A new era of cringe is upon us, and the critics have only themselves to blame.

https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/arts-letters/articles/unbearable-fakeness-film-reviews

Peter van Eyck: the Nazi who wasn’t – The Movie Gourmet

https://www.themoviegourmet.com/?p=20461

Antisemitism | Holocaust Encyclopedia

https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/antisemitism

A Guide to the Forgotten Paris – Cityscape Travel

https://cityscape-travel.com/a-guide-to-the-forgotten-paris/

Maximilian Schell, Actor Who Played Jews, Nazis — and Both

Maximilian Schell, Actor Who Played Jews, Nazis — and Both

Schell of an Actor: Maximilian Schell as seen in 1969. Image by Getty Images

Benjamin Ivry

By Benjamin IvryFebruary 3, 2014

Considering that the Oscar-winning Austrian-Swiss actor Maximilian Schell, who died on February 1 at age 83, spent WWII safely in neutral Switzerland, it is remarkable that he spent his acting life portraying Nazis, victims of Nazis, and defenders of Nazis, far beyond the requirements of typecasting. Schell’s 1961 best actor Academy Award was for his role as the defense lawyer serving Nazi war criminals in Stanley Kramer’s “Judgment at Nuremberg.” (Some film buffs thought it a crime of a different order that Schell’s comparatively stagy performance beat out the subtle, truth-telling turn by Spencer Tracy as a tribunal judge, also Oscar-nominated for the same film).

Son of Margarete Schell-von Noé, an Austrian actress and drama school proprieter all of whose children became actors, at age eight Schell moved with his family from Austria to neutral Switzerland after the 1938 Anschluss, or Nazi annexation of Austria. Schell’s family could do so because his father, Hermann Schell, an author and pharmacy owner, was Swiss. Many obits incorrectly refer to Schell as a wartime “refugee” which he decidedly was not, given his family’s privileged status in Zurich. Still, this formative time made a permanent impact on the young actor, resulting in a variety of war-themed films.

In his first film in Germany, “Children, Mothers, and a General,” (1955) about German families who objected when their sons were sent to fight on the Russian front, Schell played a Nazi deserter. He followed this the same year with a small role as a conspirator in the German movie “The Plot to Assassinate Hitler.” His first break in Hollywood was also as a Nazi soldier in 1958’s “The Young Lions,” based on a novel by Irwin Shaw (born Irwin Gilbert Shamforoff). The original 1959 TV production of “Judgment at Nuremberg,” written by Abby Mann (born Abraham Goodman) was an American launching pad for Schell. In Vittorio De Sica’s “The Condemned of Altona” (1962), Schell played a deranged Nazi war criminal whose family allows him to think the war is still on years after Germany lost.

Free morning newsletter

Forwarding the News

Thoughtful, balanced reporting from the Forward and around the web, bringing you updated news and analysis of the crisis each day.Terms(Required)I agree to the Forward’s Terms of Service and Privacy PolicyEmail(Required)

about:blank

This eternalizing of the Second World War partly summarized Schell’s developing career. In 1967’s “Counterpoint,” Schell played a music-loving Nazi general who forces a conductor to perform symphonies for him. Small wonder that when Schell began to direct films, he chose the subject of “The Pedestrian” (1973) the trial of an old German war criminal. The following year he played a never-prosecuted Nazi SS captain in “The Odessa File.” “The Man in the Glass Booth” (1975) offered a more ambiguous role for Schell as Arthur Goldman, a rich Jewish industrialist who may or may not really be a Nazi war criminal.

This film marked a turning point in Schell’s usual typecasting as Nazis, whether proud or rebellious ones. In 1977, after two more performances as Nazis in “Cross of Iron” and “A Bridge Too Far,” he was nominated for an Oscar in the small role of an anti-Nazi activist in Fred Zinnemann’s “Julia.” From there it was only a short step to playing a Jew, this time an unambiguous one, as the heroine’s father in a 1980 TV version of “The Diary of Anne Frank,” directed by the Ukrainian Jewish filmmaker Boris Sagal. The following year, Schell was Professor David Malter, an Orthodox Jew, in the Hollywood adaptation of Chaim Potok’s “The Chosen.”

