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Often typecast as a menacing figure, Peter Lorre achieved Hollywood fame first as a featured player and later as a character actor who trademarked his screen performances with a delicately strung balance between good and evil. His portrayal of the grisly child murderer in Fritz Lang’s masterpiece M (1931) catapulted him to international fame. Lang said of Lorre: "He gave one of the best performances in film history and certainly the best in his life." Today, the Hungarian-born actor is also recognized for his riveting performances in The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934), The Maltese Falcon (1941), and Casablanca (1942).
The first full biography of this major actor, The Lost One: A Life of Peter Lorre draws upon more than three hundred interviews, including conversations with directors Fritz Lang, Alfred Hitchcock, Billy Wilder, John Huston, Frank Capra, and Rouben Mamoulian, who speak candidly about Lorre, both the man and the actor. Author Stephen D. Youngkin examines for the first time Lorre’s pivotal relationship with German dramatist Bertolt Brecht, his experience as an émigré from Hitler’s Germany, his battle with drug addiction, and his struggle with the choice between celebrity and intellectual respectability.
Separating the enigmatic person from the persona long associated with one of classic Hollywood’s most recognizable faces, The Lost One is the definitive work of a life triumphant and yet tragically tangled with so many failed possibilities.
He Beat the DevilReviewed by Kevin Killian, 2008-10-06
Like all the other reviewers I'm staggered by Youngkin's
accomplishment, which seems to me--perhaps profanely--even more
impressive than Lorre's own. In a way, Lorre has found a biographer
supreme, one beautifully blessed by all the gifts of sympathy and
knowledge needed to translate an artist's work into contemporary
times. How many of Lorre's peers have been given such a chance to
live again? It's really shocking how few good biographies there
have been of Hollywood stars, and even some of the most acclaimed
(think of Gavin Lambert's Norma Shearer) have actually been among
the most banal and simplistic.
Of course Lorre gave Youngkin a life really worth chronicling. If
it wasn't the drug addiction, it was the dramatic life in Germamny
observing and protesting the rise of Hitler, till he and Celia
Lovsky found their way out in a sequence right out of Shearer's
ESCAPE! The work with Fritz Lang, with Brecht, with Hitchcock, with
Bogart, with Irwin Allen, with Roger Corman, each one of these
phases could have made an interesting book, and Youngkin knows how
to spread them out so that every angle is covered and yet our
curiosity remains high. And the research and the interviewing is by
itself amazing. Every time you turn around, Youngkin is eliciting
revealing and wry comments from exactly the people you hope would
comment on the particular situation he is writing about. Because
the book has apparently been in motion for something like 30 years,
his reach goes way back--he spoke with Frank Capra, with Hitchcock
and Huston, with Broderick Crawford and Corinne Calvet--hundreds of
actors, writers, directors and behind the scenes personnel. This
research gives the book a depth and richness of point of view that
elevates it to the Mount Rushmore of biography.
I wasn't always persuaded by Youngkin's critical judgments, and
would rather put a staple gun to my face than have to watch SILK
STOCKINGS again, for example--but now he's got me re-thinking,
"Maybe it is a great performance stuck within a lousy film."
Youngkin pulls the camera way back and takes us through Rouben
Mamoulian's whole career, his way of astonishing audiences by
revealing unexpected sides to their favorite stars. I didn't
actually need all of that to get the point, but I hope he gets to
do the DVD commentary for SILK STOCKINGS, for we need more
enthusiasts and fewer haters. Why write a book about a man, even a
drug-addled and morose one, unless you love him?
Peter Lorre finally gets prestige treatment.Reviewed by Mykal Banta, 2007-12-09
Peter lorre was one of the most unique and fascinating actors ever
to come out of the studio system in Hollywood. Anyone who has every
seen his soft, silken acting or heard that lyrically menacing voice
ever forgot it. I know that I never did. I have been a fan since
seeing him go toe to toe with Cary Grant in Arsnic and Old Lace
when I was in my teens.
