Everything about Andr Andrejew totally explained
André Andrejew (
January 21,
1887 -
March 13,
1967), was one of the most important art directors of the international cinema of the twentieth century. He had a distinctive, innovative style. His décors were both expressive and realistic. French writer Lucie Derain described Andrejew at the peak of his career as
‘an artist of the grand style, blessed with a vision of lyrical quality’ . Edith C.Lee wrote recently:
Believing in creative freedom rather than academic reconstruction, André Andrejew fulfilled the 20th century's notion of the romantic, individualistic artist. The unusual titillated his imagination.
Early life
André Andrejew was born in a town of Schawli (Lithuanian:
Šiauliai) in part of tsarist
Russia which would be today
Lithuania, on January 21, 1887 as
Andrej Andrejew (Russian: Андрей Андреев). He studied architecture at the
Moscow Fine Arts Academy. At the time in Russia, architecture could be studied at technical universities and with the more artistic angle at art academies, where accent was on interior and decor and students were trained as artists. After the studies André Andrejew worked as a decor designer at the
Stanislavski´s theater in Moscow.
In Berlin
After the
October revolution of 1917, Andrejew migrated to Germany, where he worked as stage designer in theater productions in Berlin and Vienna, working among others with
Max Reinhardt. In 1921/1922 he designed the stage decorations for the Jasha Jushny's
Der Blaue Vogel (Blue Bird), a legendary Russian émigré cabaret at Goltzstrasse in Berlin.
In 1923, he designed his first cinema décor for
Raskolnikow directed by
Robert Wiene, the film based upon
Dostoyevsky’s Crime and Punishment. This expressionist work made him the foremost art director in Germany. Rudolf Kurtz in his
Expressionismus und Film (1926) wrote:
Andrejew is a typical Moscow mixture, distinction of the streaked folk art (his decors) dissolves the rhythm of images, creates gentle forms, establishes balance even when everything is broken and torn.
Germany produced at the time hundreds of feature movies each year, and as cinema was silent, often they were produced in a co-production with France and released in both countries with different language intertitles. Andrejew designed décors for several major German and Franco-German productions directed by
Pabst,
Feyder,
Duvivier,
Christian-Jacque. The titles of this period include
Dancing Vienna,
Pandora's Box,
The Threepenny Opera,
Don Quixote,
The Golem,
Meyerling.
Especially interesting is today
The Threepenny Opera (1930) directed by
G.W. Pabst. Andrejew built for this film huge sets of the imaginary London. These decors artistically continue
German Expressionism of the 1920s, but bring it to another level, creating the world far more realistic, intense and somber.
France, Great Britain, Czechoslovakia: 1933-1940
Immediately after
Hitler took power in Germany in 1933, Andrejew as several other Russian artists living in Berlin left for Paris. At first he worked with the directors who also left Germany (Fedor Ozep, Alexis Granowsky, G. W. Pabst), but later also the most successful French filmamakers of the time working on art direction of numerous film productions in France, England, and Czechoslovakia.
In collaboration with Pimenoff, Andrejew art directed ‘Les Yeux Noirs’. Following this came sumptuous sets for ‘Les Nuits Moscovites’ and ‘Myerling’. His sets for Duvivier’s ‘Golem’ made in Prague were remarkable, the camera reproducing the artist’s original designs very faithfully. Toeplitz brought Andrejew to England in 1937 to make ‘The Dictator’, and he stayed on to make ‘Whom the Gods Love’ for Basil Dean. Both these films were set against lavish eighteenth century backgrounds on which he was so much at home(...)Until 1937 he was associated with many productions for London Films but returned to his chateau in France in 1938.
Just before the WWII, Andrejew has been very active in France making decors for two films with
Pabst and several other films with
L'Herbier, Ozep, Pottier, Lacombe and Mirande.
