Hedy Lamarr Movies
The daughter of a Vienesse banker,
Hedy Lamarr began her acting career at 16 under the tutelage of German impresario
Max Reinhardt. She began appearing in German films in 1930, but garnered little attention until her star turn in Czech director
Gustav Machaty's
Extase (
Ecstasy) in 1933. It wasn't just because Lamarr appeared briefly in the nude;
Extase was filled to overflowing with orgasmic imagery, including tight close-ups of Lamarr in the throes of delighted passion. Though her first husband, Austrian businessman Fritz Mandl, tried to buy up and destroy all prints of
Extase, the film enjoyed worldwide distribution, the result being that Lamarr was famous in America before ever setting foot in Hollywood. She was signed by producer
Walter Wanger to co-star with
Charles Boyer in the American remake of the French
Pepe Le Moko, titled
Algiers (1938). That Lamarr wasn't much of an actress was compensated with several scenes in which she was required to merely stand around silently and look beautiful (she would later downgrade these performances, equating sex appeal with "looking stupid"). The prudish
Louis B. Mayer was willing to forgive Lamarr the "indiscretion" of
Extase by signing her to a long MGM contract in 1939. Most of her subsequent roles were merely decorative (never more so than as Tondelayo in
White Cargo [1940]), though she was first rate in the complex role of the career woman who "liberates" stuffy Bostonian
Robert Young in H.M. Pulham, Esq. (1942). In 1949, Lamarr, tastefully under-dressed, appeared opposite the equally attractive
Victor Mature in
Cecil B. DeMille's
Samson and Delilah (1949). Lamarr's limited acting skills became more pronounced in her 1950s films, especially when she gamely tried to play Joan of Arc in the all-star disaster
The Story of Mankind (1957). She disappeared from films in 1958. An autobiography, Ecstasy and Me, enabled her to pay many of her debts, though she'd later sue her collaborators for distorting the facts. In another legal action, Lamarr took on director
Mel Brooks for using the character name "Hedley Lamarr" in his 1974 Western spoof
Blazing Saddles. In 1990, Lamarr made an unexpected return before the cameras in the obscure low-budget Hollywood satire
Instant Karma, in which she was typecast in the role of Movie Goddess. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide