hooper, “But the Germans Like It”, in: The New York Times, November 4, 1928 http://www.ralph-benatzky.com/main.php?cat=4&sub_cat=10&task=3&art_id=000093
  5. Movie review in: The New York Times, November 22, 1931. http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9906EFD71131E13ABC4A51DFB767838A629EDE
  6. Hall, Mordaunt, “Der Kongress Tanzt (1931)”, in: The New York Times, May 12, 1932. http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9D06E5D9153EE633A25751C1A9639C946394D6CF
  7. “The fictitious death of a non-arian”, in: Pariser Tageszeitung, October 3, 1937.
  8. Sennwald, Andre, "Caravan", in: The New York Times, September 28, 1934. http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9D03E5DC123FE53ABC4051DFBF66838F629EDE
  9. Atkinson, Brooks, "'With Horse Inn', an Elaborate Musical Show, Opens the Season in Rockefeller City", in: The New York Times, October 2, 1936. http://www.ralph-benatzky.com/main.php?task=30&page=6&art_id=000069
  10. Coleman, Robert, “White Horse Inn”, in: The Daily Mirror, October 2, 1936. http://www.ralph-benatzky.com/main.php?task=30&page=8&art_id=000040
  11. Berg, Marita, “ »Det Jeschäft ist richtig!« Die Revueoperetten des Erik Charell“, in: Musik-Konzepte, Heft 133/134. Im weißen Rössl. Zwischen Kunst und Kommerz, published by Ulrich Tadday, edition text + kritik in Richard Boorberg Verlag, 2006, p. 76-77.
  12. Atkinson, Brooks, "Swingin' Shakespeare's Dream", in: The New York Times, November 30, 1939.
  13. https://www.gallery.ca/en/see/exhibitions/events/exhibition_details/1466/lang:en
  14. Drews, Wolfgang, „Letzter Gruß für Eric [sic] Charell“, in: Tagesspiegel, July 24, 1974.
  15. Reports of Deaths of American Citizens Abroad, 1960, 1963-1974 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009.
  16. Berg, Marita, “ »Det Jeschäft ist richtig!« Die Revueoperetten des Erik Charell“, in: Musik-Konzepte, Heft 133/134. Im weißen Rössl. Zwischen Kunst und Kommerz, published by Ulrich Tadday, edition text + kritik in Richard Boorberg Verlag, 2006, p. 61-69.
  17. Flechtheim, Alfred, „Vom Ballett zur Revue“, in: Der Querschnitt: Facsimile Querschnitt durch den Querschnitt 1921-1936, published by Wilmont Haacke and Alexander von Baeyer, Frankfurt am Maain/Berlin/Wien, 1977.
  18. Flechtheim, Alfred, „Vom Ballett zur Revue“, in: Der Querschnitt: Facsimile Querschnitt durch den Querschnitt 1921-1936, published by Wilmont Haacke and Alexander von Baeyer, Frankfurt am Maain/Berlin/Wien, 1977.
  19. Berg, Marita, “ »Det Jeschäft ist richtig!« Die Revueoperetten des Erik Charell“, in: Musik-Konzepte, Heft 133/134. Im weißen Rössl. Zwischen Kunst und Kommerz, published by Ulrich Tadday, edition text + kritik in Richard Boorberg Verlag, 2006, p. 61-69.
  20. Berg, Marita, “ »Det Jeschäft ist richtig!« Die Revueoperetten des Erik Charell“, in: Musik-Konzepte, Heft 133/134. Im weißen Rössl. Zwischen Kunst und Kommerz, published by Ulrich Tadday, edition text + kritik in Richard Boorberg Verlag, 2006, p. 61-69.
  21. Flechtheim, Alfred, „Vom Ballett zur Revue“, in: Der Querschnitt: Facsimile Querschnitt durch den Querschnitt 1921-1936, published by Wilmont Haacke and Alexander von Baeyer, Frankfurt am Maain/Berlin/Wien, 1977.

External links

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