Pictures from Google Image Search

Lorre, Peter

International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers | 2001 | | Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

LORRE, Peter



Born: Laszlo Loewenstein in Rosenberg, Hungary, 26 June 1904. Education: Studied acting in Vienna. Family: Married 1) Cecilia Lovovsky, 1934; 2) Kaaren Verne, 1951 (divorced); 3) Anna Marie Brenning. Career: Stage debut in Zurich, and also acted in Breslau and other German-language cities: in Galsworthy's Society in Zurich, and in Die Pionere von Ingolstadt at the Volksbühne, Berlin, 1928; 1931played a child murderer in his film debut, M ; 1933left Germany with rise of Nazis, and made English-language film debut The Man Who Knew Too Much 1934; over the next ten years made films in Hollywood for Columbia, 20th Century-Fox (including the Mr. Moto series beginning 1937), and Warner Brothers; free-lance after 1947, often in horror films; 1951directed and acted in Der Verlorene in Germany. Died: 24 March 1964.

Films as Actor:

1931

M (Fritz Lang) (as Hans Beckert); Die Bomben auf Monte Carlo (The Bombardment of Monte Carlo ; Monte Carlo Madness ) (Schwarz) (as Pawlitschenk); Die Koffer des Herrn O.F. (The Thirteen Trunks of Mr. O.F. ) (Granowsky) (as Stix)

1932

Fünf von der Jazzband (Five of the Jazzband ) (Engel); Der weisse Dämon (The White Demon ) (Gerron) (as hunchback); F.P. 1 antwortet nicht (F.P. 1 Doesn't Answer ) (Siodmak) (as Johnny); Schuss im Morgengrauen (A Shot at Dawn ) (Zeisler) (as Klotz)

1933

Was Frauen träumen (What Women Dream ) (von Bolvary) (as Füssli); Unsichtbare Gegner (Invisible Opponent ) (Katscher) (as Henry Pless); De haut à bas (Pabst) (as beggar); The Man Who Knew Too Much (Hitchcock) (as Abbott)

1935

Mad Love (Freund) (as Dr. Gogol); Crime and Punishment (von Sternberg) (as Raskolnikov)

1936

The Secret Agent (Hitchcock) (as General)

1937

Crack-Up (St. Clair) (as Col. Gimpy); Nancy Steele Is Missing (Marshall) (as Prof. Sturm); Think Fast, Mr. Moto (Foster) (as Mr. Moto); Lancer Spy (Ratoff) (as Maj. Sigfried Gruning); Thank You, Mr. Moto (Foster) (as Mr. Moto)

1938

Mr. Moto's Gamble (Tinling) (as Mr. Moto); Mr. Moto Takes a Chance (Foster) (as Mr. Moto); I'll Give a Million (Walter Lang) (as Louie); Mysterious Mr. Moto (Foster) (as Mr. Moto)

1939

Danger Island (Leeds) (as Mr. Moto); Mr. Moto's Last Warning (Foster) (as Mr. Moto); Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation (Foster) (as Mr. Moto)

1940

Strange Cargo (Borzage) (as Cochon/M'sieu Pig); I Was an Adventuress (Ratoff) (as Polo); Island of Doomed Men (Barton) (as Stephen Danel); Stranger on the Third Floor (Ingster) (as Stranger); You'll Find Out (Butler) (as Fenninger)

1941

The Face behind the Mask (Florey) (as James Szabo); Mr. District Attorney (Morgan) (as Mr. Hyde); They Met in Bombay (Brown) (as Capt. Chang); The Maltese Falcon (Huston) (as Joel Cairo)

1942

All through the Night (Sherman) (as Pepi); Invisible Agent (Marin) (as Baron Ikito); The Boogie Man Will Get You (Landers) (as Dr. Lorentz); Casablanca (Curtiz) (as Ugarte)

1943

Background to Danger (Walsh) (as Zalenkoff); The Constant Nymph (Goulding) (as Fritz Bercovy); The Cross of Lorraine (Garnett) (as Sgt. Berger)

1944

Passage to Marseille (Curtiz) (as Marius); The Mask of Dimitrios (Negulesco) (as Cornelius Leyden); Arsenic and Old Lace (Capra) (as Dr. Einstein); The Conspirators (Negulesco) (as Jan Bernazsky); Hollywood Canteen (Daves) (as guest)

