Max Glass
Max Glass | |
---|---|
Born |
12 June 1881 Jaroslau, Galicia Austria-Hungary |
Died |
18 July 1965 (aged 84) Paris France |
Nationality | Austrian |
Occupation | Screenwriter, producer |
Years active | 1920 - 1952 |
Max Glass (June 12, 1881 – July 18, 1965) was an Austrian screenwriter and film producer.
Glass was born in Jaroslau, which was then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, into a Jewish family, but later converted to Catholicism.[1] He gained a PHD in Philosophy from the University of Vienna. Glass entered the German film industry as a writer, but soon became a producer. By the mid-1920s he rose to be head of production at Terra Film before breaking away to set up his own production company in 1928[2] Glass' lover the actress Ruth Werner appeared in a number of his films but was unable to marry him until he had secured a divorce from his first wife.
Following the Nazi takeover of power in Germany in 1933, Glass' production companies were shut down and he was forced to go into exile in France.[3] Glass again worked as a producer, but ran into further trouble following the German invasion of France during the Second World War. In 1942 the collaborationist Vichy Government stripped him of his citizenship. Glass and Werner then went to Brazil and United States for the remainder of the conflict, only returning to France once the war was over. They finally married in 1957.[4]
Selected filmography
Writer
- Die entfesselte Menschheit (novel; 1920 - that year the novel was adapted to the screen to a film by the same name)
Screenwriter
- Countess Maritza (1925)
- The Humble Man and the Chanteuse (1925)
- If You Have an Aunt (1925)
- Why Get a Divorce? (1926)
- Young Blood (1926)
- Vienna - Berlin (1926)
- The Man Without Sleep (1926)
- The Three Mannequins (1926)
- Svengali (1927)
- Bigamie (1927)
- Heimweh (1927)
- Leontine's Husbands (1928)
- Love in the Ring (1930)
- Rasputin (1938)
- Entente cordiale (1939)
- Le chemin de Damas (1952)
Producer
- Svengali (1927)
- Queen Louise (1927)
- The Ship of Lost Souls (1929)
- Zwei Krawatten (1930)
- The Soaring Maiden (1931)
- Rasputin (1938)
- Tête blonde (1949)
References
Bibliography
- Buchanan, Roderick D. Playing With Fire: The Controversial Career of Hans J. Eysenck. Oxford University Press, 2010.
External links
- Max Glass at the Internet Movie Database
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