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Maria Orska

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Maria Orska
Maria Orska on promotional postcard from ca 1920. Photographed by A.Macsigay, Hamburg; card published by Photochemie, Berlin.
Born
Rachel Blindermann

(1893-03-16)March 16, 1893
DiedMay 16, 1930(1930-05-16) (aged 34)
Other namesMaria Daisy Orska
SpouseHans von Bleichröder
Maria Orska - portrait by Oskar Kokoschka, 1922

Maria Orska (Russian: Мария Орская; * March 16, 1896 - † May 16, 1930) was an important actress of the German theater and cinema in the 1920s.

Maria Orska was born as Rachel Blindermann in 1893, of a Polish-Jewish family, in a city of Mykolaiv (Russian: Nikolaev), not far from Odessa, in what is now Ukraine, at the time a part of Russian Empire. Just before World War I Maria Orska moved to Warsaw and from there she moved to Berlin in 1915, as Warsaw has been occupied by German army during the war. She spoke fluently Polish, German and Russian.

In Berlin, Maria Orska worked with Max Reinhardt and was famous for her parts in theater plays by Strindberg, Wedekind and Pirandello. She also gained national popularity in Germany for her film parts, although theater was always more important to her. Her first movie Dämon und Mensch (1915) was produced by Jules Greenbaum, one of the pioniers of the German cinema, who discovered cinema during his 20 years long stay in Chicago and migrated back to Germany in 1895. Most of her movies were produced by Alfred Maack, director and producer employed by Greenbaum. She was sometimes credited in films and film publicity materials as Maria Daisy Orska.

Oskar Kokoschka drew in 1922, a famous portrait of her, now kept as a lithograph in collections of several museums. Orska married an important Jewish banker from Berlin, much older than she was, Baron Hans von Bleichröder (son of Gerson von Bleichröder) and took a name of Baroness von Bleichröder. They were divorced in 1925. Maria Orska's lover, a wealthy Jewish industrialist and geologist Julius Heinrich Koritschoner from Vienna, shot himself in Constantinople in 1928, writing before death a letter to Orska. His morphine addiction is thought to have made him suicidal.

Maria Orska's sister Gabryela Marchesa di Serra Mantschedda, married to an Italian aristocrat, had committed suicide in 1926, by hanging herself on a curtain rope in a Berlin hotel, after a heated argument with Maria.

Maria Orska had an enormous popularity in Central Europe of the 1920s. Her stage performances at The Hebbel-Theater in the Kreuzberg district were seen as extraordinary by the Berlin audience of that era. Her photographs appeared on covers of magazines, postcards with her portraits were distributed all over that part of the continent.

Maria Orska committed suicide in 1930, in Vienna. Some people speculate that an addiction to morphine had a decisive influence on the last years of her life.

Filmography

External links

  • Maria Orska at IMDb
  • "Tyrolese Dynamite". Time Magazine. 1926-02-22. Retrieved 2008-08-09.
  • Testimony about Maria Orska's lover Julius Heinrich Koritschoner and the society of artists and financiers in Vienna which Maria Orska was a part of
  • Description of the Maria Orska suicide presently at Harvard University, School of Law, in Wood Detective Agency. Records, 1865–1945
  • Postcards
  • [1] IMDB

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