- Eugenie Leontovich
Eugenie Leontovich ( _ru. Евге́ния Леонто́вич; March 21 1900, "Eugenie Leontovich, 93; actress, writer, director."
Chicago Tribune . CHICAGOLAND; Pg. 6; ZONE: C. April 4, 1993.] "Eugenie Leontovich, 93, Actress, Playwright and Teacher, Is Dead." GLENN COLLINS.The New York Times Section 1; Page 11; Column 1; Cultural Desk. April 3, 1993.]Moscow ,Russian Empire – April 2, 1993,New York City ) was aRussia n-born stage actress with a distinguished career intheatre ,film andtelevision . Reportedly, she "was one of the most colourful figures of the 20th-century theatre, a successful actress, producer, playwright and teacher.""EXILE ON BROADWAY; Obituary: Eugenie Leontovich." DALE HARRIS.The Guardian (London). THE GUARDIAN FEATURES PAGE; Pg. 13. April 14, 1993.]Early life
Reportedly, "born in
Moscow in 1900, Leontovich studied at that city'sImperial School of Dramatic Art , and then underMeyerhold at theMoscow Art Theatre , which she subsequently joined." As she was a daughter of an officer in the Russian Imperial Army, Leontovich suffered greatly during the Revolution with her three brothers (White Army officers like her father) being killed by theBolsheviks and her family lose everything. In 1922, she reportedly "found her way toNew York and set about mastering the English language." Her success in doing so led to Broadway stardom.Career
After touring the country in "Blossom Time," she was cast as Grusinskaya in an adaptation of
Vicki Baum 's novel "Grand Hotel." An enormous success, the play, which opened in 1930, was later filmed with Garbo in the part created by Leontovich.The first she embodied as the Dowager Empress in "Anastasia", a role she created on Broadway in 1954; the second as the Archduchess Tatiana in "Tovarich", a comedy about a pair of Russian aristocrats who survive in Paris by going into domestic service. It was in this play that she made a highly successful London debut at the Lyric Theatre in 1935, with Cedric Hardwicke as her co-star.
After "Grand Hotel" it looked for a while as though Leontovich would be typecast as the kind of soulful Russian to whom misfortune is second nature, but as soon as she finished the tour of the play, she was given the role of
Lilly Garland (nee Mildred Plotka) in "Twentieth Century", the fast-moving comedy byBen Hecht andCharles MacArthur that was later transformed into a musical. With "Twentieth Century", Leontovich established herself as a first-rate comedian. During the war, she played on Broadway in "Dark Eyes", a comedy she wrote withElena Miramova about three Russian exiles in New York. The play was produced in London after the war withEugenia Delarova andIrina Baronova .Reportedly, "Leontovich liked appearing in Britain." In 1936, she played
Shakespeare 's Cleopatra at the New Theatre, returning toLondon in 1947 as a female Russian general in a crude but funny farce she wrote withGeorge S George , "Caviar To The General", which temporarily displacedPhyllis Dixey at theWhitehall .A year later, she moved to
Los Angeles , where for the next five years she had her own theatre, The Stage, where she both produced and performed. In 1972, she adapted "Anna Karenina " for off-Broadway, calling it "Anna K." and appearing in it with success. Leontovich made a handful of films, "none of any distinction", though her performance in "Four Sons" (1940) is considered "touching". For most of her long professional life she was identified with the theatre, however.Also, Leontovich was reportedly, "for seven years in the 1960s . . . an artist in residence at the
Goodman Theater inChicago and also taught acting inCalifornia andNew York ."Personal
Reportedly, Leontovich, "whose students addressed her and referred to her as 'madame,' lived in a Manhattan apartment surrounded by family pictures and icons." Leontovich's two marriages reportedly ended in divorce. According to her official biography, her first husband,
Paul Sokolov , was a member of the Russian nobility. Her second husband was the actor, producer, and directorGregory Ratoff (the two were married in 1923, but divorced).Broadway Plays and Filmatography
Leontovich made her Broadway debut in 1922 in "Revue Russe", appearing with her future husband,
Gregory Ratoff . She also appeared in "Bitter Oleander " (1935), "Dark Eyes" (1943) which she co-wrote, and "Obsession" (1946).Her most notable role was that of the Dowager Empress in "Anastasia" (1954). She was nominated for a Tony Award for
William Saroyan 's "The Cave Dwellers".Her films include "Anything Can Happen" (1952), "
The Rains of Ranchipur " (1955) (a 1955 remake of "The Rains Came " (1939), withRichard Burton andLana Turner ), "The World in His Arms " (1952) and "Homicidal " (1961). She also appeared on an episode of "Naked City".External links
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References
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