Mauritz Stiller
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Mauritz Stiller | |
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File:Mauritz Stiller 1927.jpg
Mauritz Stiller in 1927
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Born | Moshe Stiller 17 July 1883 Helsinki, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Stockholm, Stockholms län, Sweden |
Occupation | Director, screenwriter, actor |
Years active | 1912 - 1928 |
Awards | Walk of Fame - Motion Picture 1713 Vine Street |
Mauritz Stiller (17 July 1883 – 18 November 1928) was a Finnish-Swedish film director, best known for discovering Greta Garbo and bringing her to America.
Stiller had been a pioneer of the Swedish film industry, writing and directing many short films from 1912. When MGM invited him to Hollywood as a director, he arrived with his new discovery Greta Gustafsson, whose screen name Greta Garbo is believed to have been his suggestion.
After frequent disagreements with studio executives at MGM and Paramount, Stiller returned to Sweden, where he died soon afterwards.
Contents
Life
Born Moshe Stiller in Helsinki, his family was of Ashkenazi Jewish heritage, having lived in Russia and Poland before settling in Finland. When he was four, his mother committed suicide, after which he was raised by family friends. From early on, Stiller was interested in acting. His talents did not go unnoticed, and soon Stiller was offered the opportunity to practice and display his acting skills in the theaters of Helsinki and Turku in Finland.
Drafted into the army of Czar Nicholas II—Finland was at the time an autonomous Grand Duchy of Russia—rather than report for duty he fled the country for exile, and settled in Sweden. He became a Swedish citizen in 1921.
Career
By 1912, Stiller had become involved with Sweden's rapidly developing silent film industry. He began by writing scripts, in addition to acting and directing in short films but within a few years gave up on acting to devote his time to writing and directing. He was soon directing feature-length productions and his 1918 effort Thomas Graals bästa barn (Thomas Graal's First Child), starring Karin Molander, and with Victor Sjöström in the leading role, received much acclaim.
By 1920, having directed more than thirty-five films including Sir Arne's Treasure and Erotikon, Stiller was a leading figure in Swedish filmmaking. He also directed The Blizzard starring a young Einar Hanson and based on the Selma Lagerlof novel Gunnar Hedes saga.
Stiller and Garbo
At the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm, he met a young actress named Greta Gustafsson whom he cast in an important but secondary role in his film, Gösta Berlings saga (The Atonement of Gosta Berling), and who some have said gave her the stage name Greta Garbo. For Stiller, the screen presence of the eighteen-year-old actress led to him bringing her and Hanson to the United States after he accepted an offer from Louis B. Mayer to direct for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
In Hollywood, Mauritz Stiller was assigned to direct The Temptress (1926), Garbo's second film with MGM, but he could not deal with the studio structure. After repeated arguments with MGM executives, he was replaced on the film by Fred Niblo and his contract with the studio terminated. Stiller was immediately hired by Paramount Pictures, where he made three successful films but was let go a second time while directing his fourth as a result of his continuing disagreements with studio bosses.
Death and legacy
Mauritz Stiller returned to Sweden in 1927 and died the following year from pleurisy at the age of forty-five. He was interred in the Norra begravningsplatsen in Stockholm.
Stiller's contribution to the motion picture industry has since been recognized with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1713 Vine Street. In Kristianstad, a monument was erected in his honor. Originally, his star on the Walk of Fame was erroneously listed as "Maurice Diller" and wasn't corrected until the late 1980s.
