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Pola Negri (Template:IPAc-en; born Barbara Apolonia ChałupiecTemplate:Efn {{#invoke:IPA|main}};Template:Efn 3 January 1897Template:Efn – 1 August 1987) was a Polish stage and film actress and singer. She achieved worldwide fame during the silent and golden eras of Hollywood and European film for her tragedienne and femme fatale roles. She was also acknowledged as a sex symbol of her time.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Raised in the Congress Kingdom of Poland, Negri's childhood was marked by several personal hardships: After her father was sent to Siberia, she was raised by her single mother in poverty, and suffered tuberculosis as a teenager. Negri recovered, and went on to study ballet and acting in Warsaw, Poland, becoming a well-known stage actress there. In 1917, she relocated to Germany, where she began appearing in silent films for the Berlin-based UFA studio. Her film performances for UFA came to the attention of Hollywood executives at Paramount Pictures, who offered her a film contract.

Negri signed with Paramount in 1922, making her the first European actress to be contracted in Hollywood. She spent much of the 1920s working in the United States appearing in numerous films for Paramount, establishing herself as one of the most popular actresses in American silent film. In the 1930s, during the emergence of sound film, Negri returned to Europe, where she appeared in multiple films for Pathé Films and UFA, and also began a career as a recording artist. She made only two films after 1940, her last screen credit being in Walt Disney's The Moon-Spinners (1964).

Negri spent her later life largely outside the public sphere. She became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1951, and spent the remainder of her life living in San Antonio, Texas. In 1987, aged 90, she died of pneumonia secondary to a brain tumor for which she refused treatment.

Early lifeEdit

Negri was born Barbara Apolonia Chałupiec on 3 January 1897 in Lipno, Congress Poland, Russian Empire (present-day Lipno, Poland), the only surviving child (of three) of a Polish mother, Eleonora Kiełczewska (died 24 August 1954). According to Negri, her mother came from impoverished Polish nobility,Template:Sfn with her family having lost their fortune over support of Napoléon Bonaparte.Template:Sfn Negri's father, Juraj Chalupec (Polish transcription Jerzy Chałupec or Chałupiec, died 1920), was an itinerant Romani-Slovak tinsmith from Nesluša.<ref name="Negri-Pitt">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Forum Polonijne">Template:Cite journal</ref> After her father was arrested by the Russian authorities for revolutionary activities and sent to Siberia, she and her mother moved to Warsaw, where they lived in poverty,Template:Sfn with her mother supporting them by working as a cook.Template:Sfn

Chałupiec was raised Catholic by her mother, who was a lifelong practicing Catholic.Template:Sfn In her youth, Chałupiec was accepted into Warsaw's Imperial Ballet Academy.<ref name="resources-film">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Her first dance performance was in the danse des petits cygnes in Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake; she worked her way up to a solo role in the Saint-Léon ballet Coppélia. However, a bout with tuberculosis forced her to stop dancing; she was sent to a sanatorium in Zakopane to recover.Template:Sfn During her three-month convalescence, she adopted the pseudonym Pola Negri, after the Italian novelist and poet Ada Negri;Template:Sfn "Pola" was short for her own name, Apolonia (sometimes spelled Apollonia).Template:Sfn

CareerEdit

Polish theatre and filmEdit

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After Negri returned from the sanatorium, she successfully auditioned at the Warsaw Imperial Academy of Dramatic Arts. Alongside her formal schooling at the academy, she took private classes outside with renowned Polish stage actress and professor Honorata Leszczyńska. She made her theatrical debut before her graduation at The Small Theatre in Warsaw on 2 October 1912.

She made her stage debut in 1913 in Gerhardt Hauptmann's Hannele in Warsaw and appeared the following year in her first film, Niewolnica zmysłów. She continued to perform there while finishing her studies at the academy, graduating in 1914. Her graduating performance was as Hedwig in Ibsen's The Wild Duck, which resulted in offers to join a number of the prominent theatres in Warsaw.Template:Sfn

By the end of World War I, Negri had established herself as a popular stage actress. She made an appearance at the Grand Theatre in Sumurun, as well as in the Small Theatre (Aleksander Fredro's Śluby panieńskie), and at the Summer Theatre in the Saxon Garden. She debuted in film in 1914 in Slave to her Senses (Niewolnica zmysłów). She appeared in a variety of films made by the Warsaw film industry, including Bestia (Beast, released in the US as The Polish Dancer), Room No. 13 (Pokój nr 13), His Last Gesture (Jego ostatni czyn), Students (Studenci), and The Wife (Żona).Template:Sfn

Ernst Lubitsch and German silent film careerEdit

Negri's popularity in Poland provided her with an opportunity to move to Berlin, Germany in 1917, to appear as the dancing girl in a German revival of Max Reinhardt's theatre production of Sumurun. In this production, she met Ernst Lubitsch,<ref name="intv">1978 interview with Pola Negri Template:Webarchive, Polanegri.com; accessed 29 March 2015.</ref> who at the time was producing comedies for the German film studio UFA. Negri was first signed with Saturn Films, making six films with them, including Wenn das Herz in Haß erglüht (If the Heart Burns With Hate, 1917). After this, she signed to UFA's roster; some of the films that she made with UFA include Mania (1918), Der Gelbe Schein (The Yellow Ticket, also 1918), and Komtesse Doddy (1919).Template:Sfn

