On reading of the death on December 30th of actress
Luise Rainer (1910-2014), I recalled her connections in the early 1930s to two reporters who were part of the Anglo-American Press Association (A-APA) and the
Café Louvre Circle, both made up of reporters in Vienna who covered Central
Europe and the Balkans for newspapers in the United States and England.[1] In fact, one reporter, Friedrich Scheu, who
was part of both groups, attended her debut stage performance in Vienna on
September 12, 1931 and afterwards co-hosted a party for her and others who
staged the theater production.
Scheu (1905-1985) was a Vienna native, the son of a
well-known lawyer, Dr. Gustav Scheu (1875-1935), who served on the Vienna city
council as a Social Democrat during the First Republic. His mother, Helene
Scheu-Riesz (1880-1970), was a writer who had considerable success with her
books for children and as a publisher.[2] This liberal Jewish family lived in
the Hietzing district (13th) of Vienna where they had a house designed
for them by Alfred Loos in 1912. It was called Haus Scheu [3] At this house, Frau
Scheu-Riesz hosted a salon that was visited by many famous Viennese such as
Loos, Oskar Kokoschka and Alban Berg. The house at Larochegasse 3, which still
stands, was known as the “Haus der Begegnung” (house of encounters).[4]
In his book, Der Weg
ins Ungewisse: Österreichs Schicksalskurve 1929-1936 (The Way into the
Uncertain: The Arc of Austria’s Fate), Scheu wrote the following about his
first encounter with Luise Rainer:
"On the evening of September 12, 1931, there occurred an event of interest to Vienna: the first night of a play by the German playwright Fritz von Unruh at the Volkstheater. The piece was named “Phäa” and it addressed in an ironic form the fate of a bit movie actress who wanted to become a star. The actress in the main role has to climb into a lion’s cage, and a key moment in the piece lies in the instructions that the film director gives to the camera crew: “If the lion, God forbid, should eat the young lady, don’t stop filming!” The play was a satire on the inhumanity of the film industry.
Coincidentally the play brought a small, unknown actress from Düsseldorf to Vienna soil for the first time. Her name was Louise [sic] Rainer and the premiere in Vienna was for her the opening of a fairy tale film career in Hollywood.[5] The role that she played in Unruh’s piece had many parallels to her own fate.
The director of the play, Fritz Peter Buch was acquainted with my parents and after the premiere we had a small celebration at the home of my parents on Laroche Gasse – Fritz von Unruh, Fritz Peter Buch, Louise Rainer, and Hans Schweikart, who played the lead male role. The celebration of the success of the premiere lasted into the early morning hours."[6]
In 1931, at the time of this party for Rainer and her
colleagues, Scheu was not only a lawyer working in his father’s firm, but also
was the Vienna correspondent for the British Labor Party’s newspaper, the London Daily Herald. As a member of a
prosperous and prominent family, he had been able to travel with his parents to
the U.S. (1926) and England, where his mother had lived for a while. Also, he
perfected his English when he spent 18 months in England on an exchange
program. He had taken on the journalist position in 1929 and was one of the
first members of the Anglo-American Press Association when it formed in
1930.
Apparently Scheu was a well-liked member of the A-APA (he
was elected its secretary in 1931), and he also spent time at the Café Louvre
with the journalists who hung out there. Among his colleagues was Robert Best (1896-1952), the heart and soul of the Café Louvre
Circle. Scheu described him as “one of my best friends."[7] There is some
irony in that description because Best, a South Carolina native who wrote for
the United Press news agency, stayed in Austria after the Anschluss and was in
Germany during the war, from which he made propaganda broadcasts. His
broadcasts were filled with anti-Semitic remarks; as mentioned earlier, Scheu
was a Jew.[8] Best was convicted in 1948 by a U.S. court of treason.