1945

Hotel Berlin (Godfrey) (as Johannas Koenig); Confidential Agent (Shumlin) (as Contreras)

1946

Three Strangers (Negulesco) (as West); Black Angel (Neill) (as Marko); The Chase (Ripley) (as Gino); The Verdict (Siegel) (as Victor Emmric); The Beast with Five Fingers (Florey) (as Hilary Cummins)

1947

My Favorite Brunette (Nugent) (as Kismet)

1948

Casbah (Berry) (as Slimane)

1949

Rope of Sand (Dieterle) (as Toady)

1950

Quicksand (Pichel) (as Nick)

1953

Double Confession (Annakin)

1954

Beat the Devil (Huston) (as O'Hara); Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea (Fleischer) (as Conseil)

1956

Congo Crossing (Pevney) (as Col. Arragas); Around the World in Eighty Days (Anderson) (as Japanese Steward); Meet Me in Las Vegas (Rowland) (as guest)

1957

The Buster Keaton Story (Sheldon) (as Kurt Bergner); Silk Stockings (Mamoulian) (as Brankov); The Story of Mankind (Allen) (as Nero); The Sad Sack (Marshall) (as Abdul); Hell Ship Mutiny (Sholem and Williams) (as Lamouet)

1959

The Big Circus (Newman) (as Skeeter)

1960

Scent of Mystery (Cardiff) (as Smiley)

1961

Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (Allen) (as Emery)

1962

"The Black Cat" ep. of Tales of Terror (Corman) (as Montresor); Five Weeks in a Balloon (Allen) (as Ahmed)

1963

The Raven (Corman) (as Dr. Bedlo)

1964

The Comedy of Terrors (Tourneur) (as Felix Gillie); Muscle Beach Party (Asher) (as Mr. Strangdour); The Patsy (Lewis) (as Morgan Heywood)


Film as Director:


1951

Der Verlorene (The Lost One ) (+ co-sc, ro as Dr. Karl Rothe)

Publications


On LORRE: books

Sennett, Ted, Masters of Menace: Greenstreet and Lorre, New York, 1979.

Youngkin, Stephen D., James Bigwood, and Raymond G. Cabana, Jr., The Films of Peter Lorre, Secaucus, New Jersey, 1982.

Suehla, Gary J., editor, Peter Lorre, Beaverton, 1999.


On LORRE: articles

Luft, Herbert, "Peter Lorre," in Films in Review (New York), May 1960.

Dyer, P. J., "Fugitive from Murder," in Sight and Sound (London), Summer 1964.

Classic Images (Indiana, Pennsylvania), November 1980.

Cinema (W. Germ), March 1984.

Film und Fernsehen (Berlin), no. 1, 1985.

Film Dope (Nottingham), February 1987.

Smith, J., "Mad Love! " in Filmfax (Evanston), March/April 1989.

Molina Foix, J.A., "Peter Lorre," in Nosferatu (San Sebastian), January 1996.

Potes, A., "Peter Lorre," in Nosferatu (San Sebastian), January 1996.


* * *

"I want to escape . . . to escape from myself! . . . But it's impossible. I can't. I can't escape . . . Who knows what it feels like to be me? How I'm forced to act. . . ." Cringing, pathetic, grotesque, a giveaway M (for murderer) still chalked on his back, the cornered child-killer makes his agonized plea to a grim-faced jury of criminals. Peter Lorre's first film performance (barring an unconfirmed bit part or two), it was also one of his finest, and made him internationally famous. Yet at the same time it trapped him. Hollywood, having seen Lang's film, waited for Lorre to arrive, slapped an indelible M (for melodrama) on his back, and set him to 30 years of playing sad-eyed psychopaths. Throughout his subsequent career, the lines from M echo in ironic commentary.