In 1918, Lubitsch convinced UFA to let him create a large-scale film with Negri as the main character. The result was Die Augen der Mumie Ma (The Eyes of the Mummy Ma, 1918), which was a popular success and led to a series of Lubitsch/Negri collaborations, each larger in scale than the previous film. The next was Carmen (1918, reissued in the United States in 1921 as Gypsy Blood), which was followed by Madame DuBarry (1919, released in the U.S. as Passion).Template:Sfn Madame DuBarry became a huge international success, brought down the American embargo on German films, and launched a demand that briefly threatened to dislodge Hollywood's dominance in the international film market.Template:Sfn Negri and Lubitsch made three German films together after this, Sumurun (aka One Arabian Night, 1920), Die Bergkatze (aka The Mountain Cat or The Wildcat, 1921), and Die Flamme (The Flame, 1922), and UFA employed Negri for films with other directors, including Vendetta (1919) and Sappho (1921), many of which were purchased by American distributors and shown in the United States.Template:Sfn

Hollywood responded to this new threat by buying out key German talent, beginning with the procuration of the services of Lubitsch and Negri. Lubitsch was the first director to be brought to Hollywood, with Mary Pickford calling for his services in her costume film Rosita (1923). Paramount Pictures mogul Jesse Lasky saw the premiere of Madame DuBarry in Berlin in 1919, and Paramount invited Negri to come to Hollywood in 1921. She signed a $3,000 a week contract with Paramount and arrived in New York in a flurry of publicity on 12 September 1922.<ref name=varobit/> This made Negri the first-ever Continental star to be imported into Hollywood,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> setting a precedent for imported European stars that included Vilma Bánky, Greta Garbo, and Marlene Dietrich, among many others. The Hot Dog, a Cleveland monthly publication, in its own promotional advertisement for Paramount in February 1922, claimed Negri's true name was Paula Schwartz, and that she was Jewish,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> which was completely untrue.<ref name="polanegri.com/bio">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Paramount periodEdit

File:Pola Negri and Rod La Rocque.jpg
Negri and Rod La Rocque in a publicity portrait for Forbidden Paradise (1924)

Negri ended up becoming one of the most popular Hollywood actresses of the era, and certainly the richest woman of the film industry at the time,<ref name="Biskupski12">Biskupski, M.B.B. (2010) Hollywood's War With Poland 1939–1945, p. 12, University Press of Kentucky; Template:ISBN</ref> living in a mansion in Los Angeles modeled after the White House. While in Hollywood, she started several ladies' fashion trends, some of which are still fashion staples today, including red painted toenails, fur boots, and turbans.<ref name="TaylorNYT1970">Taylor, Angela. "Pola Negri's Memoirs: Best Roles Were Played in Real Life", The New York Times, 24 April 1970, p. 30.</ref> Negri was a frequent photography subject of Hollywood portrait photographer Eugene Robert Richee, and several photographs of her were taken during this period.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Negri's first two Paramount films were Bella Donna (1923) and The Cheat (1923), both of which were directed by George Fitzmaurice and were remakes of Paramount films from 1915. Her first spectacle film was the Herbert Brenon-directed The Spanish Dancer (1923), based on the Victor Hugo novel Don César de Bazan. The initial screenplay was intended as a vehicle for Rudolph Valentino before he left Paramount and was reworked for Negri. Rosita, Lubitsch's film with Mary Pickford, was released the same year and happened to be based on Don César de Bazan. According to the book Paramount Pictures and the People Who Made Them, "Critics had a field day comparing the two. The general opinion was that the Pickford film was more polished, but the Negri film was more entertaining."Template:Sfn

Initially Paramount used Negri as a mysterious European femme fatale and a clotheshorse as they had done with Gloria Swanson and staged an ongoing feud between the two actresses, which actor Charlie Chaplin recalled in his autobiography as "a mélange of cooked-up jealousies and quarrels."Template:Sfn Negri was concerned that Paramount was mishandling her career and image and arranged for her former director Ernst Lubitsch to direct her in the critically acclaimed Forbidden Paradise (1924). It was the last time the two worked together in any film. By 1925, Negri's on-screen continental opulence was starting to wear thin with some segments of the American audience, a situation parodied in the Mal St. Clair-directed comedy A Woman of the World (1925), in which Negri starred.Template:Citation needed

In 1926, Negri starred in The Crown of Lies and Good and Naughty, the former of which earned an unfavorable review in Photoplay magazine, which deemed it an "impossible Pola Negri vehicle. If you have nothing else to do—see this and suffer with Pola."<ref>Template:Cite journal Template:Open access</ref> Paramount transitioned into casting Negri in international peasant roles the following year in films such as the Mauritz Stiller-directed and Erich Pommer-produced Hotel Imperial (1927), in an apparent effort to give her a more down-to-earth, relatable image.<ref>Hotel Imperial on DVD, Polanegri.com; accessed 17 May 2014.</ref> Although Hotel Imperial reportedly fared well at the box office, her next film Barbed Wire (1927), directed by Rowland V. Lee, and a number of subsequent films did not, reportedly due to negative publicity about her behavior at Rudolph Valentino's funeral (she fainted a few times and cried exaggeratedly<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>) and her rebound marriage to Georgian prince Serge Mdivani,Template:Sfn although her films continued to fare well internationally. Negri defended herself, saying: "It is difficult for a foreigner coming to America...I had been told so much what not to do. It was particularly difficult for me, a Slav. My emotion seemed exaggerated to Americans. I cannot help that I haven't the Anglo-Saxon restraint and tact."Template:Sfn

