Lil Dagover born Marie Antonia Sieglinde Martha Seubert; 30 September 1887 – 23 January 1980 was a German actress whose film career spanned between 1913 and 1979. She was one of the most popular and recognized film actresses in the Weimar Republic.
================================================================
===============================================================
Saturday, February 19, 2022. 08:00.
Lil Dagover - Actress.
===============================================================
Profile :
===============================================================
Born Marie Antonia Sieglinde Martha Seubert, 30 September 1887, Madiun, Java, Dutch East Indies
Died 23 January 1980 (aged 92), Munich, West Germany.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Occupation Actress
Years active 1913–1979
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Spouse(s)
1.Fritz Daghofer - (m. 1907; div. 1919)
2.Georg Witt - (m. 1926; died 1973)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Children Eva Marie Daghofer (1909–1982)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Introduction :
Lil Dagover born Marie Antonia Sieglinde Martha Seubert; 30 September 1887 – 23 January 1980 was a German actress whose film career spanned between 1913 and 1979. She was one of the most popular and recognized film actresses in the Weimar Republic.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Early life :
Lil Dagover was born Marie Antonia Sieglinde Martha Seubert in Madiun, Java, Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) to German parents. Some sources inaccurately give her birth name as Marta Maria Lillits. Her father, Adolf Karl Ludwig Moritz Seubert, born in Karlsruhe/Baden Germany, was a forest ranger in the service of the Dutch colonial authorities.[6] She had two siblings. Her mother died in 1897, after which she returned to Germany, where she lived with relatives in Tübingen. She was educated at boarding schools in Baden-Baden, Weimar, and Geneva, Switzerland.
*Dagover in 1919, photo by Alexander BinderOrphaned at the age of 13, she spent the rest of her adolescence with friends and relatives. After completing her education she began pursuing a career as a stage actress around the principal cities of Europe. In 1907 she married actor Fritz Gustav Josef Daghofer, who was fifteen years her senior. The couple had a daughter, Eva (born 1909) but divorced a decade later, in 1919. Eva married Hungarian director Géza von Radványi in 1930.
Seubert began using a variant of her husband's surname as a professional moniker – changing the spelling of "Daghofer" to "Dagover".
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Acting career in the Weimar Republic :
*
*Lil Dagover c. 1912−13
Lil Dagover made her screen debut in a 1913 film by director Louis Held. During her marriage to Fritz Daghofer, she was introduced to several notable film directors; among them Robert Wiene and Fritz Lang. Lang would cast Dagover in the role of 'O-Take-San' in the 1919 exotic drama Harakiri which would prove to be Dagover's breakout role. The following year, she would be directed by Robert Wiene in the German Expressionist horror classic Das Kabinett des Doktor Caligari, from a script by Carl Mayer and Hans Janowitz opposite actors Werner Krauss and Conrad Veidt. Lang would direct Dagover in three more films: 1919's Die Spinnen (English title: Spiders), 1921's Der Müde Tod (English release titles: Destiny and Behind The Wall), and 1922's Dr. Mabuse der Spieler.
*Lil Dagover as the character Jane Olsen in the film The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)
By the early 1920s, Dagover was one of the most popular and recognized film actresses in the Weimar Republic, appearing in motion pictures by such prominent directors as F. W. Murnau, Lothar Mendes and Carl Froelich. In 1925 she made her stage debut under the direction of Max Reinhardt. In the following years she played in Reinhardt’s Deutsches Theater in Berlin and also at the Salzburg Festival. In 1926 she married film producer Georg Witt, who would produce many of Dagover future films. The couple would remain married until Witt's death in 1973.
Lil Dagover film career in German cinema through the 1920s was prolific, making over forty films and appearing opposite such actors as Emil Jannings, Nils Olaf Chrisander, Willy Fritsch, Lya De Putti, Bruno Kastner and Xenia Desni. She would also make several films in Sweden for directors Olof Molander and Gustaf Molander and appear in several French silent films – her last film appearance of the 1920s was in the 1929 Henri Fescourt-directed French silent film Monte Cristo opposite Jean Angelo and Marie Glory.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Talkies and the Third Reich :
*
*Lil Dagover photographed by Elmer Fryer, May 1932
With the advent of talkies, Lil Dagover would cease making foreign films and appear only in German productions; with the exception of one English language American film, the Michael Curtiz-directed drama The Woman from Monte Carlo (1932) with actor Walter Huston, shot on location in the United States.