War years in France: 1940-1944
When Germany invaded France in May 1940 and established a puppet
Vichy regime there, German producer
Alfred Greven and his firm Continental Films continued to produce French films. These films were shown in cinemas in France and other occupied by Germany countries, where cinema had to be kept alive as it has been seen by the Nazi regime as an important propaganda tool. Several directors left France escaping the Nazis as
Louis Bunuel and
Jean Renoir, but the directors who stayed in France like
Marcel Carné,
Jean Cocteau,
Sacha Guitry continued to make films and André Andrejew continued to design and build film décors. Nonetheless almost all of French films had nothing to do with the occupiers ideology. Their default was to pretend normality, while the whole world has been set on fire and just next door millions of people were chased and send away to be exterminated.
Le Corbeau controversy
In 1943 André Andrejew worked as a production designer on a thriller by
Henri-Georges Clouzot Le Corbeau. This anti-authoritarian film became very controversial not only during the occupation, when it has been seen as an indirect film about the Nazi system. It is just after the liberation of France in August of 1944, that
Le Corbeau has been perceived as a movie made by the Nazi collaborators. The untrue rumors were spread that
Le Corbeau has been released in Germany and used by the Nazis to picture in a bad light France and French people. In fact,
Le Corbeau has been forbidden by the Nazi German censorship, and not released in Germany.
However, the film has been disliked by all political parties in after war France and there was a strong consensus to see this movie as a work of collaborators. In the post-war French social atmosphere dominated by the feeling of guilt of the whole nation for not putting enough resistance against the Nazi Germany, these collaborators even if only imagined, had to be severely punished. Clouzot received at first ban from film directing for life, his actors who acted also in other movies, long prison terms.
Several important personalities in France, as artist
Jean Cocteau and philosopher
Jean Paul Sartre, went to the defense of
Le Corbeau and
Henri-Georges Clouzot himself. The
Clouzot´s ban has been commuted to three years counted since
Le Corbeau release, which in fact meant two years ban from directing. Andrejew as his close collaborator received nine months ban. This ban forced André Andrejew to renew his English contacts.
The ban on
Le Corbeau has been lifted in France only in 1969.
Final years - Hollywood productions
Andrejew continued to work as a production designer in England, France, and since 1948, he designed décors for several major international productions as
Anna Karenina,
Alexander the Great(shot in Spain), and
Anastasia.
Anna Karenina produced by
Alexander Korda and directed by
Julien Duvivier, with the cinematography by
Henri Alekan, costumes by
Cecil Beaton and
Vivien Leigh in the title part, stands out in Andrejew's work as probably one of his best films. `
Andre Andrejew has done something good that very few set designers for films set in czarist Russia are able to do: create the impression of sumptuous wealth without making the rooms look like nearly barbaric combinations of harems and safaris. The seeming alien-ness of Russia, particularly before 1917, has influenced many set designers to make the place look strange and combine several bizarre cultures which have nothing to do with anything. This production of Anna Karenina
takes into account something very important: Upper class Russians were, in effect, Europeans, and they tended to live in the same sort of surroundings as other Victorian-era Europeans did.´
In
Alexander the Great (1956) Andrejew successfully used existing elements of primitive ancient architecture (in Spain!) to create the richness and glory of ancient Greece an Persia in far more authentic way, than the plaster and plywood decorations in other Hollywood films of similar genre of the epoch. Andrejew's new ideas were continued a decade later in the mythological films directed by
Pier Paolo Pasolini,
Edipo re (Oedipus Rex, 1967) with the production design by
Luigi Scaccianoce, and
Medea (1969) with the production design by Dante Ferretti.
Andrejew briefly returned to Berlin in 1952, to work on a
Carol Reed`s
The Man Between. He made his last movies in mid-fifties of the 20c. in Germany (then West Germany).
André Andrejew died of natural causes in
Loudun, south of Paris on March 13, 1967.
Influence of Andrejew on production design in film
Through his individual style of the art directing, the visual wealth and the artistic quality of his decors and the sheer number of films produced in many countries, Andrejew influenced for more than thirty years aesthetics of the cinema in Europe and America. Several production designers were following his style and today Andrejew is regarded as a classic. Edith C. Lee writes about him:
As critics began to condemn any strongly stated art direction as distracting, Andrejew slightly toned down his style. Nonetheless, he maintained his belief in the importance of intrinsic meaning in design.