Another of Scheu’s colleagues was John Gunther (1901-1970),
who had arrived in Vienna in 1930 to write for the Chicago Daily News. Gunther was another acquaintance of Luise
Rainer; in fact according to William Shirer, one of Gunther’s friends, his
infatuation with her was a major source of tension in his marriage. Apparently in
the 1930s, Rainer had many men in love with her and she paid no special
attention to Gunther.[9]
After Gunther left Vienna in 1935, he wrote a novel, a
roman-à-clef, about his Vienna years in which he and his wife are the two main
characters. It was scheduled to be published as Ring Around Vienna in Spring, 1938, but the publication was halted
because of fear that a libel suit might be brought against the publisher: the
book contained an unflattering portrayal of a character named James Drew who
could clearly be identified as Robert Best. The book was finally published in
1964 as The Lost City. One of the major
characters in the novel – Richardo Stein, a lawyer-journalist and zealous
social democrat -- was clearly based on Friedrich Scheu. From Scheu’s depiction
in the novel, it is clear that Gunther thought highly of him.[10] Though the book’s lead character, Mason
Jarrett (the ersatz Gunther), is good friends with a nightclub singer, the
daughter of his landlord, and a young artist, he does not link up with
beautiful young woman who becomes a Hollywood movie star.
As described in Gunther’s novel, Scheu was not only a lawyer
and journalist, but also an ardent socialist.. He had been active as a
youngster in the Socialist youth movement. After the 1934 civil war, the Social
Democratic party, outlawed by the Austro-fascist government, went underground,
but covertly Scheu remained an active member of the party. When someone tipped off the police that Scheu
was reading outlawed newspapers and journals, he was arrested in January 1935,
but he was released without imprisonment. The A-APA was active in efforts to
get his release.
After his release, Scheu went to the American embassy to
thank the ranking diplomat there, George Messersmith (1881 – 1960), for
assistance in obtaining his release. (In fact, the Americans could do nothing
to assist him because he was not an American citizen and reported only part
time for an American press agency.) Messersmith mentioned his meeting with
Scheu in a letter to one of his superiors:
"A few days ago a young Austrian lawyer here, Dr. Scheu, who on the side also reports for the Daily Herald in London and for the Federated Press at home, was detained by the police and his house searched. He is a young fellow about thirty, whose father is a prominent lawyer here with close connections with the United State. The young man is quite a Socialist, as is he family. As soon as he was arrested the Vice President of the Anglo-American Press Association here called me up and wanted me to do something. I told him that I could not until we knew what he was detained for, and then it was much a question whether I could even make the most informal enquiry, as he was an Austrian and his newspaper connection was principally with the Daily Herald, and that his American connection with the Federated Press was attenuated that I felt there was really nothing we could do…. He was in fact released on the afternoon of the same day.
George Messersmith, Dec. 2, 1946
http://content.time.com/time/covers/0,16641,19461202,00.html
"I took the opportunity of Scheu's call on me to talk to him, and I find that he is a Socialist of such an exaggerated type that he is more interested in there being a socialist government in Austria than in the maintenance of Austria….I found the young man one of these liberals who are so prejudiced they cannot even consider anyone else's point of view. I pointed out to him that anyone who held such strong view as he did had to consider very seriously as to whether he was not coloring his news with his prejudices, even when he was serving socialist papers. I gathered the impression that he considered himself more of an advocate than a reporter."[11]
When Germany invaded Austria in 1938, Scheu had to quickly escape
the city and find a clever way to do so. He went to Prague, where his wife
joined him; then to England. After some years, the parents were reunited with
the child they had to leave behind in Vienna with this wife’s mother. Scheu
spent the war years in England. After the war, he worked as a reporter for the Daily Herald. In 1954, he returned to
Vienna to report on international affairs for the Arbeiterzeitung, the newspaper of the Social Democrats. He remained
in that position until 1972.
Scheu wrote several books that documented his times. His
book Der Weg in Ungewisse is a memoir
of the interwar years. It contains the best and most complete account of the A-APA
and the Café Louvre Circle that is available, and it tells the story of his
work as a correspondent and socialist activist in Vienna in the 1930s. [12]
Luise Rainer http://www.theplace2.ru/photos/Luise-Rainer-md3751/pic-242377.html |
Notes
[1] Luise Rainer died
on December 30, 2014. She was a German actress, who had great success in Vienna
before she immigrated to the United States in 1935. The following year, she won
an Oscar for Best Actress and she won the same award again in 1937. Wikipedia has a nice biographical sketch of
her life and career at this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luise_Rainer
For an excellent obituary, with clips from several of her
movies, see http://www.theguardian.com/film/2014/dec/30/luise-rainer
I have a research interest in
foreign correspondents in Vienna during the inter-war period. Here are some
links to other things I have written on the topic.