In 1928 Negri was earning $10,000 a week,<ref name=varobit/> and was directed by Rowland V. Lee in another three films (The Secret Hour, Three Sinners, and Loves of an Actress), before making her last film for Paramount Pictures, The Woman from Moscow, with Norman Kerry. Negri claimed in her autobiography she opted not to renew her contract with Paramount, choosing to retire from films and live as a wife at the Château de Rueil-Seraincourt, near Vigny that she owned and where she had married her second husband.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The same year, her short volume featuring reflections on art and film, La Vie et Le Rêve au Cinéma (Template:Literal translation English: Life and Dreams of the Cinema), edited by Albin Michel, was published.Template:Sfn By 1929, she had reportedly earned $5 million.<ref name=varobit/>

Later films; return to UFAEdit

File:Pola publicilty portrait 5.jpg
Negri in a publicity portrait from Hi Diddle Diddle (1943)

Negri's initial 1928 retirement turned out to be short-lived. She miscarried and later learned that her husband was gambling her fortune away on speculative business ventures, which strained their relationship. She went back to acting when an independent production company offered her work in a British film production that was to be distributed by Gaumont-British. Initially the film was to be a filmed version of George Bernard Shaw's Caesar and Cleopatra, and Shaw offered to alter the play to suit the film.<ref>"Pola Negri To Screen Shaw's 'Cleopatra'." The New York Times, 1 December 1928, p. 14.</ref> When the rights proved to be too expensive, the company settled on an original story and hired German Kammerspielfilm director Paul Czinner to direct. The resulting film, The Way of Lost Souls (also known as The Woman He Scorned), was released in 1929; it was Negri's final silent film.Template:Citation needed

Negri returned to Hollywood in 1931 to begin filming her first talking film, A Woman Commands (1932). The film itself was poorly received, but Negri's rendition of the song "Paradise", the centerpiece of the film, became a sizable hit in the sheet music format. The song became a minor standard and was covered by many other performers, including Russ Columbo, Louis Prima and Keely Smith. Negri went on a successful vaudeville tour to promote the song. She then was employed in the leading role of the touring theatre production A Trip to Pressburg, which premiered at the Shubert Theatre in New York. However, she collapsed after the final curtain at the production's stop in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, due to gallbladder inflammation,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and was unable to complete the tour.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Negri returned to France to appear in Fanatisme (Fanaticism, 1934), a historical costume film about Napoleon III. The film was directed by the directorial team of Tony Lekain and Gaston Ravel and released by Pathé. It was her only French film.Template:Citation needed

After this, actor-director Willi Forst brought Negri to Germany to appear in the film Mazurka (1935). The film was considered "artistically valuable" (German: künstlerisch wertvoll) by the Reichsfilmkammer. Mazurka gained much popularity in Germany and abroad and became one of Adolf Hitler's favorite films, a fact that, along with her admiring comments about the efficiency of the German film industry, gave birth to a rumor in 1937 of Negri having had an affair with Hitler. Negri sued Pour Vous, the French magazine which had circulated the rumor, for libel, and won. Mazurka was remade (almost shot-for-shot) in the U.S. as Confession (1937), starring Kay Francis.Template:Citation needed

File:Negri Scott 5.jpg
Martha Scott and Negri in a publicity still from Hi Diddle Diddle (1943)

After the success of Mazurka, Negri's former studio, the now Joseph Goebbels-controlled UFA, signed Negri to a new contract. Negri lived in France while working for UFA, making five films with the company: Moscow–Shanghai (1936), Madame Bovary, Tango Notturno (both 1937), Die fromme Lüge ("The Secret Lie", 1938), and Die Nacht der Entscheidung ("The Night of Decision", 1938).

After the Nazis took over France, Negri fled back to the United States. During her flight, she spent some days in Portugal. She stayed in Monte Estoril, at the Hotel Atlântico, between 28 June and 30 June 1940.<ref>Exiles Memorial Center.</ref> The following day she moved to Estoril's Hotel Palácio. She sailed to New York from Lisbon, Portugal, and initially lived by selling off jewelry. She was hired in a supporting role as the temperamental opera singer Genya Smetana for the 1943 comedy Hi Diddle Diddle. After the success of this film, Negri was offered numerous roles which were essentially rehashes of her role in Hi Diddle Diddle, all of which she turned down as derivative. In 1944, Negri was engaged by booking agent Miles Ingalls for a nationwide vaudeville tour.<ref>Billboard, 29 January 1944, p. 22.</ref> According to her autobiography, she also appeared in a Boston supper club engagement in 1945 for a repertoire centered around the song "Paradise",Template:Sfn and retired from the entertainment business altogether.

Retirement and final appearancesEdit

In 1948, director Billy Wilder approached Negri to appear as Norma Desmond in the film Sunset Boulevard (1950), after Mae Murray, Mae West, Greta Garbo, Norma Shearer, and Mary Pickford declined the role. Negri reportedly declined the role and was aghast that Paramount could even suggest that she was a "has been". She also felt that the screenplay was not ready and that Montgomery Clift, who was slated to play the Joe Gillis character at the time, was not a good choice for the character. The role of Gillis eventually went to William Holden, and Gloria Swanson accepted the role of Norma Desmond.<ref name="faq">Pola Negri FAQ, Polanegri.com; accessed 17 May 2014.</ref>

