On Eforgan’s Leslie Howard: The Lost Actor

IF 0.1 0 FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION Jewish Film & New Media-An International Journal Pub Date : 2016-10-01 DOI:10.13110/JEWIFILMNEWMEDI.4.2.0207
Miriam Spiro
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Abstract

On Eforgan's Leslie Howard: The Lost Actor Leslie Howard: The Lost Actor (revised 2d edition). By Estel Eforgan. London: Vallentine Mitchell, 2013. 296 pp., 978-0853039150 (pb). US $32.95.When actor and screenwriter Leslie Howard died in a mysterious plane crash over the Bay of Biscay in June 1943, the Guardian obituary described his most outstanding quality: "the intensely English quality which made him popular everywhere."1 Even today, Howard is remembered primarily for his roles as English aristocrat in films such as The Scarlet Pimpernel (Harold Young, UK, 1934) and Pygmalion (Anthony Asquith, Leslie Howard, UK, 1938), or as tragic hero in productions like Of Human Bondage ( John Cromwell, USA, 1934) and Gone with the Wind (Victor Fleming [George Cukor], USA, 1939). As a symbol of refinement and gentlemanliness, Howard's character spoke to the social instability British audiences were experiencing due to political crisis and war. It was a time when conceptions of "Englishness" were being challenged-not least because of the influx of Jewish migrants and refugees escaping persecution in Europe who created a space of difference in British society. Howard, as Estel Eforgan's meticulously researched biography, Leslie Howard: The Lost Actor, reveals, was nothing if not aware of the social and political influences of his dramatic persona.Eforgan's biography is a compelling and thorough overview of Howard's life and career within the context of social and political upheaval, migration, and war. As such it makes an important contribution to the fields of media and cultural studies, as well as Jewish studies, revealing the influential role that actors and filmmakers played in the political arena. As Eforgan uncovers, there was more to Howard's persona as "ideal Englishman" than most people consider. Leslie Howard Steiner, whose father was a Hungarian Jew and whose mother's origins were also Jewish (from Russia and East Prussia), was intensely committed to political activism and anti-Nazi efforts in the years leading up to World War II. And while the biography covers much more than that-including Howard's career on the English stage in the 1920s and the launch of his stardom in New York and Hollywood-Eforgan makes clear that by the mid-1930s Howard was making career and life choices that were influenced by politics. More specifically, he began to use his fame as a tool to resist Hitler's rise to power and the persecution of Jews in Europe.Eforgan's sympathy for her subject will strike a chord with readers and personalize the exhaustive amount of detail on Howard's life. The chapters that trace Howard's development as an actor, screenwriter, producer, director, and public intellectual from the 1920s to the 1940s are filled with lively anecdotes as well as with valuable comments on the social and cultural milieu. Some of the most