Vienna’s Café Louvre in the
1920-1930s: Meeting Place for Foreign Correspondents
Marcel W Fodor: Foreign Correspondent
A Great Night at Cafe Louvre in Vienna (February 2012)
John and Frances Gunther Celebrate the New Year, Vienna,
December 31, 1930 (January 2013)
[2] She immigrated to the United States in 1935. For more
information on Helene Scheu-Riesz, see these links:
http://sophie.byu.edu/node/3299 (several columns she wrote for the Neue Freie Presse can be found here)
Some information (in German) on Gustav Scheu is available at
this link: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustav_Scheu
Gustav, Helene, Friedrich and his wife Herta are all buried
in a family plot at Feuerhalle Simmering, a cemetery located beside Vienna’s
first crematorium.
[3] For more on Haus Scheu, see: http://www.hietzing.at/Bezirk/geschichte2.php?id=321&menu=5
[4] Austrian Radio Network (ÖRF) interview with Friedrich
Scheu on January 5, 1977. It can be heard at this link: http://www.mediathek.at/atom/017829D2-2C2-008F5-00000BEC-01772EE2
[5] (Although the name “Louise” is used in the text, the
correct first name Luise is in the index.
[6] See Friedrich
Scheu.1972. Der Weg ins Ungewisse:
Österreichs Schicksalskurve 1929-1938. Verlag Fritz Molden. P. 92. (I
translated the paragraphs from German.)
Fritz von Unruh (1885-1970] was the son of a German army
general and also served as an army officer until 1912. He left the military to
pursue a writing career. Much of his writings were anti-war and could be calledexpressionist.
He was a staunch opponent of the Nazis, and left Germany in 1932 after Hitler
seized power. He was for many years a refugee in the United States. He returned
to Germany in 1962.
Fritz Peter Buch (1894-1964) was a director for Max
Reinhardt’s Deutsche Theater in Berlin. Buch later directed propaganda files
for the Nazis after they gained power in Germany.
Hans Schweikart (1895 – 1975) was a successful actor, film
director, and screenwriter. He directed
26 films between 1938 and 1968. According to the William Grange in his Historical Directory of German Theater,
Schweikart during the Third Reich, Schweikart “had been a much-favored director
and playwright under Goebbels, but his reputation survived.” See http://www.hans-schweikart.de/
[7] Scheu interview (see note 4)
The Cafe Louvre Circle was an
informal one that came into being over time. Best did his work at the Café
Louvre and it became a place for journalist to get together informally to find
out what had been going on in Central Europe and the Balkans. It was located
just a few steps away from telegraph and telephone services. (See https://www.scribd.com/doc/81223692/Vienna-s-Cafe-Louvre-in-the-1920s-1930s-Meeting-Place-for-Foreign-Correspondents )
The Austrian Anglo-American Press
Association was created in 1930, soon after the arrival of John Gunther and
Whit Burnett from their posts in Paris. It was modeled on the Anglo-American
press association in Paris.
[8] John Carver Edwards. 1982. Bob Best Considered: An Expatriate's Long Road
to Treason.
North Dakota Quarterly , 50(1), Winter, pp. 73-90
[9] John Cuthbertson. 1992. Inside: The Biography of John Gunther. Bonus Books. "He
fell for her to an extent that I don't think Frances [Gunther's wife] was
pleased. John had a roving eye and liked to flirt." Rainer later
recalled: "He was tall, husky, and blond. He was, of course, very bright
and had a great sense of humor. I thought he was a terribly nice fellow...
However, I must say something simply and brusquely: I was never in love with
him, or anything of that kind."
[10] John Gunther. 1964. The
Lost City. Harper & Row. In his
novel, Gunther built much of the plot around important events in Austria from
1930 to 1934. His characters, based on his journalist colleagues in Vienna,
kept the personality and some background of each person, but changed many of
the details and fictionalized many of their actions. For example, in the novel,
Richardo Stein was a Viennese lawyer as well as a journalist and was a
committed social democrat (both of which Scheu was). He also flew his own
airplane (Scheu did not) and was killed during the 1934 civil war (Scheu was
not).
[11] The letter is from G.S. Messersmith to J. Pierrepont
Moffet, U.S. Department of State, dated January 19, 1935. It can be downloaded from this site:
http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/6438, p. 8
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