Josef von Sternberg(1894-1969)
- Director
- Writer
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Josef von Sternberg split his childhood between Vienna and New York
City. His father, a former soldier in the Austro-Hungarian army, could
not support his family in either city; Sternberg remembered him only as
"an enormously strong man who often used his strength on me." Forced by
poverty to drop out of high school, von Sternberg worked for a time in
a Manhattan store that sold ribbons and lace to hat makers. A chance
meeting in Prospect Park, Brooklyn, led to a new career in the cleaning
and repair of movie prints. This job provided an entrée to the film
production industry, then flourishing in Fort Lee, New Jersey. As an
apprentice film-maker, from around 1916 to the early 1920s, von
Sternberg developed a lasting contempt for most of the directors and
producers he worked for (an exception was
Emile Chautard, who acted in some of
Sternberg's films of the 1930s), and was sure that he could improve on
their products. Staked to a few thousand dollars -- even then an
absurdly small budget -- von Sternberg proved himself right with
The Salvation Hunters (1925),
which became a critical and financial hit. For the next couple of years
he seesawed between acclaim and oblivion, sometimes on the same project
(for instance, he received the rare honor of directing a film for
Charles Chaplin, but it was shelved
after only one showing and later disappeared forever). His commercial
breakthrough was Underworld (1927), a
prototypical Hollywood gangster film; behind the scenes, von Sternberg
successfully battled Ben Hecht, the
writer, for creative control. With
The Last Command (1928),
starring the equally strong-willed
Emil Jannings, von Sternberg began a
period of almost a decade as one of the most celebrated artists of
world cinema. Both his film career and his personal life were
transformed in the making of
The Blue Angel (1930). Chosen by
Jannings and producer Erich Pommer to make
Germany's first major sound picture, von Sternberg gambled by casting
Marlene Dietrich, then obscure, as Lola
Lola, the night-club dancer who leads Jannings' character into
depravity. The von Sternberg-Dietrich story, both on-screen (he
directed her in six more movies) and off (he became one of her legions
of lovers, more in love with her than most) is a staple of film
histories. His films of the mid-'30s are among the most visionary ever
made in Hollywood, but in spite of their visual sumptuousness,
contemporary audiences found them dramatically inert. The films'
mediocre box office and a falling-out with
Ernst Lubitsch, then head of production
at Paramount Pictures (Sternberg's employer), meant that after
The Devil Is a Woman (1935)
he would never again have the control he needed to express himself
fully. In his sardonic autobiography, he more or less completely
disowned all of his subsequent films. In spite (or perhaps because) of
his truncated career and bitter personality, von Sternberg remains a
hero to many critics and filmmakers. His best films exemplify the
proposition, as he put it, that in any worthwhile film the director is
"the determining influence, and the only influence, despotically
exercised or not, which accounts for the worth of what is seen on the
screen."