Andrejew's production drawings are today in the collections in France and Great Britain, they also appear on art auctions and offering by the commercial galleries in France.
Cinémathèque Française in Paris presented several of Andrejew's gouaches during the exhibition
`Le cinéma expressionniste allemand - Splendeurs d'une collection (French Expressionist Cinema - Splendors of the Collection) ´ - held in winter of 2007. They were collected by
Lotte H. Eisner, German film historian living in France, who documented for the
Cinémathèque works of the most important
Filmarchitekte of the German expressionist cinema.
Filmography
This is a filmography of films made by André Andrejew as a production designer or an art director, as in Europe at the time there was no sharp distinction between these functions.
This filmography lists a year of release (not of production), an original title of the film and the name of its director. Eventual Andrejew’s collaborators are mentioned before the film director’s name. Additionally, after some titles, some significant names of the cast or of the crew have been noted.
Germany: 1923 - 1933
silent movies:
1923
Raskolnikov, Directed by
Robert Wiene
1923
Macht der Finsternis (Die), in collaboration with Heinrich Richter, Directed by
Conrad Wiene
1925
Briefe, die ihn nicht erreichten, in collaboration with Gustav A. Knauer, Directed by
Frederic Zelnik
1925
Geheimnis der alten Mamsell (Das), in collaboration with Gustav A. Knauer, Directed by Paul Merzbach
1925
Trödler von Amsterdam (Der), in collaboration with Gustav A. Knauer, Directed by Victor Janson
1925
Bankkrach Unter den Linden (Der), in collaboration with Gustav A. Knauer, Directed by Paul Merzbach
1926
Försterchristl(Die), in collaboration with Gustav A. Knauer, Directed by
Frederic Zelnik, Cast:
Lya Mara (Försterchristl)
1926
Mühle von Sanssouci (Die), in collaboration with Gustav A. Knauer, Directed by Siegfried Philippi and
Frederic Zelnik
1926
Flucht in den Zirkus (Die) also known as
Verurteilt nach Sibirien - Moskau 1912 (Die), in collaboration with Karl Görge and August Rinaldi, Directed by Mario Bonnard and Guido Parish
1926
Veilchenfresser (Der), in collaboration with Hermann Krehan, Directed by
Frederic Zelnik
1926
Überflüssige Menschen, in collaboration with Stefan Lhotka, Directed by Alexander Rasumny
1926
Lachende Grille (Die), in collaboration with Alexander Ferenczy, Directed by
Frederic Zelnik
1927
Zigeunerbaron (Der), in collaboration with Alexander Ferenczy, Directed by
Frederic Zelnik
1927
Weber (Die), Directed by
Frederic Zelnik, Makeup designer:
George Grosz
1927
Alpentragödie, Directed by Robert Land
1927
Der goldene Abgrund. Schiffbrüchige des Lebens(Der), Directed by Mario Bonnard
1927
Tanzende Wien (Das) also known as
An der schönen blauen Donau. 2. Teil; Directed by
Frederic Zelnik
1927
Spielerin (Die), in collaboration with Alexander Ferenczy; Directed by Graham Cutts, based upon
Dostoyevski's
The Player
1927
Im Luxuszug, Directed by Erich Schönfelder
1928
Thérèse Raquin, Directed by
Jacques Feyder
1928
Heut Tanzt Mariett, in collaboration with Erich Zander, Directed by
Frederic Zelnik
1928
Zwei Rote Rosen, Directed by Robert Land
1928
Marie Lou, Directed by
Frederic Zelnik
1928
Ladenprinz (Der), Directed by Erich Schönfelder
1928
Heilige und ihr Narr (Die), Directed by Wilhelm Dieterle
1928
Mein Herz ist eine Jazzband, Directed by
Frederic Zelnik; Cast:
Lya Mara, Carl Goetz, Iwan Kowal-Samborskij, Alfred Abel
1928
Rapa-nui, Directed by Mario Bonnard
1928
Wolga Wolga, Directed by Victor Tourjansky
1928
Herzensphotograph (Der), Directed by Max Reichmann
1929
Diane, Directed by Erich Waschneck, Cast: Henry Victor (Oberst Guy de Lasalle), Kommandant von Tschamschewa,
Olga Tschechowa (Diane), Pierre Blanchar (Leutnant Gaston Mévil)
1929
Büchse der Pandora (Die) or
Loulou (French title), in collaboration with Gottlieb Hesch (Bohumil Heš); Directed by
Georg Wilhelm Pabst, Cast:
Louise Brooks (Loulou)
1929
Liebe der Brüder Rott. Irrlichter (Die), Directed by Erich Waschneck, Cast:
Olga Chekhova aka Olga Tschechova (Theresa Donath) who also produced the film
1929
Narr Seiner Liebe (Der), Directed by
Olga Chekhova aka Olga Tschechova
1929
Sprengbagger 1010, Directed by Carl Ludwig Achaz-Duisberg, Cast: Heinrich George (Direktor March) Viola Garden (Olga Lossen)
1930
Revolte im Erziehungshaus, Directed by Georg Asagaroff
sound movies:
1930
Letzte Kompanie (Die), Directed by
Curtis Bernhardt (as Kurt Bernhardt)
1931
Dreigroschenoper (Die), Directed by
Georg Wilhelm Pabst; Treatment by
Bertolt Brecht based upon the musical by
Bertolt Brecht with the music by
Kurt Weill. Screenplay by Leo Lania, Ladislaus Vajda and
Béla Balázs
1931
Raub der Mona Lisa (Der), in collaboration with Robert A. Dietrich; Directed by Geza von Bolvary
1931
Son altesse amour, in collaboration with Erich Kettelhut; Directed by Robert Péguy and Erich Schmidt
1931
Liebeskommando, in collaboration with Robert A. Dietrich; directed by Geza von Bolvary
1932
Don Quixotte Directed by
Georg Wilhelm Pabst; Cast:
Feodor Chaliapin (Don Quixotte)
1932
Mirages de Paris in collaboration with Lucien Aguettand; Directed by Fédor Ozep - * Note: a film produced in Germany in a co-production with France
1933
Grosstadtnacht, Directed by Fédor Ozep - * Note: a film produced in Germany in a co-production with France
France, Great Britain, Czechoslovakia : 1933 - 1940
1933
Cette vieille canaille Directed by
Anatole Litvak, Cast: Harry Baur (Professor Vautier),
Alice Field (Helene),
Kiki de Montparnasse aka Alice Prin (Kiki)
1933
Dans les rues Directed by Victor Trivas
1933
Volga en flammes Directed by Victor Tourjansky
1934
Nuits moscovites (Les) Directed by Alexis Granowsky; Music
Bronisław Kaper aka Bronislau Kapper and
Walter Jurmann
1934
Whom the gods destroy Directed by Walter Lang, Cast: Walter Connolly (John Forrester aka Eric Jann aka Peter Korotoff); * Note: a film produced in Great Britain
1935
Dictator (The) Le Dictateur Directed by Victor Saville; * Note: a film produced in Great Britain
1935
Mayerling Directed by
Anatole Litvak, Written by:
Marcel Achard, Claude Anet (novel),
Joseph Kessel, Irma von Cube, Cast:
Charles Boyer (Archduke Rudolph of Austria) and
Danielle Darrieux (Marie Vetsera)
1935
Tarass Boulba Directed by Alexis Granowsky
1936
Golem (Le) in collaboration with Štěpán Kopecký; Directed by
Julien Duvivier, * Note: a film produced in France, shot in Czechoslovakia
1936
Beloved Vagabond (The) Directed by
Curtis Bernhardt; * Note: film by a German director produced in Great Britain
1936
Gässchen zum Paradies Das) Directed by W.L. Bagier and Martin Fric, Written by: Hugo Haas and
Otakar Vávra; * Please Note: a film produced in Czechoslovakia
1937
Dark Journey originally released as
