| Addicted to Bad Ideas, Peter Lorre's Twentieth Century | ||
| An ArKtype Project Written and Performed by World/Inferno Friendship Society Libretto by Jack Terricloth, Directed by Jay Scheib, Produced by ArKtype / Thomas Kriegsmann, Video by Naomi White, Lighting Design / Production Management by Brett Maughan, Music Direction by Peter Hess, Assistant Direction by Juan Souki, Sound by Dan Shatzky, Band Management by Greg Daly With Jack Terricloth , Vocals; Sandra Malak, Bass/Background Vocals; Lucky Strano , Guitar; Semra Erçin, Percussion/Background Vocals; Maura Corrigan, Alto Saxophone; Peter Hess, Tenor Saxophone / Clarinet; Ken Thomson, Baritone Saxophone / Clarinet; Raja Najib Azar, Piano; Kevin Raczka, Drums |
On PETER LORRE At Jacob Moreno's Theater of Spontaneity, he learned to act out "the lived out and unlived out dimensions of his private world." Before releasing the talented unknown into the world, the psychodramatist gave him a more suitable professional name, Peter Lorre, which recalled his resemblance to "Struwwelpeter," an unkempt character in German children's literature. From Vienna, he moved on to the Lobe and Thalia Theaters in Breslau, Germany, in 1924. Stage work at Zurich's Schauspielhaus and Vienna's Kammerspiele, where he played comedies, farces, and dramas, brought him to Berlin and to the attention of poet-dramatist Bertolt Brecht. While Lorre's unorthodox looks answered the playwright's search for distinctive types, his "clashing of characteristics" breathed form into his dialectical theories on stagecraft. Brecht cast the young actor as a cretinous high school student in Marieluise Fleischer's lustspiel "Pioniere in Ingolstadt" ("Engineers in Ingolstadt") in 1928. After that, he was, in his own words, "the hottest thing on the Berlin stage." Lorre's dual style also impressed legendary German director Fritz Lang, who cast the "negative superman" as a psychopathic murderer. M (1931), which introduced Lorre as a shadow and an off-screen voice, catapulted the actor to international fame as a notorious child murderer, forever confusing him in the public eye as a psychotic type. Though he did not know it, it was as much the end as the beginning of his film career. Looking to become a "general character actor," Lorre accepted Twentieth Century-Fox's invitation to play a variety of parts. However, a series of Japanese detective films based on J .P. Marquand's Mr. Moto threatened an even narrower use of his talents. At Warner Bros., where he co-starred on and off screen with pal Humphrey Bogart, Lorre hit his personal and professional stride, appearing in vehicles that popularized his sinister image (The Maltese Falcon, 1941; Casablanca, 1943), and explored his more melancholy, philosophic side (Three Strangers, 1946). His acting style reflected a change of attitude, away from psychological probing toward what Thomas Mann called "perfected naturalness," at the same time casual and comfortable, off-center and ironic. He told friends he would play anything -- a Martian, a cannibal, even Bugs Bunny -- to avoid a suspension. In 1946, Warner Bros. called his bluff, casting him in The Beast with Five Fingers, for what turned out to be the requiem for the waning horror genre. Seeking to chart his own course -- to act, direct, and produce -- Lorre left the studio and formed his own self-management company. Three years of relative inactivity, which he blamed on "graylisting" by the House Committee on Un-American Activities, a legacy of his friendship with Brecht, ended in bankruptcy in 1949. Feeling that Hollywood had turned its back on him, the actor left for Europe, where he played the elusive pivotal role denied him in America. In Germany, he directed, co-authored, and starred in Der Verlorene (The Lost One) in 1951, which weighed the enormity of Hitler's state-sponsored mass crimes against the fate of a single human being, a murderer who becomes the victim of murderous times. When German audiences, who wanted to put the past behind them, rejected the darkly fatalistic movie, he reluctantly returned to the United States. After appearing in a summer stock production of "A Night at Madame Tussaud's", Lorre found himself cast against type as a comically droll rogue in John Huston's Beat the Devil (1954). The reunion of the "unholy three" -- Huston, Bogart, and Lorre -- turned the clock back to happier days, when a sense of camaraderie fed the spirit of fun. Such departures, however, failed to arrest the downward spiral of his career. When Hollywood refused to risk a less commercial use of his talents, Lorre wearily accepted roles that spoofed his sinister movie personality. Ironically, by the end of his life, his appearances in horror-comedies opposite Vincent Price and Boris Karloff (Tales of Terror, 1962; The Raven, 1963; The Comedy of Terrors, 1964) came to outnumber his performances in the genre they parodied. At age 59, the overweight actor suffered a fatal cerebral hemorrhage on March 23, 1964. The emblematic personalities of Humphrey Bogart and Bertolt Brecht locked Lorre into a choice, which he never made, between celebrity and intellectual respectability. Frustrated by his failure to carve a niche for himself in Hollywood, the erudite actor planned numerous projects tailored to his aptitude and capabilities, most notably film stories with his friend and mentor Bertolt Brecht. However, his failure to bridge the gap between person and persona drove the private Peter Lorre deeper into hiding and more sharply defined the seemingly disembodied legacy of his screen image.
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| Premier: Philadelphia Live Art Festival, Sept 7 & 8, 2007 NEXT: Peak Performances at Montclair in September 2008 |
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| This project was created with a commission and residency from Peak Performances @ Montclair, Montclair State University, Montclair, NJ, Jedediah Wheeler, Executive Director. | ||