Rosa Valetti
Rosa Valetti (17 March 1878 – 10 December 1937), born Rosa Vallentin, was a German actress, cabaret performer and singer.
Biography
Rosa Valetti was born in Berlin, the daughter of industrialist Felix Vallentin and sister of actor Hermann Vallentin. She played her first roles in the theatres of suburban Berlin. Inspired by the November Revolution and her meeting with political satirist Kurt Tucholsky, Valetti began performing in cabarets. In 1920, she founded the Café Grössenwahn ("Café Megalomania"), which has been recognized as one of the most important literary and political cabarets in 1920s Berlin. Café Megalomania was frequented by Expressionist writers, and the program of sketch comedy and political songs reflected Valetti's belief in the cabaret as an instrument of political and social criticism.[1]
The inflation of 1919 to 1923 and the subsequent collapse of the German economy forced Valetti to close Cafe Megalomania. She directed the cabaret Rakete for a time, then launched another cafe of her own, the Rampe, which hosted the works of revolutionist poet and singer Erich Weinert. Valetti was among the founders of the floating cabaret Larifari during the late 1920s.[2] In 1928 she performed as Mrs. Peachum in the original cast of Bertolt Brecht's Threepenny Opera, which was staged under the direction of Erich Engel at Berlin's Theater am Schiffbauerdamm.[3]
Rosa Valetti acted in film roles from 1911. Her age and sturdy mien ensured that she acted mostly in motherly roles, as in the 1925 film Die Prinzessin und der Geiger (The Princess and the Violinist), in which she played a 46-year-old grandmother. In Josef von Sternberg's 1930 film Der Blaue Engel (The Blue Angel) she plays the wife of the magician, Kiepert (Kurt Gerron). Valetti also appears briefly in Fritz Lang's 1931 classic M as the proprietor of an underworld cafe.
In 1933, Valetti went into exile, performing first in Vienna and Prague, then in Palestine in 1936. She married actor Ludwig Roth and had a daughter, the actress Liesel Valetti, with him.
Rosa Valetti died in Vienna on 10 December 1937. She was buried at the Urnenhain. The grave existed until 2001.
A street in Berlin's Malsdorf district is named "Rosa-Valetti-Strasse" in her honour.
Filmography
- Frau Potiphar (1911)
- Wollen sie meine Tochter heiraten? (1914)
- Das Laster (1915)
- Othello oder: Das Verhängnis eines Fürstenhauses (1918)
- Wanderratten (1918)
- Die lachende Maske (1918)
- Die Tänzerin Barberina (1920)
- Kurfürstendamm (1920)
- Christian Wahnschaffe, 1. Teil - Weltbrand (1920)
- Die Schuld der Lavinia Morland (1920)
- Das Haus zum Mond (1921)
- Die rote Katze (1921)
- The Hotel of the Dead (1921)
- The Earl of Essex (1922)
- Carousel (1923)
- Die Schneiderkomtess (1922)
- Rudderless (1924)
- Zwischen Morgen und Morgen (1924)
- Die Prinzessin und der Geiger (1925)
- The Marriage Swindler (1925)
- The Flower Girl of Potsdam Square (1925)
- The Morals of the Alley (1925)
- The Golden Calf (1925)
- Tartüff (1926)
- Darling, Count the Cash (1926)
- The Captain from Koepenick (1926)
- Accommodations for Marriage (1926)
- Orphan of Lowood (1926)
- The Transformation of Dr. Bessel (1927)
- How Do I Marry the Boss? (1927)
- Spione (1928)
- The Story of a Little Parisian (1928)
- The Burning Heart (1929)
- Asphalt (1992)
- The Blue Angel (1930)
- Die Abenteuerin von Tunis / Treffpunkt Afrika (1931)
- M – Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder (1931)
- The Scoundrel (1931)
- Ehe mit beschränkter Haftung (1931)
- Täter gesucht (1931)
- Wiener Wald (1931)
- Das Geheimnis der roten Katze (1931)
- Die unsichtbare Front (1932)
- Two Hearts Beat as One (1932)
- Die Tänzerin von Sanssouci (1932)
- Scandal on Park Street (1932)
- Moral und Liebe (1933)
- Liliom (1934)
Notes
Sources
This article and filmography were translated from the corresponding article on the German Wikipedia, with additional information as cited from:
- Appignanesi, Lisa, 1976. The Cabaret. New York: Universe Books
- Eckardt, Wolf von, and Gilman, Sander L., 1975. Bertolt Brecht's Berlin: A Scrapbook of the Twenties. Garden City, New York: Anchor Press/Doubleday