Negri came out of retirement to appear in the Walt Disney film The Moon-Spinners (1964), which starred Hayley Mills and Eli Wallach. Negri's appearance in the film as eccentric jewel collector Madame Habib was shot in London over the course of two weeks. While she was filming The Moon-Spinners she made a sensation by appearing before the London press at her hotel in the company of a feisty cheetah, which had also appeared in the film, on a steel chain leash.<ref name="NYTobit">Template:Cite news</ref> The same year, she received an honorary award from the German film industry for her film work, followed by a Hemis-Film award in San Antonio in 1968.<ref name=Gonzales/> In 1970 she published her autobiography Memoirs of a Star, published by Doubleday. She made an appearance at the Museum of Modern Art on 30 April 1970, for a screening event in her honor, which featured her film A Woman of the World (1925) and selections from her films.<ref>"Pola Negri, Famous Silent Film Star, Will Make Guest Appearance At Museum", Press Release from the Museum of Modern Art (1970); accessed 25 January 2011.</ref> Negri was a guest of honor at the 1972 screening of Carmen held at the Witte Museum in San Antonio.<ref>Greg Barrios, "Negri Called S.A. Home", The Sunday Express-News (San Antonio, TX), 2 August 1987, p. 4-A.</ref> In 1975, director Vincente Minnelli approached Negri to appear as the Contessa Sanziani in A Matter of Time, but Negri did not accept due to poor health. In 1978, Billy Wilder directed Fedora, and although Negri does not appear in the film, the title character was reportedly based largely on her.<ref name="faq"/> Her final high-profile coverage in her lifetime was for a "Where Are They Now?" feature on silent film stars, which appeared in Life magazine in 1980.<ref name="faq"/>

Personal lifeEdit

Template:Multiple image Negri's first marriage was with Count Eugeniusz Dąbski, and proved to be short-lived. Negri married Dąbski in St Mary's Assumption Church in Sosnowiec on 5 November 1919, thus becoming Countess Apolonia Dąbska-Chałupec. After a long separation period, Negri and Dąbski's union was dissolved in 1922.Template:Sfn

After she began working in the United States, she made headlines and gossip columns with a string of celebrity love affairs, most notably with film stars Charlie Chaplin, Rod La Rocque, and Rudolph Valentino. Negri had met Chaplin while in Germany, and what began as a platonic relationship became a well-publicized affair and marriage speculation which received the headline "The Queen of Tragedy to Wed the King of Comedy."<ref>Bodeen, DeWitt, and Gene Ringgold. "Pola Negri", Screen Facts #15, vol 3, #3 (1967), p. 14.</ref> The relationship soured, and Negri became involved for a time with actor Rod La Rocque, who appeared as her leading man in Forbidden Paradise (1924). Negri met Rudolph Valentino at a costume party held by Marion Davies and William Randolph Hearst at the San Simeon estate and was reportedly Valentino's lover until his death in 1926. She caused a media sensation at his New York funeral on 24 August 1926, at which she "fainted" several times, and according to actor Ben Lyon, arranged for a large floral arrangement that spelled "P-O-L-A" to be placed on Valentino's coffin.<ref>Ben Lyon interview in Hollywood: Swanson and Valentino, directed by Kevin Brownlow for Thames Television (1980).</ref> The press dismissed her actions as a publicity stunt. At the time of his death and for the remainder of her life, Negri claimed Valentino was the love of her life.Template:Sfn

Just before the Wall Street crash of 1929, The New York Times estimated Negri's personal worth at $5 million.<ref name="stmarytx/silent-no-longer">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

File:Pola Mdivani wedding 6.jpg
Negri and second husband Serge Mdivani on their wedding day, 14 May 1927

Negri soon married again, to the Georgian self-styled "Prince" Serge Mdivani. This action caused public opinion in the United States to sour against her because it happened so quickly after Rudolph Valentino's death. Negri and Mdivani were married on 14 May 1927 (less than nine months after Valentino's death); shortly after she became pregnant, and Negri, who always wanted a child, started taking better care of her health and even considered retiring from movies in order to be a housewife and mother. However, she reportedly suffered a miscarriage.Template:Sfn She grieved the loss of her child for the rest of her life;Template:Sfn she and Mdivani divorced on 2 April 1931.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

While residing at the Ambassador Hotel in New York in April 1932, Negri performed with Russ Columbo in George Jessel's variety revue at the Schubert Theatre and was briefly involved with Columbo. After her film A Woman Commands premiered in Hollywood, Columbo performed Negri's signature song "Paradise" with his orchestra and dedicated the song to her. Columbo also recorded and released the song as a 78 rpm single that year with slightly altered lyrics, and the single became a huge sensation with audiences across the country.Template:Sfn

When Negri returned to the United States in the early 1940s, she became close friends with Margaret West, an oil heiress, former radio star,<ref name="stmarytx/silent-no-longer"/> and vaudeville actress, whom she had originally met in the 1930s. The two became housemates, sharing a beachfront home in Los Angeles with Negri's then-88-year-old mother, and later in Bel Air.Template:Sfn Negri, who remained a devout Catholic in her later life, spent her time raising funds for Catholic charities with both her mother and West.Template:Sfn On 12 January 1951, Negri became a naturalized citizen of the United States.<ref name="faq"/> After the death of Negri's mother in 1954 of pancreatic cancer, in 1957, Negri and West relocated from Los Angeles to a suite in the Menger Hotel, San Antonio, Texas and later to a large home in Olmos Park, Texas.<ref name="memoriesofsanantonio/pola-negri">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Gonzales">Template:Cite news</ref> Negri lived with West until the latter's death of heart failure in 1963.Template:Sfn Negri moved out of the home she had shared with West into a townhouse located at 7707 Broadway in San Antonio, where she spent the remainder of her years, largely out of the public eye.

