Eugen Illes' silent film (1918) stars internationally Polish silent movie actress Pola Negri (Barbara Apolonia Chałupiec). The rediscovered film is currently enjoying a new run in Europe, set up by Warsaw's Filmoteka Narodowa. Screenings are accompanied by a musical score specially composed by Jerzy Maksymiuk and performed by the Leopoldinum10-piece Chamber Orchestra from Wrocław.
The film, once lost and rediscovered in 2006, has been thoroughly reconstructed through advanced 4K technology. With screenings worldwide as part of the Polish Presidency festivities, it alludes to one of the most important goals of European cooperation – preserving cultural heritage. The film in itself is a mixture of European influences, directed by a Hungarian director and produced in Germany, with the lead role played by the Warsaw-born Negri.
The Polish film star was the first European 'import' to the US. After a childhood spent in poverty in Warsaw, Negri (1897-1987) rose in the ranks of the Polish ballet, which eventually led her into the world of Polish film. She made nine films in Poland (including "The Yellow Ticket" and "His Last Gesture") before moving onto Germany to star in several silent movies. Whilst there, she made 24 films including "Mania", which premiered in 1918. Due to the competition between the German and American film marker at the time, American distributors began buying out European film stars. Pola Negri was their first-acquired European actress. Her years working with Paramount studios resulted in a host of films with stars such as comedian Ford Sterling and Chester Conklin. Her last films were 1943's "Hi Diddle Diddle" and the Walt Disney production of "The Moon Spinners" which co-starred Hayley Mills.
Negri's stint in Hollywood earned her fame and wealth (she was one of the richest working actresses of the time) whilst her off screen romances also brought her renown. She had love affairs with stars such as Charlie Chaplin, Rudolph Valentino and Rod La Rocque. Negri wrote an autobiography and, in 2006, a feature-length documentary premiered about her life. It was entitled: "Pola Negri: Life is a Dream in Cinema".
Warsaw's Filmoteka Narodowa/National Film Archive is a state cultural institute dedicated to preserving archives of notable Polish film and cinematography.
For more information on the film, see:
www.mainiafilm.pl
Date: 13th of October, 2011 (7pm)
Venue: Barbican Centre, Cinema 1, London
Organised by: Filmoteka Narodowa
Project cofinanced by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage of the Republic of Poland.
Source: Adam Mickiewicz Institute
Showings of the film "Mania. The history of a cigarette factory worker" take place in four other European cities, including Berlin, Kiev, Madrid and Paris. Screening detail below.
Paris:
12th of September: Le Balzak Cinema, Paris
Madrid:
29th of September: Kino Cine Dore, Madrid
Kiev:
29th of October: Kino Kyjiv, Czerwonoarmijska 19, Kiev
In Ukraine, the screening is part of the Molodist Film Festival in Kiev.
Berlin:
8th of November: Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz, Berlin