After her return to Germany and the rise of the Third Reich in 1933, she avoided overt political involvement and generally appeared in popular costume musicals and comedies during World War II. However, in 1937, she received the State Actress award, and in 1944 she was awarded the War Merits Cross for entertaining Wehrmacht troops on the Eastern Front in 1943 and on the German occupied Channel Islands of Jersey and Guernsey in 1944.
While Dagover's films of the period were decidedly apolitical, she was known to be one of Adolf Hitler's favorite film actresses and Dagover is known to have been a dinner guest of Hitler on several occasions.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Later career :
After the defeat of Nazi Germany, Dagover continued to appear in West German films. In 1948, she appeared in the anti-Nazi drama Gaspare's Sons. The film follows the disintegration of a German family living under National Socialism. Dagover's most internationally popular film of the post-WWII era is the 1959 Alfred Weidenmann-directed adaptation of the 1901 Thomas Mann novel Buddenbrooks.
In 1960, Dagover began appearing in numerous West German television roles in addition to continuing to perform in film. In 1973 she starred in the Academy Award-nominated and Golden Globe-winner for Best Foreign-Language Foreign Film of 1973, The Pedestrian. The film was directed by Austrian actor-director Maximilian Schell, and featured international former early silent film peers Peggy Ashcroft, Käthe Haack, Elisabeth Bergner, Elsa Wagner and Françoise Rosay.
Dagover's last film role was at age 91 in the 1979 Maximilian Schell-directed and produced drama motion picture Tales from the Vienna Woods.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Death and legacy :
================================================================
In 1962, Lil Dagover was awarded the Bundes Filmpreis. In 1964, she was awarded the Bambi annual television and media award from Hubert Burda Media, and the Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in 1967. In 1979, she published her autobiography, Ich war die Dame (English: I Was The Lady). Dagover died at the age of 92, on 24 January 1980, in Munich, Bavaria, West Germany, and was buried at the Waldfriedhof Grünwald cemetery, near Munich.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Filmography :
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1916
Die Retterin (1916) *Credited as Martha Daghofer
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1917
Clown Charly (1917) *Credited as Martha Daghofer
Das Rätsel der Stahlkammer (1917) *Credited as Martha Daghofer
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1918
Lebendig tot (1918)
Der Volontär (1918)
The Song of the Mother (1918) *Credited as Martha Daghofer
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1919
Bettler GmbH (1919)
The Mask (1919)
The Spiders (1919) as Sonnen Priesterin Naela
The Dancer (1919) as Mutter Rellnow
Harakiri (1919) as O-Take-San
Fantome des Lebens (1919)
Revenge Is Mine (1919)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1920
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) as Jane Olsen
Spiritismus (1920)
The Woman in Heaven (1920) as Tatjana
The Hunt for Death (1920–1921, part 1, 2, 3) as Tänzerin Malatti
The Mayor of Zalamea (1920) as Isabel
The Blood of the Ancestors (1920) as Fürstin Wanda Lubowicz
The Kwannon of Okadera (1920) as Kwannon
The Eyes of the Mask (1920)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Secret of Bombay (1921) as Die Tänzerin Farnese
Island of the Dead (1921)
The Medium (1921)
Destiny (1921) as Young Woman / Das junge Mädchen / Zobeide / Monna Fiametta / Tiao Tsien
Murders in the Greenstreet (1921)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Mabuse: The Gambler (1922) (uncredited)
Luise Millerin (1922) as Luise Millerin
Power of Temptation (1922)
Phantom (1922) as Marie Starke
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lowlands (1923) as Martha
Princess Suwarin (1923) as Tina Bermonte
His Wife, The Unknown (1923) as Eva
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comedy of the Heart (1924) as Gerda Werska
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chronicles of the Gray House (1925) as Bärbe
The Humble Man and the Chanteuse (1925) as Toni Seidewitz
Tartuffe (1925) as Frau Elmire / Elmire, Orgon's wife
Wenn die Filmkleberin gebummelt hat (1925)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Brothers Schellenberg (1926) as Esther