Some scholars, such as Emily Leider, a Rudolph Valentino biographer, have suggested that Negri was bisexual, and that she and West, who lived together from 1948 to 1963<ref name="stmarytx/silent-no-longer"/> were romantic partners.Template:Sfn Negri biographer Sergio Delgado contests this, though he notes in his 2016 book Pola Negri: Temptress of Silent Hollywood, that there is "strong anecdotal evidence" that Negri was bisexual.Template:Sfn

DeathEdit

File:Pola Negri Grave.JPG
Crypt of Negri at Calvary Cemetery, bearing her incorrect birthdate

Pola Negri died on 1 August 1987, aged 90 at the Northeast Baptist Hospital in San Antonio, Texas.<ref name=varobit/> Her death was caused by pneumonia for which she had been rushed to the hospital a week earlier; however, she was also suffering from a brain tumor, for which she had refused treatment for two years.<ref name=varobit/> At her wake at the Porter Loring Funeral Home in San Antonio, her body was placed on view wearing a yellow golden chiffon dress with a golden turban to match. Her death received extensive coverage in her hometown newspapers San Antonio Light,<ref>San Antonio Light, 9 August 1987, pp. J-11, J-14.</ref> and San Antonio Express-News,<ref>The Sunday Express-News, 2 August 1987, p. 4-A.</ref> and in publications such as The Washington Post,<ref name="washingtonpost/1987/08/03/pola-negri-dies">Template:Cite news</ref> Los Angeles Times,<ref name="latimes/1987-08-09-ca-2">Template:Cite news</ref> The New York Times,<ref name="NYTobit"/> UPI,<ref name="upi/9885554875200/">Template:Cite news</ref> and Variety.<ref name=varobit>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Negri was interred in Calvary Cemetery, East Los Angeles next to her mother Eleonora, who died in 1954 from pancreatic cancer.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> As Negri had no children or siblings, she left most of her estate to St. Mary's University, in Texas, including a collection of memorabilia and several rare prints of her films. St. Mary's University also set up a scholarship in her name.<ref name="handbook"/> In addition, a generous portion of her estate was given to the Polish nuns of the Seraphic Order.

LegacyEdit

File:Pola negri chinese theater.jpg
Signature and prints of Negri's hands and feet in front of Grauman's Chinese Theatre

Negri has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contribution to Motion Pictures at 6933 Hollywood Boulevard. She was the 11th star in Hollywood history to place her hand and foot prints in front of Grauman's Chinese Theatre.<ref name="polishculture-nyc">Life is a Dream in Cinema by Pola Negri, Polish Cultural Institute.com, retrieved 13 November 2013.</ref> She received a star in Poland's Walk of Fame(pl) in Łódź and Poland's post office issued a postage stamp honoring her in 1996. The Polish Film Festival of Los Angeles remembered her with the Pola Negri Award, given to outstanding film artists, and the Pola Negri Museum in Lipno gives a Polita award for outstanding artist achievement. Template:Citation needed

Negri, with Theda Bara and Mae Murray, were the actresses whose eyes were combined to form the Chicago International Film Festival's logo, a stark, black and white close up of the composite eyes set as repeated frames in a strip of film. It was created by Festival Founder and Artistic Director Michael Kutza.<ref>About Our Logo, chicagofilmfestival.com; accessed 29 July 2014.</ref> Template:Multiple image

Negri (portrayed by an uncredited dancer/actress) makes a cameo appearance in the TV film Young Indiana Jones and the Hollywood Follies. In the film, Indiana Jones and Claire Lieberman attend a Hollywood party, where they spot Negri dancing with Valentino.

In 2006, a feature-length documentary about Negri's life, Pola Negri: Life Is a Dream in Cinema, premiered at the Seventh Annual Polish Film Festival of Los Angeles. The film was directed by Negri's biographer, Mariusz Kotowski,<ref>"Polish Film Festivals" Template:Webarchive, Polish Music News, April 2006, vol 12, #4; ISSN 1098-9188. Los Angeles: Polish Music Center, University of Southern California.</ref> and includes in-depth interviews with Hayley Mills and Eli Wallach, who starred in Negri's final film The Moon-Spinners (1964). Pola Negri: Life Is a Dream in Cinema has played at Negri retrospective screenings in Europe and the U.S., most notably at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and at the Cinémathèque Française in Paris.<ref>Pola Negri: Life is a Dream in Cinema page, Polanegri.com; accessed 29 July 2014.</ref>

Kotowski wrote a Polish-language biography of Negri titled Pola Negri: Legenda Hollywood (English title: Pola Negri: Hollywood Legend), released in Poland on 24 February 2011,<ref>"Pola Negri: new biog salutes Polish star", Polski Radio, 25 February 2011; accessed 2 March 2011.</ref> and an English-language biography Pola Negri: Hollywood's First Femme Fatale, published by the University Press of Kentucky on 8 April 2014.<ref name="pnnews">Pola Negri newspage Template:Webarchive; updated 26 November 2013.</ref> Kotowski produced a 3-disc DVD compilation of early Negri films, Pola Negri, The Iconic Collection: The Early Years (2011).<ref name="pnnews"/>

A large black and white portrait of Negri hangs in the small chapel of the Seraphic Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis of Assisi Congregation,<ref name="texashillcountry/san-antonios-shrine">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> next to Poland's patron, at Shrine of Our Lady of Częstochowa, at 138 Beethoven Street, in San Antonio.<ref name="Texas Monthly Insider's Guide to San Antonio">

</ref><ref name="tampabay/2000/07/23/san-antonio">Template:Cite news</ref>

A 1924 portrait of Negri, by Template:Interlanguage link (1889–1954), son of Jan Styka, is part of the San Antonio Museum of ArtTemplate:'s permanent collection.<ref name="sanantonio.emuseum/14158">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="sacurrent/27376290">Template:Cite news</ref>

