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Page Updated: Dec. 25, 2007
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Table of Contents
Excerpt: Chapter 3
Peter Lorre's Credits (A Sample)
Peter Lorre: Biographical Sketch
Peter Lorre FAQ
Peter Lorre On DVD
Peter Lorre Photos
Peter Lorre Poster Art
Critics Are Saying . . .
Interview With The Author
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The Lorre family very generously opened their photo album to me. Some pictures
were graciously given, others I copied and returned. On one of my many visits to California,
Cathy pulled a box from a closet. I was dismayed to see that the bottom half of what appeared
to be a greasy tool chest contained a stack of her father’s photos. Many were movie stills and
publicity photos. However, there were also multiple copies of a series of formal studio
sittings taken by a Fox photographer in 1936-37. The fact that they survived his many moves
over a period of nearly thirty years told me they held a special interest for him.
Except where noted, all photos are from the collection of Stephen
Youngkin. For a larger image, click on the thumbnail. A new window will open.
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Peter Lorre calling home? Deciding where to live in Los Angeles
generated friction between Peter and Celia. Always protective of his privacy, he
preferred to live as far as possible from the Hollywood studios. She, on the other
hand, knowing that her husband was not a good driver, wanted to live close to his
work. On the set of Mad Love (MGM,1935).
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During filming of Mad Love (1935), Peter chats with MGM
contract player Maureen O’Sullivan, best remembered for her role as "Jane"
opposite Johnny Weissmuller’s "Tarzan".
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A series of photos depicting Peter Lorre having a bust of himself made
during the filming of Mad Love for MGM in the summer of 1935.
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The completed bust of Peter Lorre, 1935.
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Dan "Danno" O'Mahoney, heavyweight wrestling champion of the world
(1935-1936), gives Peter Lorre a hard time during a visit to Columbia Studios, 1935.
The Irish wrestler was on a tour of the West Coast that summer. Peter was a huge
fan of professional wrestling and frequently attended matches. A "Thank You" goes
to Janet Fuentes for identifying "Danno" for us.
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Out with Italian actress Elissa Landi, an unidentified woman, and Alan
Mowbray. An English character actor of the "stiff upper lip school" of British acting,
Mowbray was also a founding member of the Screen Actors Guild and sat on its Board of
Directors. It appears that Lorre's hair is growing out after filming Mad Love.
June, 1935.
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Peter Lorre getting a shave during filming of Crime and Punishment
(1935). Tonsorial treatments notwithstanding, Lorre felt he was no match for the
“extraordinarily handsome” Raskolnikov. “If only I looked like Joseph Schildkraut,”
he confided to to co-star Marion Marsh. “He was a very, very handsome fellow.
This is how someone should look.”
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Peter Lorre makes time to study the script of Crime and
Punishment while readying for the day’s shoot. Co-workers reported that the
actor kept very much to himself during filming. Said Marion Marsh: “He hardly
spoke to anyone and I really thought it was because of his English. It wasn’t very
good. It was proper when he did speak, but I think he was a little bit timid about it.”
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Peter Lorre clowns around on the set of "Raskolnikov's apartment"
between shots on Crime and Punishment (Columbia, 1935).
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Josef von Sternberg directs Peter Lorre and Edward Arnold on the
"Inspector Porfiry's office" set for Columbia's Crime and Punishment (1935).
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To announce Peter Lorre's upcoming role in Secret Agent
(1936), the American magazine Vanity Fair made use of his distinctive
appearance for the caricature (drawn by Italian artist Paolo Garretto) and his screen
image for the caption: "That bland smile of his is ten times as nasty as the frowns
from lesser villains . . ."
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Lorre seemed to be fascinated with the owl. In the endpaper of Celia
Lovsky's diary, he wrote, "Dear Untier, for 1936, the memorable year in which
the fairylike rise of the owl begins" and signed it with a sketch of an owl. Peter
also loved to amuse Celia with his owl faces. In fact, the most prominently
displayed photo of him in her apartment pictured -- in several images, side by
side -- making his famous day and night owl faces. In Crack-Up (1936),
he even worked the "faces" into his portrayal of "Colonel Gimpy".
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Lorre and Sir John Gielgud perch on trunks behind the scenes on Secret
Agent (1936). Gielgud reported that Lorre was nice to him in rehearsals, but in
takes, expertly positioned himself in ways that earned him a reputation as a scene
stealer.
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Alfred Hitchcock (center) directs Peter Lorre, John Gielgud, and an
unbilled actor on the set of Secret Agent (Gaumont-British, 1936), as Lorre
and Gielgud take a tour of a chocolate factory acting as a front for espionage activities.
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The wrap party on Secret Agent (Gaumont-British, 1936) was
held in December, 1936, with a Christmas theme, complete with "Father Christmas"
(center). Director Alfred Hitchcock (far right), John Gielgud (behind Hitchcock),
Peter Lorre (in costume as "The General" and standing behind flag, "The Poocha
Cake"), and Madeleine Carroll are among the celebrants.
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As Peter Lorre's voice lent itself to comic imitation, so his unique
features -- especially his eyes, which he described as "soft-boiled eggs" -- inspired
caricature. Lorre was gratified by impersonations, whether vocal or artistic. While
Secret Agent (1936) was in release in London, the artist Gitano created a
portrait of Lorre's character "The General" for the British publication The
Bystander, a tabloid published weekly by the Illustrated London News
-- using skeins of black silk, a scarf, a gold earring, a boutonniere, and a tie-pin, in
addition to paint.
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The Lost One: A Life of Peter Lorre
by Stephen Youngkin -- now in its second printing and winner
of the Rondo Award for "Best Book of 2005" -- is available in bookstores everywhere, as
well as these on-line merchants.
The Films of Peter Lorre
(1982), also by Youngkin, is out of print but copies may be
purchased through Amazon and Barnes & Noble below. Interested in Lorre's radio and
television performances? Check out Radio Showcase and Movies Unlimited. Netflix has
Lorre movies for rent.
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