Love is Blind (1926) as Diane
The Violet Eater (1926) as Melitta von Arthof
Only a Dancing Girl (1926) as Marie Berner - varieté dansös
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
His English Wife (1927) as Cathleen Paget, née Brock
Orient Express (1927) as Beate von Morton
Attorney for the Heart (1927) as June Orchard
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Maelstrom of Paris (1928) as Lady Amiscia Abenston
The Secret Courier (1928) as Mme. Thérèse de Renal
Hungarian Rhapsody (1928) as Camilla
La grande passion (1928) as Sonia de Blick
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Marriage (1929)
Monte Cristo (1929) as Mercédès / Comtesse de Morcerf
Hungarian Nights (1929) as Coraly Rekoczi
The Favourite of Schonbrunn (1929) as Kaiserin Maria Theresia
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1930
The Ring of the Empress (1930) as Catherine the Great
The White Devil (1930) as Nelidowa
There Is a Woman Who Never Forgets You (1930) as Tilly Ferrantes
Va Banque (1930) as Miß Harriet Williams
The Old Song (1930) as Baronin Eggedy
Boycott (1930) as Seine Frau
Die große Sehnsucht (1930) as Herself, Lil Dagover
Der Fall des Generalstabs-Oberst Redl (1931) as Vera Nikolayevna
Elisabeth of Austria (1931) as Elisabeth of Austria
The Congress Dances (1931) as The Countess
Madame Bluebeard (1931) as Frau Erika Dankworth
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Woman from Monte Carlo (1932) as Lottie Morlaix
The Dancer of Sanssouci (1932) as Barberina Campanini
Thea Roland (1932) as Thea Roland
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Johannisnacht (1933) as Lisa Lers, Schauspielerin
The Fugitive from Chicago (1934) as Eveline
A Woman Who Knows What She Wants (1934) as Mona Cavallini, Revuestar
I Marry My Wife [de] (1934) as Lisa Behmer
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Bird Seller (1935) as Der Kurfürstin
Lady Windermere's Fan (1935) as Mrs. Erlynne
The Higher Command (1935) as Madame Martin
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Augustus the Strong (1936) as Gräfin Aurora Königsmark
Final Accord (1936) as Charlotte Gartenberg, seine Frau
The Girl Irene (1936) as Jennifer Lawrence
Fridericus (1937) as Marquise de Pompadour
The Kreutzer Sonata (1937) as Jelaina Posdnyschew
Strife Over the Boy Jo (1937) as Leonine Brackwieser - seine Frau
Beate's Mystery (1938) as Beate Kaiserling
Triad (1938) as Cornelia Contarini
Maja zwischen zwei Ehen (1938) as Maja
The Stars Shine (1938) as Herself
Umwege zum Glück (1939) as Hanna Bracht
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1940
Friedrich Schiller (1940) as Franziska von Hohenheim
Bismarck (1940) as Queen Eugénie
The Little Residence (1942) as Herzogin von Laufenburg
Vienna 1910 (1943) as Maria Anschütz
Music in Salzburg (1944) as Ursula Sanden
Gaspare's Sons (1948) as Margot von Korff
Don't Play with Love (1949) as Florentine Alvensleben
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1950
A Day Will Come (1950) as Mme. Mombour
Chased by the Devil (1950) as Frau Dakar
The Secret of the Mountain Lake (1952) as Lamberta
Red Roses, Red Lips, Red Wine (1953) as Gräfin Waldenberg
His Royal Highness (1953) as Gräfin Löwenjoul
Hubertus Castle (1954) as Baronin Kleeberg
Ich weiß, wofür ich lebe (1955) as Alice Lechaudier
The Fisherman from Heiligensee (1955) as Baronin Hermine von Velden
Rosen im Herbst [de] (1955) as Mrs. von Briest
The Barrings (1955) as Thilde von Barring
Crown Prince Rudolph's Last Love (1956) as Kaiserin Elisabeth
Meine 16 Söhne (1956) as Frau Senator Giselius
Confessions of Felix Krull (1957)
Beneath the Palms on the Blue Sea (1957) as Contessa Celestina Morini
The Buddenbrooks (1959, part 1, 2) as Elisabeth Buddenbrook
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1960
The Strange Countess (1961) as Gräfin / Lady Leonora Moron
Hotel Royal [de] (1969, TV film) as Die Maharani
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1970
The Pedestrian (1973) as Frau Eschenlohr
Karl May (1974) as Bertha von Suttner
Tatort (1975, Episode: "Wodka Bitter-Lemon [de]") as Mutter Koenen
End of the Game (1975) as Gastmann's Mother
The Standard (1977) as Erzherzogin
Tales from the Vienna Woods (1979) as Helene (final film role)
===============================================================
FILM POSTERS :
===============================================================
END.
===============================================================
Comments
Post a Comment