Peter Lorre fans have cause for celebration with this book, which
is full of tremendous insight and depth. It covers all of Lorre's
life and does so with compassion and appreciation. This work never
becomes a fan's love letter, though, as the author does not shy
away from the star's less admiriable qualities (which I will leave
to the reader to discover). But everything is put in context, which
often provides a certain understanding. And what a fascinating
context it is - from the German stage of Bertolt Brecht to the
Hollywood horror of Roger Corman. It's worth noting that this book
is extremely well researched and includes a complete Lorre
filmography as well as a complete listing of his tremendous radio
work (was ever their a voice better suited for telling stories over
the radio?).
As the Author tells Lorre's story, the reader is treated to plenty
glimpses into several Hollywood immortals, such as Humphry Bogart,
Walter Huston, Sidney Greenstreet, and Lauren Bacall (with whom
Lorre had a close friendship). And the writing style is very
readable and smooth.
All I can say is, for all of us Peter Lorre fans, Thank you, Mr.
Youngkin.
And while we are on the subject of Hollywood greats that never have
been given an aurhorative bio, what about Boris Karloff. Mr.
Youngkin . . .?
-Mykal Banta
The Marked ManReviewed by Peter Baklava, 2007-07-09
"He's crazy about me...all the degenerates are." Peter Lorre,
speaking of his chimpanzee co-star in "Five Weeks in a
Balloon."
From the beginning of his career, Peter Lorre was typecast. The
classic German Expressionist drama, "M", set the tone for his
entire career. Lorre said that from that point on, in people's eyes
he was "forever the murderer". This was allowed to overshadow his
incredible talent and his great aptitude for comedy. (His throwaway
lines, like the one I quoted above, are priceless!)
His career spanned from experimental theater in pre-Nazi Germany,
to classic noir films with Humphrey Bogart, to eminently
forgettable films from the Sixties. (How odd that one of his last
appearances was in "Muscle Beach Party"!)
Stephen Youngkin does an admirable job of chronicling Lorre's
professional life, including the myriad missed opportunities--(of
note: Malcolm Lowry's rabid interest in seeing Lorre play "the
consul" in "Under the Volcano", and Lorre's own desire to produce a
film about Kasper Hauser. Both of those projects, never realized,
would have added so much to Lorre's cachet.)
The book overflows with examples of Lorre's humanity,
professionalism, and wit. Unfortunately, the actor's personal
battles with the demons of drug abuse and poor health, his
unluckiness at love, and his profligate nature create an undertow
of tragedy which no reader can escape. In the end, this is a deeply
saddening and troubling book. Long after you have finished reading
it, you will find yourself reflecting on the life of this brilliant
and tormented individual, who indeed has a special place in the
hearts of all the "outsiders" in the world.
Absolutely wonderfulReviewed by Marina C. Watteck, 2007-06-09
First of all I am profoundly grateful, that finally someone took up the task to write a biography on one of the greatest actors of the 20th century. Mr. Youngkin did very good work especially in researching the very early years of Peter Lorre in Vienna and Berlin, which I assume must have been a quite excrutiating task. Nobody who ever saw the film "M" will ever forget the wonderful performance Peter Lorre gave. Even later on, nearing the end of his live, when he was doing B-movies, he gave them that certain Lorre-touch. It is a wonderful read and Mr. Youngkins work cannot be praised enough. Sometimes this biography makes you cry and laugh at the same time. Finally somebody did credit to this wonderful, wonderful actor.
RehashReviewed by Grace Gonzales, 2007-05-13
if you are unable to get ahold of author stephen youngkin's earlier biography of peter lorre, then by all means purchase this book. it's comprehensive and thorough, and a good read of a fascinating subject. if you were able to get ahold of the earlier book, then you can save your money on this one. the only new item that would make purchasing this edition worthwhile is the photo and information on peter's daughter catherine. she looks like him but pretty, and her connection to the hillside strangler is included.