entertaining points in the biography include Eforgan's musings on Howard's stage mishaps and love affairs, and the colorful characters who peppered the actor's professional and personal lives. Yet it is the way Eforgan frames Howard's career in connection with Jewish migration and persecution during the rise of Nazism and at the start of World War II that makes this biography especially noteworthy. Eforgan's view that these elements played a key role in the actor's life is underscored in the way the biography is bookended by Leslie Howard's little-known Jewish roots. The work begins with a story of Howard's "real family history" in Vienna and England (3), and ends with his last speech before his death, when he laughed at someone's suggestion that he was the "idealised picture of the perfect Englishman." He surprised the press when he publicly admitted, "I suppose we do not have to tell them that I began as a Hungarian" (229).Indeed, there is a good deal to discover about British Jewish migration, as well as assimilation, at the turn of the century from Eforgan's description of Leslie Howard's background. …
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埃弗根的《莱斯利·霍华德:迷失的演员
关于埃弗根的莱斯利·霍华德:迷失的演员莱斯利·霍华德:迷失的演员(修订的2d版)。埃斯特尔·埃弗根著。伦敦:瓦伦丁·米切尔,2013。296页,978-0853039150 (pb)。32.95美元。1943年6月,演员兼编剧莱斯利·霍华德(Leslie Howard)在比斯开湾(Bay of Biscay)神秘的飞机失事中丧生,《卫报》(Guardian)的讣告描述了他最突出的品质:“那种让他在各地都受欢迎的强烈的英国品质。”即使在今天,霍华德被人们记住的主要还是他在电影中扮演的英国贵族角色,比如《Scarlet Pimpernel》(哈罗德·扬,英国,1934)和《Pygmalion》(安东尼·阿斯奎斯,莱斯利·霍华德,英国,1938),或者是他在《人类的束缚》(约翰·克伦威尔,美国,1934)和《乱世佳人》(维克多·弗莱明[乔治·库克尔],美国,1939)中扮演的悲剧英雄。作为优雅和绅士的象征,霍华德的角色反映了英国观众因政治危机和战争而经历的社会不稳定。那是一个“英国人”观念受到挑战的时代,尤其是因为犹太移民和难民的涌入,他们逃离了欧洲的迫害,在英国社会中创造了一个不同的空间。正如埃斯特尔·埃弗根精心研究的传记《莱斯利·霍华德:迷失的演员》所揭示的那样,霍华德如果不意识到他的戏剧角色对社会和政治的影响,他什么都不是。埃弗根的传记引人注目,全面概述了霍华德在社会和政治动荡、移民和战争背景下的生活和事业。因此,它对媒体和文化研究以及犹太研究领域作出了重要贡献,揭示了演员和电影制作人在政治舞台上发挥的重要作用。正如埃弗根所揭示的,霍华德的“理想英国人”形象比大多数人想象的要多。莱斯利·霍华德·施泰纳(Leslie Howard Steiner)的父亲是匈牙利犹太人,母亲也是犹太人(来自俄罗斯和东普鲁士),在第二次世界大战前的几年里,他一直致力于政治激进主义和反纳粹的努力。虽然这本传记涵盖的内容远不止这些——包括霍华德在20世纪20年代在英国舞台上的职业生涯,以及他在纽约和好莱坞的明星生涯——但埃弗根明确指出,到30年代中期,霍华德的职业和生活选择受到了政治的影响。更具体地说,他开始利用自己的名声作为抵制希特勒上台和迫害欧洲犹太人的工具。Eforgan对主人公的同情将会引起读者的共鸣,并将霍华德生活中详尽的细节个人化。从20世纪20年代到40年代,追溯霍华德作为演员、编剧、制片人、导演和公共知识分子的发展历程的章节充满了生动的轶事,以及对社会和文化环境的宝贵评论。这本传记中最有趣的地方包括埃弗根对霍华德舞台上的不幸和爱情的思考,以及他职业和个人生活中丰富多彩的角色。然而,正是埃弗根将霍华德的职业生涯与纳粹主义兴起期间和二战开始时的犹太移民和迫害联系起来的方式,使这本传记尤为引人注目。埃弗根认为,这些因素在演员的生活中发挥了关键作用,这一点在莱斯利·霍华德鲜为人知的犹太血统的传记结尾得到了强调。这部作品以霍华德在维也纳和英国的“真实家族史”开始,以他死前的最后一次演讲结束,当时他嘲笑别人说他是“完美英国人的理想化形象”。当他公开承认“我想我们不必告诉他们我一开始是匈牙利人”时,他让新闻界感到惊讶。事实上,从埃弗根对莱斯利·霍华德背景的描述中,我们可以发现很多关于世纪之交英国犹太人移民和同化的信息。…
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期刊介绍: Jewish Film & New Media provides an outlet for research into any aspect of Jewish film, television, and new media and is unique in its interdisciplinary nature, exploring the rich and diverse cultural heritage across the globe. The journal is distinctive in bringing together a range of cinemas, televisions, films, programs, and other digital material in one volume and in its positioning of the discussions within a range of contexts—the cultural, historical, textual, and many others.
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