In November 2018, a monument to Pola Negri, was set at Our Lady of the Bright Mount Church, Los Angeles.<ref name="gettyimages/1090889346">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 2021, a street in Bydgoszcz, where she briefly lived in 1920s, was named after her.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

FilmographyEdit

Key
Template:Dagger Denotes a lost or presumed lost film

In Congress Poland and Regency KingdomEdit

Year Film Director Company Notes Template:Abbr
1914 Niewolnica zmysłów Template:Dagger Aleksander Hertz Sphinx Company Alternate titles: Der Sklave der Sinne, Template:Literal translation English: Slave of Sin
Poland's first feature film
Template:Sfn
1915 Żona Template:Dagger Template:Literal translation English: Wife Template:Sfn
Czarna książka Template:Dagger Template:Literal translation English: The Yellow Pass
An early version of Der Gelbe Schein (The Yellow Ticket)
Template:Sfn
1916 Studenci Template:Dagger Template:Literal translation English: Students Template:Sfn
1917 Bestia Template:Literal translation English: Beast; Alternate titles: The Polish Dancer (U.S. release title), Bad Girl Template:Sfn
Tajemnica alei Ujazdowskich Template:Dagger Template:Literal translation English: Mystery of Uyazdovsky Avenue
Part of the Tajemnice Warszawy (Mysteries of Warsaw) serial
Template:Sfn
Pokój Nr. 13 Template:Dagger Template:Literal translation English: Room #13
Part of the Tajemnice Warszawy (Mysteries of Warsaw) serial
Template:Sfn
Arabella Template:Dagger Note: Though the majority of the film is presumed lost, a short fragment survives, as it was used in Polish film O czym się nie mówi (1939).<ref>Template:YouTube</ref> Template:Sfn
Jego ostatni czyn Template:Dagger Template:Literal translation English: His Last Gesture Template:Sfn

In Germany (silent period)Edit

Year Film Director Company Notes Template:Abbr
1917 Nicht lange täuschte mich das Glück Template:Dagger Kurt Matull Saturn-Film AG Negri plays a dual supporting role as a nun and a cabaret dancer Template:Sfn
Zügelloses Blut Template:Dagger Unknown Template:Sfn
Küsse, die man stiehlt im Dunkeln Template:Dagger Template:Literal translation English: Kisses Stolen in the Dark Template:Sfn
Die toten Augen Template:Dagger Template:Literal translation English: Dead Eyes Template:Sfn
When the Heart Burns with Hate Kurt Matull German: Wenn das Herz in Haß erglüht
This film survives and has been shown at La Cinémathèque Française in Paris, France, and at the Museum of Cinematography in Łódź, Poland
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1918 Rosen, die der Sturm entblättert Template:Dagger Unknown Template:Sfn
Mania Eugen Illés UFA Set design by Paul Leni
Full title: Mania, Die Geschichte einer Zigarettenarbeiterin (Mania: The Story of a Cigarette Girl).
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Die Augen der Mumie Ma Ernst Lubitsch Template:Literal translation English: The Eyes of Mummy Ma
Co-stars: Harry Liedtke and Emil Jannings
First Negri/Lubitsch collaboration
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Der gelbe Schein Victor Janson and Eugen Illés Co-stars: Harry Liedtke and Victor Janson
Alternate title: The Yellow Ticket
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Carmen Ernst Lubitsch Co-star: Harry Liedtke
Alternate title: Gypsy Blood (U.S. release)
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1919 The Carousel of Life Template:Dagger Georg Jacoby Co-star: Harry Liedtke
German:Das Karussell des Lebens; Alternate title: The Last Payment (U.S. release)
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Vendetta Template:Dagger Co-stars: Emil Jannings and Harry Liedtke
Alternate title: Blutrache (Blood Revenge)
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Dämmerung des Todes Template:Dagger Template:Sfn
The Woman at the Crossroads Template:Dagger German: Kreuziget sie! Template:Literal translation English: Crucify Them!
Co-stars: Harry Liedtke and Victor Janson
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Madame DuBarry Ernst Lubitsch Co-stars: Emil Jannings and Harry Liedtke
Alternate title: Passion (U.S. release)
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Countess Doddy Georg Jacoby Co-stars: Harry Liedtke and Victor Janson
Alternate title: Komtesse Dolly
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1920 The Marquise of Armiani Template:Dagger Alfred Halm German: Die Marchesa d'Armiani Template:Sfn
Sumurun Ernst Lubitsch Co-stars: Ernst Lubitsch, Paul Wegener, Harry Liedtke, and Jenny Hasselqvist
Alternate title: One Arabian night (U.S. release)
A film remake of the Max Reinhardt theater production, which also featured Negri and Lubitsch in the same respective roles, this is the only time the two appeared on screen together and is the last time the Lubitsch appeared on-screen as an actor.
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Intrigue Template:Dagger Paul Ludwig Stein German: Das Martyrium Template:Literal translation English: The Martyrium Template:Sfn
The Closed Chain Template:Dagger Die geschlossene Kette; Alternate title: Intrigue (U.S. release) Template:Sfn
The Red Peacock German: Arme Violetta Template:Literal translation English: Poor Violetta, film was rediscovered in a basement in New York in 2020<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

