Lotte Lenya Movies
Best known as a stage performer and recording artist, and the wife of composer Kurt Weill -- whose songs made up the repertory for which she was most widely recognized as an interpreter -- Lotte Lenya also made a handful of notable film appearances across her six-decade career. Born Karoline Blamauer in Hitzing, Austria, to a working-class Catholic family, her childhood associations with music were somewhat harrowing, centered on her physically abusive father who, in his drunken rages, would pull her out of bed to have her sing to him and then berate her; she was forced to go to work at an early age and did her best, mostly out of love for her mother Johanna. It was her mother and her aunt, Sophie, who conspired to get the girl out of the household and away to Zurich, where she went to work as a maid to a couple who, by chance, were photographers.It was a chance look at a photo of ballet dancer Steffi Herzeg that stimulated her interest in dance, and she became a pupil of Herzeg's. She was good enough at age 13 to get engaged as an apprentice ballerina in Zurich, which enabled her -- though officially an Austrian national -- to remain in Switzerland at the outbreak of World War I. The next year allowed her to experience all of the exposure to art and music that she had missed growing up under her father's abusive regimen, and she began to get known as a dancer, and a protégée of Richard Revy, the chief director of the Schauspielhaus. By 1916, after a period as an apprentice, she became a full-fledged member of the ballet company at the Stadttheater in Zurich; and by 1918 she was giving solo performances, and also taking on acting roles, in plays by Ludwig Anzengruber and George Bernard Shaw.
Her ballet work extended to appearances in operetta productions, such as Franz Lehar's The Merry Widow, and she'd even made an appearance as an extra in one opera production. Among those she crossed paths with professionally was Elisabeth Bergner, the future film star and then an apprentice actress, with whom she worked in supporting roles in Franz Wedekind's Kammersanger. Her work had forced her to choose a stage name -- eventually she came around to "Lotte," an informal shortening of her middle name, and "Lenja," a variation on "Jalena" from Uncle Vanya, a play that had special personal resonance to her and to Revy; "Lenja" eventually became "Lenya" after she moved to the United States. By 1921, she'd made the leap from Zurich to Berlin, which was the center of a multitude of new, modernistic, forward-looking artistic visionaries. Alas, the only audition she could get at first -- despite Revy's best efforts -- was in a Russian touring ballet company doing a children's pantomime, with music by a composer named Kurt Weill. The two met during the audition, but she never did return for the rehearsal, and -- on Revy's advice, after he failed to get the job as director -- walked away from the production without a word. Instead, she made her Berlin debut in an acting role, as Maria in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night.
As her career moved forward, and toward acting much more than dance, Lenya crossed paths again with Weill in 1924, and this time the sparks flew and the little, bespectacled composer fell in love with the actress. By the spring of 1925, they were living together and in the first month of the following year they were married. She was part of his life when he saw his first major success, with the opera Der Protagonist in 1926, but by 1928, Weill, his playwright collaborator Bertolt Brecht, and Lenya would constitute a creative/performing triumvirate that would be immortalized for decades to come, with Die Dreigroschenoper (The Threepenny Opera), a modernization and "musicalization" of John Gay's The Beggar's Opera. Lenya was immortalized in the role of Jenny, which became her breakthrough -- from the premiere of the work, on the final day in August of 1928, until the rise of the Nazi Party in Germany in 1933, she was the star of the moment. This was also the work that afforded Lenya her first screen role -- G.W. Pabst's film version of The Threepenny Opera outraged Brecht, because of changes to the libretto, but it proved an extraordinary vehicle for Lenya, who appeared in both the French and German versions of the movie (a planned English version was never shot). Unfortunately, the worsening political situation in Germany was to cut short any benefit that Lenya, Weill, Brecht, or anyone else might have seen from the movie -- their Seven Deadly Sins (1933) saw its premiere in Paris, not Berlin, as she and Weill became cultural and political refugees from the Nazi-run government. Not all was happy or easy during this period between them personally, and they were divorced that same year. But barely two years later, after both emigrated to the United States, they reconciled, and in 1937 were remarried, this time for keeps -- they were together until Weill's death 15 years later, eventually settling in New City, New York. Lenya did contribute some recordings to the American war effort, and to the Voice of America, but she was primarily a creature of the stage for the next decade, and not even that for a time, following an unhappy experience in Weill's The Firebrand of Florence (1945), which convinced her to give up the theater temporarily. She re-emerged in the years following Weill's death, and in 1956 won a Tony Award for her performance as Jenny in Marc Blitzstein's English-language adaptation of The Threepenny Opera. This, in turn, led to a revived recording career and to cabaret work; Lenya, in turn, became the keeper of her late husband's work, and eventually founded a music society to help foster performances and recordings. In 1961, she returned to feature film work for the first time in 30 years with a role in the movie The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone, starring Vivien Leigh and Warren Beatty and based on a work by Tennessee Williams. Then, in 1963, came Lenya's breakthrough to mass exposure, when she accepted the co-starring role of Rosa Klebb, the murderous lesbian spy master in Terence Young's From Russia With Love. It was a role that people would refer to for the rest of her life, and one of those career oddities that would amuse her from time to time. Lenya's three subsequent movie appearances would range from supporting roles in Ten Blocks on the Camino Real (1966) and North Dallas Forty (1976) to a starring role in Sidney Lumet's The Appointment (1969). In the midst of this sudden revival of her movie career, Lenya returned to the Broadway stage in a very prominent manner, originating the role of Fraulein Schneider in the musical Cabaret. Lenya cut a striking figure during her final years, both onscreen and on talk shows, which she did occasionally. She was arguably, along with Marlene Dietrich, the most enduringly popular performing star to come out of pre-war/pre-Nazi Germany. She died of cancer in 1981 in New York City. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

