Lilli Palmer
Lilli Palmer was born on May 24, 1914 in Poland]. Lilli Palmer's big-screen debut came with Secret Agent directed by Alfred Hitchcock in 1936. Lilli Palmer is known for Peter the Great directed by Marvin J. Chomsky, Maximilian Schell stars as Peter the Great and Vanessa Redgrave as Sophia. Lilli Palmer has got 7 awards and 7 nominations so far. The most recent award Lilli Palmer achieved is German Film Awards. The upcoming new tvshow Lilli Palmer plays is Peter the Great - Season 1 which will be released on Feb 02, 1986.
A charming, elegant, and exceedingly popular international film star with a gentle, understated beauty, actress Lilli Palmer was born as Lilli Marie Peiser on May 24, 1914, in Posen, Prussia. She was the daughter of Rose Lissman, an Austrian Jewish actress, and Alfred Peiser, a German Jewish surgeon. In addition to her native German, she grew up becoming fluent in French and English as well. Of her two sisters, older sister Irene Prador became an actress and singer in her own right. Lilli studied drama in Berlin and made her theatrical debut there in 1932 at age 18. Within a short time, however, the family was forced to flee their native homeland with the rise of Hitler and settled in Paris. Eventually Lilli moved to England to rebuild the career she had started on stage and film.She made her British movie debut co-starring in the "B" mystery drama Crime Unlimited (1936), playing the distaff member of a syndicate of jewel thieves who becomes a romantic pawn for a policeman (Esmond Knight) who has infiltrated the crime ring as a plant. Throughout the rest of the decade she upped the value of her name in both "A" and "B" material, notably Alfred Hitchcock's Quatre de l'espionnage (1936), La grande barrière (1937) and Jack le mystérieux (1938) where she provided the usual element of feminine mystery.Lilli's career took a major upswing during the early to mid 1940s. Several of her pictures centered around the omnipresent war, particularly Le rocher du tonnerre (1942), her film career-maker), which starred Michael Redgrave as an anti-fascist journalist who retreats to Canada, and L'honorable Monsieur Sans-Gêne (1945), with Rex Harrison as a idle bounder who sees the error of his ways and becomes a war sacrifice. This was Lilli's first movie with husband Harrison; they married in 1943 and she bore him a son, Carey Harrison, the following year. Carey grew up to became a writer and director.The family moved to America in 1945 to further their careers. Rex and Lilli became a prominent acting couple, appearing together on the early 50s Broadway stage with "Bell, Book and Candle" (1950), "Venus Observed" (1952) and "The Love of Four Colonels" (1953), the last mentioned directed by Harrison. In movies, they co-starred in the murky crimer L'assassin frappe à minuit (1951) and the vastly superior Le ciel de lit (1952), which later gave rise to the musical adaptation "I Do! I Do!". Lilli was award the Venice Film Festival Award for this performance and represented herself well with other handsome male acting partners, notably Gary Cooper in her debut American film Cape et poignard (1946) and John Garfield in the classic boxing film Sang et or (1947), leaving audiences enthralled with one of its newer foreign imports. At one point, she was given her own own (short-lived) TV show to host, The Lilli Palmer Show (1951).Somewhat typecast by this time as heartless cads and opportunists on film, "Sexy Rexy", as husband Harrison was known in the tabloids, developed quite a reputation off-camera as well. A particularly disastrous romance with actress Carole Landis led to that actress's tragic suicide in 1948. Lilli took the high road and came off the better for it in the public's eye. She eventually called it quits, however, with both Harrison and Hollywood and returned to Europe in 1954. In 1956 Lilli filmed Dernière escale (1956) [Between Time and Eternity] and fell in love with handsome Argentine co-star Carlos Thompson, who had developed matinée idol status in Germany. They married in September of 1957, several months after her divorce from Harrison became final. This marriage endured.Lilli matured gracefully in films, the epitome of poise and class, but she lost any potential for top stardom after leaving Hollywood. She made international productions for the rest of her career, primarily German and French, but they did not live up to her early successes and were not seen all that much outside of Europe. She managed to work, however, opposite a "Who's Who" of European male stars of the time, including Curd Jürgens, James Mason, Louis Jourdan, Jean Gabin, Jean Marais, Jean Sorel, Gérard Philipe and Klaus Kinski. Of those few movies she made in Hollywood, she played the prickly wife of Clark Gable, who has a May-December affair with young Carroll Baker in La vie à belles dents (1959); was a sparkling and witty standout in the ensemble cast of Mon séducteur de père (1961); and proved quite moving in the William Holden spy thriller Trahison sur commande (1962). On TV here, she was touchingly effective as Mrs. Frank in a production of The Diary of Anne Frank (1967) with Max von Sydow, and enjoyed one of her last roles in the acclaimed miniseries Pierre le Grand (1986).The final decade and a half played out rather routinely with supporting roles in such films as diverse as Le roi Oedipe (1968), Le Divin Marquis (1969), and Ces garçons qui venaient du Brésil (1978). She demonstrated her writing talents with her popular bestselling biography "Change Lobsters and Dance" in 1975, and later published a novel "The Red Raven" in 1978. Dying of cancer in 1986 at age 71 in Los Angeles, Lilli's surviving second husband Thompson, who had abandoned acting in the late 60s and turned to turned TV writing/producing, committed suicide four years later back in his native Argentina.
Birthday
May 24, 1914Place of Birth
Posen, Prussia, Germany [now Poznan, Wielkopolskie, Poland]
Known For
Awards
7 wins & 7 nominations
Movies & TV Shows
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