But Lorre was also trapped by his own utterly distinctive physique. Squat, stocky, round-faced, at once pitiable and terrifying, he seemed a textbook illustration of schizophrenia: the eyes, liquid and soulful, that could abruptly bulge with murderous rage or ungovernable terror; the voice, a gentle middle-European whisper, pitching without warning into a shrill fury of frustration and hate; the cigarette drooping from a twitching mouth; the caged, prowling walk, driven by some intolerable restlessness of spirit. Otis Ferguson described him as "childlike, beautiful, unfathomably wicked, always hinting at things it would not be good to know." Small wonder if he found himself cast as madmen and murderers.

His first appearance on a Hollywood screen, as Dr. Gogol in Mad Love, gave fair warning of what was to come. Leaning forward from the darkness of a theater box, moon-round face totally bald above a fur collar and neatly bisected by shadow, Lorre gazed with depraved desire at the spectacle of Frances Drake being tortured on a wheel. Although one of his better films, as it turned out, it pushed him over the edge of self-parody, using (as the New York Times remarked of a later movie) "his tricks but not his talent."

Lorre himself, longing to extend his range, always claimed that his true bent lay in comedy, and his most enjoyable roles were certainly those in which comic and sinister were finely balanced. As Joel Cairo in The Maltese Falcon, querulous and frizzy-haired, with his spats and gardenia-scented calling cards, he made one of a memorable gang of villains (along with Greenstreet, Mary Astor, and Elisha Cook), just occasionally allowing the killer to glare through the fop. His two roles for Hitchcock drew on a similar vein of quirky ambiguity: the kindly, soft-spoken nihilist in The Man Who Knew Too Much, so good with children; and the flamboyantly overdressed "Hairless Mexican" in Secret Agent, vain and temperamental, given to sudden outbursts of irrational fury. Lorre could effect the switch, from genial to chilling, with utmost subtletya twitch of the scalp, a spasm briefly contorting the mouth, and his shy, vulnerable face would smooth into an inhuman mask.

After The Maltese Falcon Warners teamed him eight more times with Greenstreet. They acted well together, effectively playing off Greenstreet's vast urbanity against Lorre's scuttering nervousness, even (perhaps especially) when, as in The Mask of Dimitrios or The Verdict, Lorre played hero to the other's villain. The Mr. Moto series also allowed him a rare escape from evilroutine Fox program-fodder, redeemed by Lorre's resilient wit. Otherwise it was mostly psychopaths, spies, and sadists, though Lorre could bring individuality to the most hackneyed parts, transforming them (in David Thomson's words) "into portraits of delicate, deranged kindness, pushed to the point of frantic malice."

Privately, Lorre was known as a charming man, gentle and intelligent. In later life, troubled by ill-health and overweight, and hurt by the undeserved failure of his sole attempt at directing, Der Verlorene, he wandered with resigned sadness through some disastrously bad movies. He was, Peter John Dyer wrote, "a victim of his own precocious fame . . . too intractably unique in accent, form and expression for producers to reorient their attitude towards him. He was too obviously nearly mad. He was too dangerously sane."

Philip Kemp

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

Kemp, Philip. "Lorre, Peter." International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. 15 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Kemp, Philip. "Lorre, Peter." International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. (November 15, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3406801854.html

