Too Beautiful to Be True: Lilian Harvey

Autor: Eric Rentschler, Karsten Witte
Rok vydání: 1998
Předmět:
Zdroj: New German Critique. :37
ISSN: 0094-033X
DOI: 10.2307/488490
Popis: Lilian Harvey always looked like she had needed to stage a comeback already at the start of her career. The prematurely aged face was continually coerced into an iron mask of charm, which in moments of consternation revealed chinks that no makeup could ever hide. The Ufa direction did not want her to be a vamp or a lady; what they had in mind was "the sweetest girl in the world" [das siileste Madel der Welt]. They allowed this face to assume only one expression: mechanical good cheer. Harvey sought to glide over the floor like a fairy, but the pitterpatter of her gait had more in common with a wind-up doll. This siren never sang, she blubbered as if she had a hurdy gurdy stuck in her throat. Her gestures were forced, her dance steps drilled into her, and when running to Willy Fritsch in a fit of infatuation, she did not swing her hips; instead she swerved, like a flag, as if her person were divorced from her body. Lilian Harvey, the eternal blond dream and lucky kid, was the perfect synthetic actress, whose human features mimicked the mechanical ones of cartoons. It stands to reason that in the grotesque nonsense setpiece of Glickskinder [Lucky Kids, 1936], she says the role of her dreams would be Mickey Mouse. The Ufa production, Der Kongress tanzt [The Congress Dances, 1931] is considered to be an ideological exemplar of a cinematic social romanticism. During a coach ride around a fountain, Lilian Harvey pulls out all the stops, singing "That only happened once, it won't happen again
Databáze: OpenAIRE