By then Schell was clearly the go-to Aryan for playing sympathetic Jewish parts, a new form of typecasting for him which he repeated in the US/German co-production “The Rose Garden” (1989), based on a true story. In it, Schell played a concentration-camp survivor who attacks the camp’s former commandant after seeing him at an airport. The continuing sub-theme of Nazis getting away scot-free originated in Schell’s career in “Judgment at Nuremberg,” when he slyly (and accurately) informed Spencer Tracy that all the war criminals who received life sentences will surely be out of jail five years later.

This lack of satisfactory resolution may explain Schell’s resurfacing as Mordecai Weiss, another concentration camp survivor, in “Miss Rose White” a 1992 TV adaptation of Barbara Lebow’s 1985 play, “A Shayna Maidel.” And as Arkady Shapira, the unlikely patriarch of a murderous Russian Jewish mafia family in “Little Odessa” (1994). And as yet another Jewish patriarch, Mr. Silberschmidt, in Jeroen Krabbé’s “Left Luggage” (1998). Schell’s determination to keep playing such roles was matched by the film industries’ continuing insistence on seeing him as ideal casting for them. Perhaps the apotheosis of these lovable, if sometimes unlikely, Jewish parts was reached when Schell was cast as Albert Einstein in the German TV series “Giants” (Giganten).

Curiously, in later years, when offered the opportunity to direct, Schell made his strongest statements with two pitilessly sardonic documentaries about how showbiz’s star system can mentally destroy people, the subjects being Marlene Dietrich and his own sister, actress Maria Schell. In “Judgment at Nuremberg,” two of the worst-damaged flotsam from the Hollywood studio system, Judy Garland and Montgomery Clift, portrayed victims of the Nazis, further tormented during cross-examinations by the merciless Schell. Schell’s own career trajectory of incarnating Nazis, and later anti-Nazis and Jews, apparently led him to conclude that although on a wholly different scale, the movie business can also destroy human lives.

Benjamin Ivry is a frequent Forward contributor.

FREE MORNING NEWSLETTER

Forwarding the News

Free morning newsletter

Thoughtful, balanced reporting from the Forward and around the web, bringing you updated news and analysis of the crisis each day.Terms(Required)I agree to the Forward’s Terms of Service and Privacy PolicyEmail(Required)

about:blank

Engage

CATCH UP ON YIDDISH EVENTS

IT’S TRIVIA TIME!

Shop the Forward Store

100% of profits support our journalismPrevious

ACCESSORY

Our founder, Ab CahanTote bag

APPAREL

1960s Yiddish hipi hoodiePremium pullover hoodie

APPAREL

It’s spelled Khanike teePremium tee

APPAREL

The Forverts est. 1897 hoodieWomen’s premium hoodie

Next

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Dive In

Explore

MOST POPULAR

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

THE JEWISH DAILY FORWARD ℠

Copyright © 2024 The Forward Association, Inc. All rights reserved.

desktop-top-1340x125%402x.png

The Pedestrian: post-war Germany without the chewing gum | Sight & Sound | BFI

https://www2.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/sight-sound-magazine/comment/bradlands/pedestrian-post-war-germany-without-chewing-gum

Review: ‘The Color Purple’ a Divisive Musical Adaptation | National Review

https://www.nationalreview.com/2024/01/say-no-to-this-color-purple/

The Return of the Progressive Atrocity

It is the responsibility of Western activists to know who and what they support, and to separate themselves—openly and decisively—from programs and regimes that are predicated on violence and repression.

https://quillette.com/2023/11/18/the-return-of-the-progressive-atrocity/

Palestine Isn’t Ferguson

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/10/israeli-palestinian-conflict-ferguson/620471/?ref=quillette.com