1921 Die Bergkatze Ernst Lubitsch Co-stars: Victor Janson, Paul Heidemann
Template:Literal translation English: The Mountain Cat; Alternate title: The Wildcat
A German Expressionist comedy and parody of the Expressionist film genre
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Sappho Dimitri Buchowetzki Co-stars: Alfred Abel and Johannes Riemann
Alternate title: Mad Love (U.S. release)
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Die Flamme Ernst Lubitsch Ernst Lubitsch Film GmbH Template:Literal translation English: The Flame
Co-stars: Alfred Abel and Hermann Thimig
Alternate title: Montmartre (U.S. Release)
Ernst Lubitsch's final German film
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Paramount periodEdit

Year Film Director Company Notes Template:Abbr
1923 Bella Donna George Fitzmaurice Famous Players–Lasky/Paramount Co-stars: Conway Tearle, Conrad Nagel, Adolphe Menjou
Remake of the 1915 film Bella Donna starring Pauline Frederick
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The Cheat Template:Dagger Co-stars: Jack Holt and Charles de Roche
Remake of the 1915 film The Cheat starring Fannie Ward and Sessue Hayakawa
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Hollywood Template:Dagger James Cruze Negri plays a cameo role in this film, which features guest appearances from many other Hollywood stars from the period Template:Sfn
The Spanish Dancer Herbert Brenon Co-stars: Antonio Moreno, Wallace Beery and Adolphe Menjou Template:Sfn
1924 Shadows of Paris Template:Dagger Herbert Brenon Co-stars: Charles de Roche, Adolphe Menjou, and George O'Brien Template:Sfn
Men Template:Dagger Dimitri Buchowetzki Template:Sfn
Lily of the Dust Template:Dagger Co-stars: Ben Lyon, Noah Beery, and Raymond Griffith Template:Sfn
Forbidden Paradise Ernst Lubitsch Co-stars: Rod La Rocque, Adolphe Menjou, Pauline Starke, and Clark Gable (in a bit role).
Only American Lubitsch/Negri collaboration and their final film together
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1925 East of Suez Template:Dagger Raoul Walsh Co-stars: Edmund Lowe and Noah Beery
Negri's only film directed by Raoul Walsh
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The Charmer Template:Dagger Sidney Olcott Co-stars: Wallace MacDonald and Cesare Gravina Template:Sfn
Flower of Night Template:Dagger Paul Bern Co-stars: Warner Oland, Gustav von Seyffertitz Template:Sfn
A Woman of the World Malcolm St. Clair Co-stars: Charles Emmett Mack, Holmes Herbert, Chester Conklin Template:Sfn
1926 The Crown of Lies Template:Dagger Dimitri Buchowetzki Template:Sfn
Good and Naughty Template:Dagger Malcolm St. Clair Co-stars: Ford Sterling and Miss DuPont Template:Sfn
1927 Hotel Imperial Mauritz Stiller Co-stars: James Hall, George Siegmann, and Max Davidson
Broke box-office records for highest ticket sales
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Barbed Wire Rowland V. Lee
Mauritz Stiller
Paramount Co-stars: Clive Brook, Einar Hanson, and Gustav von Seyffertitz
Mauritz Stiller started the film, but was replaced with Rowland V. Lee early on in the film
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The Woman on Trial Template:Dagger Mauritz Stiller Note: While mostly lost, surviving fragments are owned by the Museum of Modern Art.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}} Template:Open access</ref>

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1928 The Secret Hour Template:Dagger Rowland V. Lee Template:Sfn
Three Sinners Template:Dagger Co-stars: Warner Baxter, Paul Lukas, and Olga Baclanova Template:Sfn
Loves of an Actress Template:Dagger Co-stars: Nils Asther and Paul Lukas
Silent film with soundtrack
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The Woman from Moscow Template:Dagger Ludwig Berger Co-stars: Norman Kerry, Paul Lukas, and Otto Matiesen
Alternate title: Rachel
Silent film with soundtrack
Incomplete film
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International (sound period)Edit

Year Film Director Company Country Notes Template:Abbr
1929 The Woman He Scorned Paul Czinner Charles Whittaker Productions UK (Distributed By Warners UK) United Kingdom Co-stars: Hans Rehmann, Warwick Ward
Alternate Titles: The Way of Lost Souls, Street of Abandoned Children
Silent film with soundtrack. Negri's final silent film.
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1932 A Woman Commands Paul L. Stein RKO United States Co-stars: Basil Rathbone, Roland Young, H.B. Warner
Alternate title: Maria Draga
Negri's first sound film; features the songs "Paradise", "I Wanna Be Kissed", "Promise You Will Remember Me". "Paradise" was a major hit and a went on to become a standard for many years; it was covered by Russ Colombo and Louis Prima, featured in the television show Adventures in Paradise, and used as soundtrack music for other films from the time.
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1934 Fanatisme Tony Lekain, Gaston Ravel Pathé France Negri's only French film; features her singing three songs Template:Sfn
1935 Mazurka Willi Forst Cine-Allianz/Tobis-Klangfilm Germany Co-stars: Ingeborg Theek, Paul Hartmann, and Albrecht Schoenhals
Features the songs "Je sens en moi", "Mazurka", and "Nur eine Stunde". Remade in 1937 by Warner Brothers as Confession starring Kay Francis and directed by Austrian director Joe May
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1936 Moscow–Shanghai Paul Wegener UFA Co-star: Gustav Diessl
German: Moskau-Shanghai; Alternate titles: Von Moskau nach Shanghai, Der Weg nach Shanghai, Begegnung in Shanghai, Zwischen Moskau und Shanghai
Features the song "Mein Herz hat Heimweh..."
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1937 Madame Bovary Gerhard Lamprecht Negri's only German sound film to be shown in the United States Template:Sfn
Tango Notturno Fritz Kirchhoff Co-star: Albrecht Schoenhals
Features the songs "Ich hab an Dich Gedacht" and "Kommt das Glück nicht heut'? Dann kommt es morgen"
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1938 The Secret Lie Nunzio Malasomma German: Die fromme Lüge
Co-star: Hermann Braun
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The Night of Decision Nunzio Malasomma German: Die Nacht der Entscheidung
Co-star: Iván Petrovich
Features the songs "Siehst Du die Sterne am Himmel" and "Zeig' der Welt nicht Dein Herz"
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Last films (U.S.)Edit

