Asta Nielsen (11 September
1881 - 24 May 1972), was a Danish
silent film actress who was one of the most
popular leading ladies of the 1910s and one of the first
international movie stars.
Seventy of
Nielsen's 74 films were made in Germany
where she
was known simply as Die Asta (The Asta).
Noted for her large dark eyes, mask-like face and boyish figure,
Nielsen most often portrayed strong-willed passionate women trapped
by tragic consequences. Due to the erotic nature of her
performances, Nielsen's films were heavily censored in the United
States and her work remained relatively obscure to American
audiences. She is credited with transforming movie acting from
overt theatricality to a more subtle naturalistic style. Nielsen
founded her own film studio in Berlin during the 1920s, but
returned to Denmark in 1937 after the rise of Nazism in Germany. A
private figure in her later years, Nielsen became a collage artist
and an author.
Early life
Asta Sofie Amalie Nielsen
was born in the Vesterbro
section of Copenhagen
, Denmark
, the
daughter of an often unemployed blacksmith and a
washerwoman. Nielsen's family moved several times during her
childhood while her father sought employment.
They lived for several
years in Malmö
, Sweden
where her
father worked in a corn millery and then a factory. After he
lost those jobs, they returned to live in the Nørrebro section of
Copenhagen. Nielsen's father died when she was fourteen years old.
At the age of eighteen, Nielsen was accepted into the acting school
of the
Royal Danish Theatre.
During her time there, she studied closely with the Royal Danish
Actor, Peter Jerndorff. In 1901, twenty-year-old Nielsen became
pregnant and gave birth to her daughter, Jesta. Nielsen never
revealed the identity of the father, and chose to raise her child
alone with the help of her mother and older sister.
Nielsen graduated from the Theater school in 1902. For the next
three years she worked at the Dagmar Theatre, then toured in Norway
and Sweden from 1905 to 1907 with
De Otte and the Peter
Fjelstrup companies.
Returning to Denmark, she was employed at
Det Ny
Theater
from 1907 to 1910. Although she worked
steadily as a stage actress, her performances remained
unremarkable. Danish historian Robert Neiiedam wrote that Nielsen's
unique physical attraction, which was of great value on the screen,
was limited on stage by her deep and uneven speaking voice.
Film career
Nielsen began her film career in 1909, starring in
director Urban Gad's
1910 tragedy
Afgrunden ("The Abyss").
Nielsen's minimalist acting style was evidenced in her successful
portrayal of a naive young woman lured into a tragic life. Her
overt sexuality in the film's "gaucho dance" scene established the
erotic quality for which Nielsen became known. The film's success
encouraged her to continue making silent films. Nielsen and Gad
married and, after making several films, they moved to Germany
because her talent was not understood by the Danish film
industry.
In 1911 she was contracted to German producer Paul Davidson for
$80,000 a year, then the highest salary for a film star. Nielsen is
called the first international movie star, challenged only by
French comic
Max Linder, also famous
throughout Europe and in America by that time. In a Russian
popularity poll of 1911 Nielsen was voted the world's top female
movie star, behind Linder and ahead of her Danish compatriot
Valdemar Psilander.
She remained popular
on both sides through World War I and in
1915 (before the United States' entry into it) she visited New York City
to study American film techniques.
In 1924 she was famously co-starred with that other great
Scandinavian diva,
Greta Garbo, months
before Garbo left for Hollywood and MGM. Nielsen continued as a
legend of the screen in Germany. After the Nazis came to power she
was offered her own studio by propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels.
Understanding the implications well, she instead fled the country
home to Denmark.
She worked in film until start of sound movies. Nielsen made only
one feature movie with sound, but was unable to adapt and retired
from the sreen. Thereafter, Nielsen acted only on stage. Nielsen
left Germany in 1936 after the rise of Nazism, returning to Denmark
where she wrote articles on art and politics and a two-volume
autobiography.
She is considered to be a great movie actress because of her talent
of
adapting her performing style in
accordance with the demands of the film media avoiding
theatrical manners. Besides, she was able to play
women of extremely various social positions as well as of different
psychology.
Assistance to Jews during World War II
During the Second World War she provided money for Allan O.
Hagedorff, a young Dane living in Germany, to assist Jews. Using
money provided by Nielsen, Hagedorff sent so many food parcels to
the Theresienstadt concentration camp that he was warned by the
Gestapo. Among others,
Victor
Klemperer, the diarist and philologist, was offered money by
Hagedorff.
She was married three times. She died in 1972.
Quotes about Asta Nielsen
Selected films
- Afgrunden (The Abyss) directed by
Urban Gad, 1910
- Balletdanserinden (The Ballet Dancer)
directed by August Blom, 1911
- Engelein (The Angel), 1914
- Reigen, 1920 (Eng. Merry-Go-Round)
- Mata Hari, 1920
- Die Spionin, 1921, In which
she also played Mata Hari
- Fräulein Julie, 1921 (English, Miss Julie)
- Hamlet, 1921
- Die freudlose
Gasse, 1925 (Eng. Joyless Street), directed by
Georg Wilhelm Pabst
- Dirnentragödie, 1927 (Eng. Tragedy of the
Street)
References
- Morris, Gary Asta Nielsen, Bright Lights Film Journal,
Issue 16, April 1996
- Malmkjær, Poul, Asta: Mennesket, Myten, og
Filmstjernen, P Haase & Sons, 2000, 343pp
- DFI, Asta Nielsen Det Danske Filminstitut,
retrieved 2008-10-10
- Neiiendam, Robert, Asta Nielsen, Dansk Biografisk
Leksikon, 1939
- Klemperer, Victor, Die Tagebücher 1933–1945I Will
Bear Witness 1942-1945: A Diary of the Nazi Years, Modern
Library, 2001 ISBN 978-3-89853-550-2
External links