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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Biography  





2 Filmography  





3 References  














Lena Amsel






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Lena Amsel (27 July 1898 in Łódź – 2 November 1929 in Paris) was a dancer and actress.

Lena Amsel, photo taken by Franz Xaver Setzer (1918)

Biography[edit]

She came from a Jewish manufacturer family. In 1914 she moved to Dresden, in 1915 to Berlin. At the beginning of her career, she sought contact with the greats of variety, film and theatre. In 1916 in the Café des Westerns in Berlin, she met Karl Gustav Vollmoeller and Max Reinhardt. Vollmoeller became her lover and sponsor for several years.[1]

In 1917 she became a dancer on the stage in the conservatory (Varieté), shortly afterwards she began working in front of the camera in Vienna. In 1917/18 she played in several silent films. Most notably: Pinselputzi causes mischief and a marriage, Brush cleaning rendevouzelt, Lena's noble acquaintance, my daughter, your daughter and the road to wealth.[2]

Although she had no dance education, Lena Amsel was kept for a few years on German and Austrian stages as a dancer. Her film career continued at the beginning of the 20s. In 1922/23 she appeared in the four episodes of The Tragedy of Love, directed by Joe May, she played alongside Emil Jannings, Mia May, Curt Goetz and Marlene Dietrich. Her last film was "The Mighty Dollar", 1923, with Eduard von Winterstein.

In her private life, the 1917-1924 ongoing affair with Vollmoeller was interrupted by three short marriages and three divorces. In 1927, Lena Amsel moved to Paris. Vollmoeller brought her into contact with well-known artists: André Derain, Georges Braque, Pablo Picasso, Ossip Zadkine, Louis Aragon, André Breton, René Crevel and Paul Éluard.[3]

On 2 November 1929 she organized a car race with André Derain near Paris. Both drove Bugatti sports cars. Amsel's car slammed, overturned and caught fire. Lena Amsel and her friend Florence Pitron died in the accident.[4]

Filmography[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Ruth Landshoff : Roman of a dancer. Novel 1933; First edition from the estate v. Walter Fähnders. Aviva, Berlin 2002; 2nd revised. Edition 2005; ISBN 3-932338-23-5
  • ^ Frederik D. Tunnat: Karl Vollmoeller. Poet and cultural manager. A biography. tredition, [Hamburg] 2008, ISBN 978-3-86850-000-4
  • ^ Frederik D. Tunnat: Karl Vollmoeller. Poet and cultural manager. A biography. tredition, [Hamburg] 2008, ISBN 978-3-86850-000-4
  • ^ Ruth Landshoff : Roman of a dancer. Novel 1933; First edition from the estate v. Walter Fähnders. Aviva, Berlin 2002; 2nd revised. Edition 2005; ISBN 3-932338-23-5

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lena_Amsel&oldid=1208468843"

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