The Conrad Veidt Society
A little-
Another sidelight is the fact that CASABLANCA’s showing in Morocco was actually
banned during the initial release by the U.S. Government, as authorities were actually
concerned that the film would further inflame the conflict between pro and anti-
Also, during CASABLANCA’s initial release in Europe after the war, the film was
not immediately popular with audiences in France, who at first disapproved of the
film’s depiction of life in occupied France. Sweden and Germany went even further,
heavily censoring their prints of CASABLANCA-
Immediately after CASABLANCA, Conrad was offered what would be his last role in
ABOVE SUSPICION (1943) with Joan Crawford, Fred MacMurray and Basil Rathbone. ABOVE
SUSPICION was the tale of a newly-
Unfortunately, ABOVE SUSPICION wouldn't be released until April 28, 1943. Twenty-
Although Conrad Veidt's ashes were later entombed in the Ferncliff Cemetery in Westchester, New York, the actor has not been forgotten. In the intervening years, a growing legion of fans and admirers has formed, culminating in the founding of the Conrad Veidt Society in 1990. In April 1998, the Conrad Veidt Society, through donated funds, had the remains of Conrad Veidt and his wife, Lily, interred at Golder’s Green Crematorium in London, England. There, the Veidts now rest with many of Veidt’s contemporaries such as Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Vivian Leigh and Sir Alexander Korda.
The Conrad Veidt Society also publishes an excellent newsletter which is available on the Internet (http://members.aol.com/CVSociety/index.html) and details the continuing efforts of a multitude of people, both in and out of the society, who are working to research Conrad Veidt’s career and preserve his memory.
One of the most interesting developments reported, in a 1996 newsletter, was the
existence of a street named after Veidt in Potsdam, “Conrad-
Another development was the publication in 1987 of the only English language biography of Conrad Veidt, by Jerry C. Allen, entitled Conrad Veidt: From Caligari to Casablanca. An excellent work, the book was later reissued in 1993 to honor the centennial of Conrad Veidt’s birth.
It is quite evident that, generations after his death, Conrad Veidt is still alive in the hearts and minds of film audiences. So it seems that as long as there survives a projector or video device, this great actor will live on, in the flickering, shadowy images of such films as THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI and THE WAXWORKS, as well as the magic of THE THIEF OF BAGDAD and the incomparable romance of CASABLANCA.
REFERENCES
Allen, Jerry C., Conrad Veidt: From Caligari to Casablanca, Boxwood Press, Pacific Grove, CA, 2nd Ed 1993
American Heritage, December 1991
Brewer’s Cinema, Market House Books, London 1995
Conrad Veidt Society Newsletter, all issues
Eyman, Scott, Ernst Lubitsch: Laughter in Paradise, Simon and Schuster, NY 1993
Internet Movie Database
Motion Picture, Guide, The, Cinebooks, Inc., Chicago, IL 1987
O'LEARY, Liam, The Silent Cinema, Dutton Co., NY 1965
QUINLAN, Daniel, Illustrated Encyclopedia of Movie Character Actors, Harmony Books, NY 1985
RAGAN, David, Who's Who in Hollywood, Facts on File, NY and Oxford, England, 1992
San Francisco Chronicle, 2-
San Francisco Examiner, 9-
Seattle Times, 2-
TRUITT, Evelyn Mack, Who Was Who on the Screen, R. R. Bowker Co, NY and London 1984
Vincendeau, Ginette, Encyclopedia of European Cinema, Facts on File, NY 1995
Conrad Veidt:
The Cinema's Master
of the Shadows
(Continued)
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Copyright © 1999, 2000, 2001 by David K. Bowman. All rights reserved.
The vintage San Francisco Examiner newspaper ads were kindly provided by Mr. David K. Bowman.
This article and the title photo originally appeared in CULT MOVIES magazine, Issue #29, October 1999.
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