- 2005
- Add Lotte Lenya and Gisela May: Theater Music of Brecht & Weill to QueueAdd Lotte Lenya and Gisela May: Theater Music of Brecht & Weill to top of Queue
This release features performances of songs from different Brecht/Weill collaborations from the 1950s throught the '70s as sung by Lotte Lenya, Gisela May, Martha Schlamme, and Will Holt . Some of the songs performed include "Pirate Jenny," "Mack the Knife," "Alabama Song," and "Ballad of the Drowned Girl." ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Lotte Lenya, Gisela May, (more)
Burt Reynolds and Kris Kristofferson star as two pro-football pals who both fall for the team-owner's very rich daughter. Kind of goofy, kind of funny, and somewhat endearing--those are the qualities that surface in this light-hearted comedy built upon an extremely predictable scenario. ~ All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Burt Reynolds, Kris Kristofferson, (more)
Sidney Lumet directed this romantic melodrama involving deceit and marital secrets. The film takes place in Rome where lawyer Federico Fendi (Omar Sharif) falls in love with his colleague Renzo's (Fausto Tozzi) fiancee Carla (Anouk Aimee). Renzo warns Federico that Carla is actually a high-priced call girl, but Federico refuses to believe it. Instead, Carla and Federico marry. After the wedding however, Federico notices that Carla has been making curious disappearances from her domestic home. Recalling Renzo's warning, Federico begins the secretly follow her to find out the truth. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Omar Sharif, Anouk Aimée, (more)
Jack Landau directed this 1966 televised production of Tennessee Williams' fantastical one-act play. In it, Martin Sheen stars as Kilroy, an American GI who finds himself in the surreal landscape of a fictitious Latin American nation where he interacts with several characters who have fallen into meaningless and destitute lives. The play also features performances by Tom Aldredge, Michael Baseleon, Albert Dekker, Hurd Hatfield, Kazimir Kokich, and Lotte Lenya. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Martin Sheen
From Russia With Love, the second in the series of James Bond films, is the film that solidifies all the Bond film elements into a formula -- the action sequences are intensified and lend greater tension to the proceedings; John Barry's inimitable score makes its first appearance; Q is seen for the first time; and Sean Connery as Bond has nailed down his role as 007 -- accentuating Bond's stylishness and sophistication, while toning down his cold-bloodedness. In From Russia With Love, the bad guys don't want to take over the world. They want something more mundane -- a Russian decoding device. Assigned to the mission of stealing the decoding device are No. 3, former KGB agent Rosa Klebb (Lotte Lenya), and No. 5, Kronsteen (Vladek Sheybal), an expert chess player who has plotted every move of the mission. Kronsteen's plan requires using Bond's weakness for women as an element in acquiring the decoding device. Once Bond obtains the decoding device from Russian cipher clerk Tatiana Romanova (Daniela Bianchi), SPECTRE muscleman Red Grant (Robert Shaw) is to forcibly take it from Bond and kill him. But Bond suspects a trap. Being Bond, however, he can't resist the lure of a beautiful woman. So, flaunting danger, Bond travels to Istanbul to meet Tatiana. The centerpiece of this 007 feature is the thrilling fight to the death between Bond and enemy agent Red Grant aboard the Orient Express. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Sean Connery, Daniela Bianchi, (more)
Vivien Leigh plays Karen Stone, a middle-aged actress whose career is in a tailspin. To assuage her hurt feelings, Karen goes on a vacation to Rome with her husband, who dies en route. Her best friend (Coral Browne) compassionately arranges for a young Italian escort (read: gigolo) to keep Karen from wallowing in her grief in Rome. The man hired for the task is sneering, contemptuous Pablo di Leo, played by Warren Beatty. Despite Pablo's rude behavior, the lonely Karen throws herself at him, showering him with expensive gifts and demanding his undivided attention. This being an adaptation of a Tennessee Williams novel, Blanche Dubois --er, Karen Stone must pay the piper for her eleventh-hour surfeit of passion; she is dispensed with by an "Angel of Death" in the form of psycho Jeremy Spencer. More operatic than dramatic, The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone represents the only feature-film directorial effort of experimental-theatre maven Jose Quintero; his assistant was future Bullitt helmer Peter Yates. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Vivien Leigh, Warren Beatty, (more)
Filmmaker G.W. Pabst's adaptation of Bertoldt Brecht and Kurt Weill's Threepenny Opera (Die Dreisgoschenoper) is every bit as good as the stage original, and sometimes even better. Filmed in both German and French versions with different casts (a planned English-language version was abandoned), Threepenny is most readily available today in its German incarnation. Rudolf Forster stars as robber captain MacHeath -- aka Mackie Messer, or Mack the Knife -- who falls in love with Polly (Carola Neher), daughter of beggar king Peachum (Fritz Rasp). Despising MacHeath, Peachum plots the thief's downfall with his best friend, corrupt police official Tiger Brown (Reinhold Schunzel). The satirical "happy ending" of the original -- MacHeath, en route to the gallows, suddenly and without motivation promoted to knighthood! -- is altered somewhat by Pabst and his scenarists to accommodate a swipe against Depression-era bankers. Lotte Lenya, Weill's wife, brilliantly repeats her stage role as Pirate Jenny. Stylistically, Threepenny Opera is a Georg Grosz drawing come to life; despite its 1890s London setting, the film's calculatedly tawdry veneer is clearly meant to represent the wide-open Berlin of the 1930s. For the record: the French version of Threepenny Opera starred Albert Prejean as MacHeath. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Rudolf Forster, Carola Neher, (more)
















