| |
Page Updated: Dec. 25, 2007
Home
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
|
|
===================================/>
Main Text Area />
===================================/>
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.
2-column table, 6 rows only! />
|
|
One of Peter Lorre's greatest dreams was to perform on Broadway. The
closest he came was a "pre-Broadway" summer stock engagement in Edwin Justin
Mayer's thriller, A Night at Madame Tussaud's on the "straw-hat" summer
circuit in 1952. He is pictured here with co-stars Ralph Clanton (Marque Lomenie de
Brienne), Viola Frayne (Mdm. Tussaud) and Miriam Hopkins (Ninon). According to
Clanton, there was no love lost between Hopkins and Lorre: "She hated him and he
hated her" -- and it showed. Grist Mill Playhouse, Andover, NJ, Sept 1 to 6, 1952.
|
Friction came to a head during Madame Tussaud's curtain calls.
Said actor Gerald Hiken: "It was simply that she was overblown and he was
understated and made her look silly by his simple motions. . . He knew that he was
coming out and taking his time and being flat and real and that she was going to come
out and flutter and bow."
|
During the Andover, NJ, run of A Night at Madame Tussaud's at
the Grist Mill Playhouse, Sept. 1-6, 1952, Peter Lorre and the other principal cast
members Miriam Hopkins, Ralph Clanton, Viola Frayne, and Rudulph Justice Watson
stayed at the historic Perona Farms (family-owned and operated since 1917) in the
countryside outside Andover. Here he is positioned in front of the original Perona
Barn (still standing today). A "thank you" goes out to Mark Avondoglio, Vice
President, Perona Farms, who
kindly identified the photo.
|
In this shot taken from the bull barn, Peter tells "Hominy Hill Conqueror,"
Mr. Perona's prize bull, to look at the camera, early September, 1952. The
foundation of the old bull barn is now used for additional parking at Perona Farms,
which hosted the many Hollywood celebrities performing at the Grist Mill Playhouse
in Andover during the 1950s. A "thank you" to Mark Avondoglio, Vice President,
Perona Farms, for his assistance
in identifying these photos.
|
Roberto Rossellini (center) visits John Huston and Peter Lorre at the
Palumbo Hotel during filming of Beat the Devil (United Artists, 1954) in
Ravello. Rossellini and wife Ingrid Berman were just two of the many celebrities,
including William Wyler, George Sanders, and Orson Welles, who dropped by the
Italian shoot.
|
Peter Lorre and four-legged friend. During filming in the mountainous
region of Ravello, Italy, cast and crew of Beat the Devil (1954) often used
this preferred mode of transportation.
|
Peter Lorre and the equally-short Arnold Stang stand next to the six-foot
five-inch Fess Parker, who achieved fame as Davy Crockett on the 1950s television
series Disneyland. Lorre was co-starring with Parker in “Turn Left at Mt.
Everest” (Playhouse 90, April 3, 1958) as a Nepalese camp aide who helps
reunite a soldier and his girlfriend during the Burma-India theater of World War II.
|
Peter Lorre snacking between scenes on Five Weeks in a
Balloon (1962), one of six pictures (and one television show) written by his
friend Charles Bennett. Whatever part he played, said the screenwriter, “there was
no way to stop Peter’s amiability from coming through.” For the thirty years
Bennett knew him, Lorre remained “the nice Peter I knew . . . gentle and friendly”
and completely unsusceptible to his star status: “I sometimes wonder if he ever
believed that he had achieved it.”
|
Peter Lorre in a reflective mood, 1960. Said his close friend Jonas
Silverstone, “I think Peter was and remained a very serious man, full of tragedy. I
think he was very aware of it.”
|
Lorre sits on Basil Rathbone’s lap between takes on The Comedy of
Terrors (1964). The woman on the right is possibly Celia Lovsky. By this point,
Lorre had trouble remembering his lines. While his co-workers sometimes grew
exasperated with the actor’s extemporizing, he was “so charming as a person,”
remembered screenwriter Richard Matheson, “you just couldn’t get angry.”
|
Stuntman Harvey Parry wears a latex "Lorre mask" while doubling
Peter Lorre in the opening "cemetery" sequence of The Comedy of Terrors.
Said Parry, "The mask was made for me and was miserable to wear." One
noteworthy difference is the eyebrows -- Parry's own eyebrows were thickened to
match Lorre's and help viewers readily recognize Parry as Lorre in the speeded-up
action sequences.
|
Vincent Price, right, gets pointers in dueling from his double Tom Steele
(center), seen here vigorously crossing blades with Harvey Parry. Parry's cigar?
He explained it was added to make this practice shot unsuitable for inclusion in the
final print -- which could happen by accident.
|
During his last years, Lorre lived in a small apartment in a large red brick
building at 7655 Hollywood Boulevard. Unwell and easily fatigued, he spent much of
his time sleeping and reading. This is a snapshot of Lorre resting. From the
Catharine Lorre Collection. Circa 1964.
|
Before getting its facts straight, the L.A. Herald-Examiner ran
an extra stating that Peter Lorre had succumbed to a fatal heart attack on March 23,
1964. The actor actually died of a cerebral hemorrhage.
|
Prev Page |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
Next Page
=============================================================== />
Display ads for UK Press, Powell's Books, Overstock.com, Barnes & Noble, Deep />
Discount, Amazon.com (US, UK, Canada), Radio Showcase, Netflix, Movies Unlimited. />
=============================================================== />
Divider />
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.
Link -- University Press of Kentucky />
University Press of Kentucky
Link -- Powell's Books />
Powell's Books
Link -- Overstock.com />
Overstock.com
Display Ads -- 4-column table />
|
|
|
|
Display ad -- Barnes & Noble />
The Lost One: A Life of Peter Lorre
Barnes & Noble
Bookstores
Display ad -- Deep Discount, "The Lost One" />
Deep Discount
|
Display ad -- Amazon.com (US) />
US fans:
Amazon.com
|
Display ad -- Amazon.ca (Canada) />
Canadian fans:
Amazon.ca
|
Display ad -- Amazon.uk (UK) />
UK fans:
Amazon.uk
|
Display ad -- B&N, "The Films of Peter Lorre" />
The Films of Peter Lorre
Barnes & Noble
Bookstores
|
Display ad -- Amazon, "The Films of Peter Lorre" />
US fans:
Amazon.com
|
Display ad -- Radio Showcase />
Radio Showcase
|
Display ad -- Netflix />

|
Display Ads -- 1-column table />
|
Display ad -- Movies Unlimited />
Movies Unlimited
|
Gift Certificate -- Amazon.com (US) />
US fans: Purchase an Amazon Gift Certificate
|
Gift Certificate -- Amazon.ca (Canada) />
Canadian fans: Purchase an Amazon Gift Certificate
|
Have a comment or question? We'd love to hear from you! Please contact us at:
Webmaster@PeterLorreBook.com
Copyright © 2005-2008 by Ghillie Web Design - Cheryl Morris. All Rights
Reserved.
|
===================================/>
End of Main Text Area />
===================================/>
|
===================================/>
Row 5 -- Gutter />
===================================/>