Filmography
Year | Film | Credited as | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Director | Writer | Actor | Role | ||
1912 | The Gardener (Trädgårdsmästaren) | Yes | Yes | Passenger | |
1912 | Mor och dotter | Yes | Yes | Yes | Raoul de Saligny |
1912 | I lifvets vår | Yes | von Plæin | ||
1912 | Den tyranniske fästmannen | Yes | Yes | Yes | Elias Pettersson |
1912 | De svarta maskerna | Yes | Yes | ||
1913 | Vampyren | Yes | Yes | ||
1913 | På livets ödesvägar | Yes | |||
1913 | När larmklockan ljuder | Yes | |||
1913 | När kärleken dödar | Yes | Yes | ||
1913 | Mannekängen | Yes | Yes | ||
1913 | The Conflicts of Life (Livets konflikter) | Yes | |||
1913 | Brother Against Brother (Gränsfolken) | Yes | |||
1913 | En pojke i livets strid | Yes | |||
1913 | Den okända | Yes | Yes | ||
1913 | Den moderna suffragetten | Yes | Yes | ||
1913 | Barnet | Yes | |||
1914 | Stormfågeln | Yes | |||
1914 | Skottet | Yes | |||
1914 | När svärmor regerar | Yes | Yes | Yes | Elias |
1914 | Kammarjunkaren | Yes | |||
1914 | För sin kärleks skull | Yes | Yes | ||
1914 | Det röda tornet | Yes | Yes | ||
1914 | Bröderna | Yes | Yes | ||
1915 | När konstnärer älska | Yes | |||
1915 | Minlotsen | Yes | |||
1915 | Mästertjuven | Yes | |||
1915 | Madame de Thèbes | Yes | |||
1915 | Playmates (Lekkamraterna) | Yes | Yes | ||
1915 | Hans hustrus förflutna | Yes | |||
1915 | Hans bröllopsnatt | Yes | |||
1915 | Hämnaren | Yes | |||
1915 | Dolken | Yes | |||
1916 | The Wings (Vingarne) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Film director |
1916 | Lyckonålen | Yes | |||
1916 | Kärlek och journalistik | Yes | |||
1916 | Kampen om hans hjärta | Yes | |||
1916 | Balettprimadonnan | Yes | |||
1917 | Thomas Graals bästa film | Yes | |||
1917 | Alexander den store | Yes | |||
1918 | Thomas Graals bästa barn | Yes | |||
1919 | Sången om den eldröda blomman | Yes | Yes | ||
1919 | Song of the Scarlet Flower (Laulu tulipunaisesta kukasta)[1] | Yes | |||
1919 | Sir Arne's Treasure (Herr Arnes pengar) | Yes | Yes | ||
1920 | Fiskebyn | Yes | |||
1920 | Erotikon | Yes | |||
1921 | Johan | Yes | Yes | ||
1921 | Guarded Lips (De landsflyktige) | Yes | Yes | ||
1923 | The Blizzard (Gunnar Hedes saga) | Yes | Yes | ||
1924 | The Saga of Gosta Berling (Gösta Berlings saga) | Yes | Yes | ||
1926 | The Temptress | Yes | |||
1927 | The Woman on Trial | Yes | |||
1927 | Hotel Imperial | Yes | |||
1927 | Barbed Wire | Yes | |||
1928 | Street of Sin | Yes |
References
- ↑ Music by Armas Järnefelt, possibly the first original film music by a Nordic composer. See Hannu Salmi (2008) Järnefeltin jalanjäljillä: Laulu tulipunaisesta kukasta (1919) (In the footsteps of Järnefelt : Song of the Scarlet Flower). (In Finnish). Retrieved 24 August 2015.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to [[commons:Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).|Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).]]. |
- Mauritz Stiller at the Internet Movie Database
- Mauritz Stiller at the Swedish Film Database
- Original Photoplay Interview with Greta Garbo, where she talks about her first meeting with Stiller: "I started trembling all over."
- Literature on Mauritz Stiller
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- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with hCards
- Commons category link from Wikidata
- 1883 births
- 1928 deaths
- Artists from Helsinki
- People from Uusimaa Province (Grand Duchy of Finland)
- Finnish Jews
- Finnish people of Polish-Jewish descent
- Finnish people of Russian-Jewish descent
- Swedish people of Finnish-Jewish descent
- Finnish film directors
- Swedish film directors
- LGBT Jews
- LGBT directors
- Finnish emigrants to Sweden
- Burials at Norra begravningsplatsen