Peter Lorre

1905 - 1964

On July 25, 1934, the New York Times reported that “Peter Lorre, European stage and screen actor … arrived in New York yesterday aboard the Majestic on his way to Hollywood to begin work for Columbia Pictures.” That was the first time American audiences heard of the renowned performer. It would not be the last.

He was born Laszlo Lowenstein, on June 26, 1904, in Rosenberg, Hungary; his first job was that of bank clerk. However, the stage training he received in Vienna led to an acting debut in Zurich. For the next seven years, he would perform on stage in Switzerland, Austria, and Germany, and received bit parts in numerous German films. Despite this experience, the surprise was great when he was chosen by Fritz Lang to play the central character in the famed director’s first sound film, M (1931). Lorre’s portrayal of a psychopathic child murderer is among the screen’s most memorable performances: His melancholy expression, alternately pathetic and sinister, highlighted by his globular eyes which bulged with fear and rage, gave the character an almost clinical authenticity. The film was a worldwide success, and its star was soon an international sensation. The next year saw Lorre appear in several more films, but when the Nazis came to power in 1933, he exiled himself to Paris, London, and finally, to the United States.

Lorre’s first two roles in American films offered him exceptional opportunities for character studies. In Mad Love (1935), he played a love-crazed surgeon, opposite a terrified Frances Drake, and in Crime and Punishment (1935), he took Josef von Sternberg’s character of Raskolnikov and convincingly transformed him into a truly anguished human being, in a fabulous performance. Lorre then took on a series of “Mr. Moto” films, in which he played the title role of the Oriental detective who got into no end of trouble in such titular stories as Think Fast, Mr. Moto (1937), Mr. Moto Takes a Chance (1938), Mysterious Mr. Moto of Devil’s Island (1938), and Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation (1939). Lorre needed the rest, as it was reported, on May 15, 1937, that the busy actor suffered a nervous breakdown, from exhaustion due to overwork.

On October 3, 1941, The Maltese Falcon opened at the Strand Theatre. The film was called, “The stuff that dreams are made of”; its director, John Huston, was hailed as giving “promise of becoming one of the smartest directors in the field,” according to the New York Times. Its stars, Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, Sidney Greenstreet, Elisha Cook, Jr., and Peter Lorre, were hailed as geniuses.

On November 26, 1942, Casablanca was hurried into release, at the Hollywood Theatre in Manhattan, to exploit the prominence of South Africa in the war news of the day. The picture, which starred Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, Claude Rains, Paul Henreid, Conrad Veidt, Greenstreet, and Lorre, was billed in a joint advertisement with Errol Flynn’s Gentleman Jim – little did Warner Bros. know that the film would go on to become, according to the American Film Institute’s 100 Years … 100 Movies poll, the number one film of the century.

Peter Lorre was a remarkably versatile performer. He could handle tragedy, intrigue, and dark comedy, with equal aplomb, as was witnessed in Frank Capra’s gem, Arsenic and Old Lace, which opened on September 1, 1944, at New York’s Strand Theatre (his costar, Cary Grant, was another of cinema’s great rubber band actors, who could be stretched in any direction, and come out flexible and effective). However, as the decade came to a close, Lorre was experiencing personal problems: on May 20, 1949, he filed for bankruptcy.

Throughout the next decade, Lorre appeared in many films, many of them masterpieces: 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954); Around the World in 80 Days (1956), The Story of Mankind (1957), and a gorgeous turn as a clown in The Big Circus (1959). Perhaps his most wacky turn was in Mike Todd’s Scent of Mystery (1960). What made this film so quirky was the fact that it was the first, and the last, major film in Smell-O-Vision – the final great “smellie.” When the film opened, on February 18, 1960, the ad said it all: “First (1893) They Moved / Then (1927) They Talked / Now (1959) They Smell.”

The career of Peter Lorre boasted nearly 100 films, and a singular style which was often imitated, but never equaled. The life of the man who brought such unique skill to the silver screen ended, on March 23, 1964, of a heart seizure, at the age of 59. His accomplishments in cinema earned him a star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame, at 6619 Hollywood Boulevard; his performances in his cinematic vehicles will, forever, earn him a place as one of the greatest character actors in film history.

Messages

  1. the great in the world

    peter lorre was the funnyset actor on scean in the raven with this friends like vicent princesand the world well miss you forever
    always be the best and in the hall of fame from paultaylor
    29th 08.2012 07.32

    paultaylor

  2. Dearest Peter,
    As a boy growing up in Southern California, your were one of my favorite actors. To this day, I still get a thrill just watching you perform.
    As an actor, you were a genius–but your talents were often unappreciated.
    There will never be another actor of your caliber.
    God bless and keep you always, dear friend.
    W

    W

  3. Great Actor, Under Appreciated

    Peter Lorre was a great actor. Few appreciated his ability — he got quickly stereotyped in films, and was limited to, essentially, the one role, for most of his career. — But, even so, with each role, he found some variation, some slight difference — so that, while all of his characters seems to come from the same dubious lineage, they were all distinct characters unto themselves.
    But, if you want to sample the true genius of Peter Lorre you must go to another medium, other than film. Find recordings of his appearances on “Suspense” or other radio shows. Since these were anthology shows, and since the appearance of the character was the creation of the listener’s imagination — Peter could really go to town. Some of his most effective, subtle, creepiest performances were on the airwaves, not on the silver screen.
    The variety of roles Peter was allowed to play was severely limited by the studio system — but listen to the old radio shows, and you will catch hear something of the true genius of Peter Lorre.

    Lorin Geitner

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