Kemp, Philip. "Lorre, Peter." International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Retrieved November 15, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3406801854.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Aaron Burr, portrayed as misunderstood Founding hero.(BOOKS)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times; 7/1/2007; 700+ words ; ...national chronicle, though, Aaron Burr is frequently cited as...their style and sweep. Aaron Burr came from splendid...Washington, D.C. So, poor Burr was tried for treason and...office after another, Aaron Burr became a very different...
Burr in the saddle.(Fallen Founder: The Life of Aaron Burr)(Book review)
Magazine article from: National Review; 7/30/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...Fallen Founder: The Life of Aaron Burr, by Nancy Isenberg (Viking...book, to rehabilitate Aaron Burr brings to mind the...historians. Since his death Burr has been taken up by what...Rather than seeking the true Aaron Burr, Isenberg argues...
Aaron Burr: Conspiracy to Treason
Magazine article from: South Carolina Historical Magazine; 10/1/2004; ; 700+ words ; Aaron Burr: Conspiracy to Treason. By Buckner F...privy to intimate conversations with Aaron Burr in the 1973 novel Burr, Buckner F...exist-Walter Flavius McCaleb's The Aaron Burr Conspiracy (1966) and Thomas Perkins...
Blennerhassett Museum gets first Aaron Burr item: Purchase of silhouette marks 200th anniversary of vice president's third and final visit to island
Newspaper article from: Charleston Daily Mail; 9/5/2006; ; 587 words ; ...Blennerhassett Museum has its first item of Aaron Burr, who may have tried to lead prominent...the silhouette coincides with the Aaron Burr Association's visit to the...C., president-general of the Aaron Burr Association. "A lot of what...
Profile: Re-enactment of 1804 duel between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr
Transcript from: NPR Weekend Edition - Sunday; 7/11/2004; ; 683 words ; ...Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr Host: DEBBIE ELLIOTT...ANTONIO BURR: (As Aaron Burr) Yes, I am. Unidentified...of singing) SOLOMON: Burr makes a hasty exit...people includes dozens of Burrs and Hamiltons who, to...interesting meeting a Burr family member. SOLOMON: The ...
February's anniversaries.(Aaron Burr acquitted of treason in Alexander Hamilton's killing)(Design and construction of Old Bailey courthouse)(Andrei Gromyko's political life)
Magazine article from: History Today; 2/1/2007; ; 700+ words ; Aaron Burr Arrested for Treason February 19th, 1807 THE THIRD VICE-PRESIDENT OF...complicated legal proceedings he was questionably acquitted of treason. Aaron Burr came from a prominent family of clerics and scholars, but he always had...
Fallen Founder: The Life of Aaron Burr.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Journal of the Early Republic; 3/22/2008; ; 700+ words ; Fallen Founder: The Life of Aaron Burr. By Nancy Isenberg. (New York: Viking, 2007. Pp...and most maligned figures of the founding generation, Aaron Burr. It is certainly the best of the many Burr biographies...
Duel: Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr, and the Future of America.(Review)
Magazine article from: The American Prospect; 5/8/2000; ; 700+ words ; Duel: Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr, and the Future of America, by Thomas...treatment, Duel: Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr, and the Future of America...ultimately fatal collision course with Aaron Burr was his effort on behalf of his...
Duel: Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr and the Future of America.(Review)
Magazine article from: The Historian; 6/22/2001; ; 700+ words ; Duel: Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr and the Future of America. By Thomas...this book spurns the explanation that Aaron Burr murdered his long-time rival...deadlocked in 1800, Fleming suggests that Aaron Burr ignored political issues and envisioned...
Classic GOT MILK? TV Spot - 'Aaron Burr' - Is Back on Air.
PR Newswire; 7/9/2002; 700+ words ; ...campaign in October 1993. "Aaron Burr," or "Awooon Buuuhh...national distribution. "Aaron Burr" was developed in...including a portrait of Burr and the actual bullet preserved...What's remarkable about Aaron Burr is that people still...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Burr, Aaron
Encyclopedia entry from: West's Encyclopedia of American Law BURR, AARON Aaron Burr was a soldier, lawyer, and politician...administration treated him like an outsider. Burr blamed his failure to secure the top office...of her own. In 1801, United States v. Aaron Burr In 1807 Aaron Burr was prosecuted...
Aaron Burr
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography Aaron Burr American lawyer and politician Aaron Burr (1756-1836) was vice president under Thomas Jefferson...and to separate certain western areas from the United States. Aaron Burr was born in Newark, N.J., on Feb. 6, 1756, the...
The Aaron Burr Conspiracy
Book article from: American Eras The Aaron Burr Conspiracy Imperial Scheme. Soon after resigning the vice presidency in 1805, Aaron Burr began a journey throughout the...the public ’ s enmity toward Burr: “ Aaron Burr — may his treachery to...
Aaron Burr and the Definition of Treason
Book article from: American Eras Aaron Burr and the Definition of Treason Beginnings. Aaron Burr, in Henry Adams ’ s words, “ impressed with favor all who first met him. ” Burr, grandson of the great theologian Jonathan Edwards, served as a colonel...
Burr-Hamilton Duel
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History BURR-HAMILTON DUEL BURR-HAMILTON DUEL. Dueling, used as a...the duel between Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr. The confrontation between Burr...Thomas. Duel: Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr, and the Future of America. New...

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: