a fiddler in his bedroom
by Douglas Messerli
Born in Budapest, then part of the
Austria-Hungary Empire, Paul Czinner was educated the University of Vienna
where he studied Philosophy and Literature before turning to film.
Czinner was first married to actor Gilda Langer, who died of the Spanish
influenza in 1920.
His
first film was the silent feature Homo Immanis (1919). By 1922, however,
he was working in Germany on Victim of Passion, and soon after begin
filming with actor Elisabeth Bergner on his first successful film, Husbands
or Lover (1924); in that film she plays the bored wife of the then
well-known actor Emil Jannings.
Although Czinner was homosexual, he developed a close working
relationship with Bergner, and the couple were eventually married. He made
several films after in Germany, but by 1929, after the Schnitzler-based novella
Frãulein Else, the couple who were both Jewish, faced with the rise of
Hitler, left for England in 1933 where they remained for several years before
emigrating to the US in 1940, where he worked for a while on Broadway. After
World War II, they returned to England where he continued to make films.
Given Czinner’s sexual orientation, it is not surprising that The
Fiddler of Florence and his 1928 film Dona Juana both feature
Bergner playing gender-bending characters, wherein the actor is asked to
perform as young boys.
In general, this film is a very Freudian work in which in the first few
scenes Renée (Bergner) is jealous of the attention
her loving father, Conrad Veidt, pays to her new stepmother (Nora Gregory). In
these early scenes, Renée is somewhat of a brat as she continual attempts to
take the attention away from her father’s new love, bringing to the table her
own flowers and replacing them for those her stepmother has chosen, and during
the meal gradually moving the vase over so that it stands between her father
and his new wife, blocking out their views.
Soon after, she feeds her pet dog scraps from her plate, while the
stepmother’s better-behaved pooch is allowed to sit beside her owner’s feet,
while Renée’s father orders his daughter’s dog removed. The dogs eventually
begin to fight, causing a huge row in which Veidt’s character, in attempting to
separate the two fighting dogs, gets bitten.
In a third instance, while seemingly trying to be agreeable, Renée
tastes her stepmother’s new punch, suggesting further ingredients which seem to
please both of them. And while they continue tasting the brew they both become
slightly inebriated and begin to dance giddily together. But the father/husband
enters the room, both women run up to him offering him a glass of punch. When
he takes the glass his wife proffers over his daughter’s she angrily throws the
punch at her stepmother.
It has become clear that there is no choice but to send Renée away to a
Swiss boarding school. And from there, after she gets into further troubles,
she finally escapes to Italy.
In this case, however, the sister obviously is not only jealous of the
boy but confused and worried since she perceives that her brother gradually
appears to be falling in love with the child. Rilla plays the character rather
exaggeratedly to begin with, performing some scenes with slightly effected
gestures that suggest gay behavior. We too become fascinated by his attraction
to Bergner’s boy. Of course, Barbra Streisand in the 1983 film musical based on
a story by Isaac B. Singer, Yentl will take up a similar situation, but
in 1926 there had been very few films to engage its audiences with a developing
relationship as the result of cross-dressing.
And with that inferred statement of his love, Renée runs off in mad
rapture, confusing him even further.
Meanwhile the father has spotted the painting “Der Geiger von Florenz”
reproduced in the newspaper, and believes it may be his daughter, a likeness
his butler confirms. He quickly tracks down the address of the wealthy
painter’s Italian villa and pays him a visit, explaining the situation.
So too, when the painter discovers the boy’s true sex, does he quickly
grow extraordinarily physically familiar with her father, hugging him close
while he begs for the girl’s hand in marriage. Indeed, if there seemed
something a bit effeminate or simply exaggerated in terms of his gestures about
the artist previously, he now nearly kisses Renée’s father, physically
resisting the man’s attempts to search out his daughter. He sits at Veidt’s
feel almost like an acolyte as they wait for the girl to enter.
During all of this, moreover, we are quite aware, in hindsight, how
Freudian this film is in relation to the director and his major actor. It must
have truly delighted the gay man to be able to turn his future wife temporarily
into a boy and imagine the joys in might feel making love to the young wild
Italian fiddler.
Czinner’s
and Bergner’s marriage lasted the rest of their lives. And there is little
gossip that I could find about Czinner’s gay life as he moved to England and
the US. He did direct the bisexual actor Laurence Olivier in As You Like It,
and obviously, the film and theater is filled with opportunities for continued
gay experimentation. But like Cole Porter with his wife Linda, there was
apparently deep love between them along with their differences in sexual
behavior.
Los Angeles, May 7, 2022
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (May
2022).
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