Emil Jannings

German actor
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Also known as: Theodor Friedrich Emil Janenz
Quick Facts
Original name:
Theodor Friedrich Emil Janenz
Born:
July 23, 1884, Rorschach, Switzerland
Died:
January 2, 1950, Strobl, near Salzburg, Austria (aged 65)
Also Known As:
Theodor Friedrich Emil Janenz
Awards And Honors:
Academy Award (1929)
Academy Award (1929): Actor in a Leading Role
Married To:
Gussy Holl (married 1923)
Hanna Ralph (1919–1921)
Lucie Höflich [dates unknown]
Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
"Wo ist Herr Belling?" (1945)
"Altes Herz wird wieder jung" (1943)
"Die Entlassung" (1942)
"Ohm Krüger" (1941)
"Der letzte Appell" (1939)
"Robert Koch, der Bekämpfer des Todes" (1939)
"Der zerbrochene Krug" (1937)
"Der Herrscher" (1937)
"Traumulus" (1936)
"Der alte und der junge König - Friedrichs des Grossen Jugend" (1935)
"Der schwarze Walfisch" (1934)
"Die Abenteuer des Königs Pausole" (1933)
"The Merry Monarch" (1933)
"Stürme der Leidenschaft" (1932)
"Liebling der Götter" (1930)
"Der blaue Engel" (1930)
"Betrayal" (1929)
"Sins of the Fathers" (1928)
"The Patriot" (1928)
"Street of Sin" (1928)
"The Last Command" (1928)
"The Way of All Flesh" (1927)
"Faust: Eine deutsche Volkssage" (1926)
"Liebe macht blind" (1926)
"Herr Tartüff" (1925)
"Varieté" (1925)
"Quo Vadis?" (1924)
"Der letzte Mann" (1924)
"Nju - Eine unverstandene Frau" (1924)
"Das Wachsfigurenkabinett" (1924)
"Du sollst nicht töten" (1923)
"Alles für Geld" (1923)
"Die Gräfin von Paris" (1923)
"Tragödie der Liebe" (1923)
"Peter der Große" (1922)
"Othello" (1922)
"Das Weib des Pharao" (1922)
"Die Ratten" (1921)
"Der Schwur des Peter Hergatz" (1921)
"Danton" (1921)
"Der Stier von Olivera" (1921)
"Colombine" (1920)
"Anna Boleyn" (1920)
"Der Schädel der Pharaonentochter" (1920)
"Die Brüder Karamasoff" (1920)
"Algol - Tragödie der Macht" (1920)
"Das große Licht" (1920)
"Kohlhiesels Töchter" (1920)
"Keimendes Leben, Teil 2" (1919)
"Rose Bernd" (1919)
"Madame DuBarry" (1919)
"Vendetta" (1919)
"Die Tochter des Mehemed" (1919)
"Der Mann der Tat" (1919)
"Fuhrmann Henschel" (1918)
"Keimendes Leben, Teil 1" (1918)
"Die Augen der Mumie Ma" (1918)
"Das Geschäft" (1917)
"Die Seeschlacht" (1917)
"Lulu" (1917)
"Frau Eva" (1917)
"Das fidele Gefängnis" (1917)
"Der Ring der Giuditta Foscari" (1917)
"Gesühnte Schuld" (1917)
"Nächte des Grauens" (1917)
"Die Ehe der Luise Rohrbach" (1917)
"Stein unter Steinen" (1917)
"Unheilbar" (1917)
"Der zehnte Pavillon der Zitadelle" (1917)
"Das Leben ein Traum" (1916)
"Die Bettlerin von St. Marien" (1916)
"Im Angesicht des Toten" (1916)
"Passionels Tagebuch" (1916)
"Aus Mangel an Beweisen" (1916)
"Der Morphinist" (1916)
"Arme Eva" (1916)
"Im Schützengraben" (1914)
Movies/Tv Shows (Directed):
"Der zerbrochene Krug" (1937)

Emil Jannings (born July 23, 1884, Rorschach, Switzerland—died January 2, 1950, Strobl, near Salzburg, Austria) was a German actor who was internationally known for his tragic roles in motion pictures. He was the recipient of the first Academy Award for best actor.

Jannings was reared in Görlitz, Germany, where he began his stage career. He joined a traveling stock company and in 1906 began acting for Max Reinhardt, the leading German theatrical director, in Berlin. He made his film debut in 1914 and had his first major success in the role of Louis XV in Madame Dubarry (1919; also released as Passion), directed by Ernst Lubitsch.

The 1924 film Der letzte Mann (The Last Laugh), directed by F.W. Murnau, featured Jannings’s best-remembered role—an aging hotel doorman demoted to the position of washroom attendant. In Varieté (1925; Variety) he was a married sideshow operator deceived by a female trapeze artist. And in Der blaue Engel (1930; The Blue Angel), which introduced the sultry leading lady Marlene Dietrich, he was an aging professor hopelessly in love with a young but worldly-wise nightclub singer. Critics acclaimed Jannings as one of the finest actors in the world on the basis of these three motion pictures.

Empty movie theater and blank screen (theatre, motion pictures, cinema).
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Jannings was a versatile actor whose enormous emotional range was well suited to an array of character roles. Although he occasionally lapsed into the unbridled hamminess that was characteristic of acting styles of the era, he was also capable of great subtlety and nuance, even in such grandiose roles as Mephistopheles in Faust (1926), wherein he projected inner rage and turmoil beneath a cool cynical exterior. He excelled at portraying once-proud men forced to endure suffering or humiliation, and such roles (The Last Laugh, Variety, The Blue Angel, The Last Command) are the ones for which he is best remembered.

In 1929, the first year of the Academy Awards, Jannings won a best actor award for his performances in the American-made films The Way of All Flesh (1927, now lost), in which he played an embittered family man, and The Last Command (1928), in which he was an exiled Russian general reduced to playing bit parts in war films. (During the early years of the awards, actors could be nominated for multiple performances.) With the advent of sound in American cinema, Jannings was forced because of his thick accent to abandon his career in the United States. He continued to work in German films, but his support of the Nazi regime made him a pariah elsewhere in the world. He remains a subject of great controversy, though many of his detractors begrudgingly admit that he was one of the finest actors of his generation.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.