In statements and petitions, the words racism, imperialism, colonialism, settler-colonialism, apartheid, capitalism, and genocide were clotted together into a smorgasbord of evil, as if the writers couldn’t decide which to choose. I received many of these petitions. They reminded me of George Orwell’s warning, in “Politics and the English Language,” about the intimate connection between debased political language and debased political thought: “As soon as certain topics are raised, the concrete melts into the abstract and no one seems able to think of turns of speech that are not hackneyed: prose consists less and less of words chosen for the sake of their meaning, and more and more of phrases tacked together like the sections of a prefabricated hen-house.” The intent is not to make a political argument—to explain, to convince—but to elicit Pavlovian reactions of disgust, thereby bypassing actual thought.

Previous Older Entries

The Love Pirate

Movie Reviews and Analysis

Humanizing The Vacuum

Alfred Soto's blog about arts and politics.

nitrateglow

I like to viddy the old films now and then

Silent-ology

Uncovering the silent era

Phantom of the Backlots

Meet the real phantom

Hometowns to Hollywood

Exploring the hometowns and legacies of Hollywood's Golden Age stars.

Heavy Topspin

The Tennis Abstract blog

STOP THESE THINGS

The truth about the great wind power fraud - we're not here to debate the wind industry, we're here to destroy it.

The Russian Reader

News and views of (other) Russia(n)(s)

uniqueplacestosee.com

Skip the tourist traps, travel like a local.

D.R.A.S.T.I.C. Research

D.R.A.S.T.I.C. Research

PETER WYNGARDE: The Official Website

PART OF THE OFFICIAL PETER WYNGARDE APPRECIATION SOCIETY

Moniqueclassique's Blog

This website is a tribute that I dedicate, with great love, to the majestic world of classic movies.

John van Dreelen

The John van Dreelen Fan Website

Vivien Leigh - the greatest actress in the world

A fan tribute to the Queen of the Seventh Art

The Lana Turner Blog

A tribute to a true Hollywood legend

My Favorite Westerns

A Celebration of Western Movies... Pardner!

Fire Breathing Dimetrodon Time

Watching classic adventure TV with my kid

Vintage Stardust

Classic Cinema's Art Direction, Culture, and Inspiration

John McEnery Fan Blog

A tribute to the actor John McEnery

Harlow Heaven

Commemorating Jean Harlow, plus assorted reflections by Sophia D'Aurelio

Lizabeth Scott

film noir queen

Fortune Finds

Finding all the things you didnt know you needed

the Carbon Freeze

Eclectic Essays & Art

Northing & Easting

Making sure things are where they really are

Mike's Take On the Movies

Rediscovering Cinema's Past

Riding the High Country

Reviews and ramblings

That's what I'd like to know

some things to wonder about

Audie Murphy Appreciation

a fan appreciation of Audie Murphy's life and films

Cinema Sojourns

Time Tripping Through the World of Film

cracked rear viewer

Fresh takes on retro pop culture

Once upon a screen...

...a classic film and TV blog

(Travalanche)

The observations of actor, author, comedian, critic, director, humorist, journalist, m.c., performance artist, playwright, producer, publicist, public speaker, songwriter, and variety booker Trav S.D.

Joseph Cotten & Teresa Wright Appreciation

Blog appreciating the films of Joseph Cotten and Teresa Wright including Shadow of a Doubt

50 Westerns From The 50s.

Riding the long, dusty trail through 50s Westerns.

Dan Duryea Appreciation

Appreciation of the actor Dan Duryea

Variety

Entertainment news, film reviews, awards, film festivals, box office, entertainment industry conferences

Ian Bannen Tribute Page

A tribute to the Scottish actor

The Tinseltown Twins

Two Film Buffs Are Better Than One

Only a Bloody Blog

Blogging my way through the career of Michael Caine one film at a time

movingtheriver.com

Matt Phillips' website about 1980s music, movies and more

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started