Year Film Director Company Notes Template:Abbr
1943 Hi Diddle Diddle Andrew L. Stone Andrew L. Stone Productions (Distributed by United Artists) Co-stars: Adolphe Menjou, Martha Scott, Billie Burke, Dennis O'Keefe, June Havoc Template:Sfn
1964 The Moon-Spinners James Neilson Walt Disney Productions Co-stars: Hayley Mills, Eli Wallach Template:Sfn

DiscographyEdit

Negri released a total of ten 78 rpm singles. In 1931, she recorded seven gypsy folk songs in London accompanied by guitars and chorus, six of which were released as the sides of three records on Victor's His Master's Voice imprint. She recorded a French-language version of "Paradise" in Paris in 1933 with "Mes Nuits sont Mortes" as its flip side. (Sheet music was released for the English-language version, but the recorded version only appeared in the 1932 film, A Woman Commands, and was never released as a record.) The remainder of Negri's recordings, cut from 1935 to 1938, centered around songs that she sang in her German sound films.<ref>Rust, Brian A., and Allen G. Debus. The complete entertainment discography, from the mid-1890s to 1942. Arlington House, 1973, p. 499.</ref><ref>Unknown author, liner notes of Pola Negri and Rudolph Valentino CD. Chansophone [France], 1995, pp. 2,3.</ref>

Matrix No. Single No. Label Song Title Time and Place of Recording Notes
OB-641 HMV EK-114 His Master's Voice V chas toski (The Hour of Longing) Small Queen's Hall, London, 12 March 1931 Accompanied by Boris Golovka and two others on guitar, with chorus.
OB-642 HMV EK-114 His Master's Voice Chto nam gore? (Why Are You Sorry?) same same
OB-643 (Not Released) His Master's Voice Yescho raz (Once again) same same
OB-647 HMV B-3820 His Master's Voice Ochy Tchornye (Dark Eyes) Small Queen's Hall, London, 13 March 1931 same
OB-648 HMV EK-115 His Master's Voice Why Fall in Love? same same
OB-649 HMV B-3820 His Master's Voice Adieu (Farewell, My Gypsy Camp) same same
OB-650 HMV EK-115 His Master's Voice Dwe gitary (Two Guitars aka "Gypsy, Sing!") same same; dedicated to Pola Negri by Boris Golovka
P 76523 AP 989 Ultraphone Mes Nuits sont Mortes Paris, July 1933
P 76524 AP 989 Ultraphone Paradis Paris, July 1933 French-language version of "Paradise"; A-side of single AP 989
P Be 10937-3 0–4723 Odéon Mazurka (Ich Spür' In Mir...) Berlin, 8 April 1935 Song from the film Mazurka (1935); orchestra arr. by Peter Kreuder
P Be 10938-3 0–4723 Odéon Nur eine Stunde Berlin, 8 April 1935 Song from the film Mazurka (1935); orchestra arr. by Peter Kreuder
128338 R 2271 Parlophone For That One Hour of Passion Berlin, Template:Circa early 1936 English-language version of "Nur eine Stunde". Original version from the film Mazurka.
128337 R 2271 Parlophone Stay Close to Me Berlin, Template:Circa early 1936 English-language version of "Ich Spür' In Mir". Original version from the film Mazurka.
P Be 11241 0–4736 Odéon Vergiss deine Sehnsucht Berlin, 17 March 1936 Orchestra arranged by W. Schmidt-Boelcke.
P Be 11242 0–4736 Odéon Wenn die Sonne hinter den Dächern versinkt Berlin, 17 March 1936 Orchestra arranged by W. Schmidt-Boelcke.
P Be 11432-2 0–4742 Odéon Mein Herz hat Heimweh... Berlin, 2 September 1936 Song from the film Moskau-Shanghai (1936). Orchestra arranged by Hans-Otto Borgmann.
P Be 11433 0–4742 Odéon Ich möchte einmal nur mein ganzes Herz verschwenden Berlin, 2 September 1936 Orchestra arranged by Hans-Otto Borgmann
P Be 11891 0–4765 Odéon Ich hab an Dich gedacht Berlin, 15 December 1937 Song from the film Tango Notturno (1937). Orchestra arranged by Hans-Otto Borgmann.
P Be 11892 0–4765 Odéon Kommt das Glück nicht heut'? Dann kommt es morgen Berlin, 15 December 1937 Song from the film Tango Notturno (1937). Orchestra arranged by Hans-Otto Borgmann.
P Be 12171 0 288233 Odéon Zeig der Welt nicht Dein Herz Berlin, 30 December 1938 Song from the film Die Nacht der Entscheidung (1938). Orchestra arranged by Lothar Bruhne.
P Be 12172 0 288233 Odéon Siehst Du die Sterne Berlin, 30 December 1938 Song from the film Die Nacht der Entscheidung (1938). Orchestra arranged by Lothar Bruhne.

See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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Works citedEdit

Further readingEdit

English

Non-English

External linksEdit

Template:Sister project

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