The Anxious Years, with the collaboration of Ferdinand Bellan; Directed by Victor Saville; Cast: Conrad Veidt (Baron Karl Von Marwitz),
Vivien Leigh (Madeleine Goddard); * Please note: a film produced in Great Britain
1937
Citadelle du silence (La) Marcel L'Herbier
1937
Tarakanowa Directed by Fédor Ozep, Cast: Annie Vernay (Princess Tarakanowa)
1938
Drame de Shangaï (Le) Georg Wilhelm Pabst
1938
Lumières de Paris Directed by Richard Pottier
1939
Esclave blanche (L') Directed by Marc Sorkin; Supervised by
Georg Wilhelm Pabst
1939
Jeunes filles en détresse Directed by
Georg Wilhelm Pabst
1939
Musiciens du ciel (Les) Directed by Georges Lacombe
1939
Paris-New York Directed by Yves Mirande
France, war time: 1940 - 1944
1940
Elles étaient douze femmes Directed by Georges Lacombe
1941
Caprices Directed by Léo Joannon
1941
Dernier des six(Le) Directed by Georges Lacombe
1941
Symphonie Fantastique (La) Directed by Christian-Jacque
1941
évadés de l´an 4000 (Les) in collaboration with André Chaillez, Directed by
Marcel Carné
1942
assassin habite au 21 (L') Directed by
Henri-Georges Clouzot
1942
Fausse maîtresse (La) Directed by
André Cayatte
1942
Main du diable (La) Directed by Maurice Tourneur
1942
Picpus Directed by Richard Pottier
1942
Simplet Directed by
Fernandel and Carlo Rim
1943
Au bonheur des dames Directed by
André Cayatte
1943
Corbeau (Le) Directed by
Henri-Georges Clouzot
1943
Ferme aux loups (La) Directed by Richard Pottier
1943
Mon amour est près de toi Directed by Richard Pottier
1943
Pierre et Jean Directed by
André Cayatte
1944
dernier sou (Le) Directed by
André Cayatte; *Note: the movie released in 1946
Great Britain: 1947 - 1952
1947
A man about the house, Directed by Leslie Arliss
1948
Anna Karenina, Directed by
Julien Duvivier, Produced by
Alexander Korda, Screenplay by
Julien Duvivier, Guy Moran and
Jean Anouilh from
Leo Tolstoy's novel, Photography by
Henri Alekan, Costumes by
Cecil Beaton, Cast:
Vivien Leigh (
Anna Karenina)
1948
The Winslow boy, Directed by
Anthony Asquith, cast:
Robert Donat (Sir Robert Morton), Cedric Hardwicke (Arthur Winslow)
1949
That Dangerous Age also known in US as
If This Be Sin, Directed by
Gregory Ratoff, Cast:
Myrna Loy (Lady Cathy Brooke)
1949
Britannia Mews Directed by Jean Negulesco, Cast:
Dana Andrews (Gilbert Lauderdale/Henry Lambert)
1950
Angel with the Trumpet (The), Directed by Anthony Bushell
1950
My daughter Joy, Directed by
Gregory Ratoff; Set Decoration by Dario Simoni; Cast:
Edward G. Robinson (George Constantin)
1952
The Man between, Directed by
Carol Reed, Cast:
James Mason (Ivo Kern),
Claire Bloom (Susanne Mallison)
Big Hollywood productions: 1953 - 1956
1953
Melba Directed by
Lewis Milestone, Cast:
Patrice Munsel (
Nellie Melba)
1954
Mambo Directed by
Robert Rossen, Produced by
Dino De Laurentiis and
Carlo Ponti, Cast:
Silvana Mangano (Giovanna Masetti),
Vittorio Gassman (Mario Rossi),
Shelley Winters (Toni Salerno)
1955
Alexander the Great Directed by
Robert Rossen, Cast:
Richard Burton (
Alexander the Great); *Note: a film shot in Spain
1956
Anastasia Directed by
Anatole Litvak, Cast:
Ingrid Bergman (
Anastasia),
Yul Brynner (General Sergei Pavlovich Bounine)
Germany (West): 1956 - 1957
1956
Bonjour Kathrin, Directed by Karl Anton, Cast:
Caterina Valente (Kathrin)
1957
Madeleine und der Legionär, in collaboration with Helmut Neutwig and Fritz Lippman; Directed by
Wolfgang StaudteFurther Information
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