Mady Christians
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marguerita Maria "Mady" Christians (January 19, 1892 – October 28, 1951) was an Austrian actress and naturalized US citizen who had a successful acting career in theatre and film in the United States until she was blacklisted during the McCarthy period. She was born on January 19, 1892 to Rudolph Christians, a well-known German actor, and his wife, Bertha. Her family moved to Berlin when she was one year old, and to New York City in 1912, where her father became the Irving Place Theatre's general manager. Five years later she returned to Europe to study under Max Reinhardt.
She appeared in a number of European films prior to the early 1930s. In 1929, she starred in the first full sound film made in Germany It's You I Have Loved. In 1933, she toured the United States in a play called Marching By and was offered a Broadway contract the following year that allowed her, like a number of other German artists, to seek refuge from the Nazi regime in the United States.
On Broadway, Christians played Queen Gertrude in Hamlet and Lady Percy in Henry IV, Part I, staged by director Margaret Webster. Webster was part of a small but influential group of lesbian producers, directors, and actors in theater (a group that included Eva Le Gallienne and Cheryl Crawford). Webster and Christians became close friends: according to Webster biographer Milly S. Barranger, it is likely that they also were lovers.
She also starred in Lillian Hellman's Watch on the Rhine. She originated the title role in the 1944 play I Remember Mama. Her last movie roles were in All My Sons, based on the play by Arthur Miller, and Letter from an Unknown Woman, both released in 1948.
During World War II, Christians was involved in political work on behalf of refugees, rights for workers (especially in theater and film), and Russian War relief, political efforts that would bring her to the attention of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and other anti-communist institutions and organizations. In addition to her political work, Christians also publicly criticized the House Committee on Un-American Activities in early 1941 and likened the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee's investigation of propaganda in US film to Nazi harassment of film and radio artists in the 1930s. In 1950, the FBI's internal security division began investigating Christians, who had been identified as a "concealed communist" by a confidential informant. When Christians' name appeared in Red Channels, the so-called bible of the broadcast blacklist, her career was effectively over.
Acting
Movie
Letter from an Unknown Woman
as Frau Berndle
1948
Movie
Heidi
as Dete
1937
Movie
Michael
as Woman (uncredited)
1924
Movie
Come and Get It
as Karie Linbeck
1936
Movie
All My Sons
as Kate Keller
1948
Movie
Address Unknown
as Elsa Schulz
1944
Movie
The Finances of the Grand Duke
as Großfürstin Olga von Rußland
1924
Movie
Tender Comrade
as Manya Lodge
1944
Movie
Seventh Heaven
as Marie
1937
Movie
The Loves of Pharaoh
1922
Movie
In the Slums of Berlin
as Regine Lossen
1925
Movie
The Lost Shoe
as Violante
1923
TV
The Philco Television Playhouse
as Mama
1948
Movie
The Waltz Dream
as Prinzessin Alix
1926
Movie
A Wicked Woman
as Naomi Trice, aka Naomi Stroud
1934
Movie
The Only Girl
as Kaiserin Eugenie
1933
Movie
The Black Hussar
as Marie Luise
1932
Movie
Manolescu, der Fürst der Diebe
as Comtesse Maria Freyenberg
1933
Movie
Und Nelson spielt
1929
Movie
The Buddenbrooks
as Gerda Arnoldsen
1923
Movie
A Glass of Water
1923
My Incognito Heart
as La reine Alexandra
1931
Heimweh
as Princess Lydia Trubetskoy
1927
Movie
Escapade
as Anita
1935