This exciting collection of unpublished essays on Ernst Lubitsch addresses multiple gaps in scholarly and critical engagement with the director. His understudied early German films shed light on Jewish culture, on the relation of comedy to gender and the influence of theatre on his filmmaking. The popular historical epics brought Lubitsch an invitation to Hollywood in 1922. There, Lubitsch helped develop the film musical and notably contributed to the genre of Hollywood romantic comedy. The well-known scholarsfilm historians, archivists, and theoristswhose essays appear in this volume expand our knowledge of the set designers, actors, directors and members of the emigré community who contributed to Lubitschs vibrant films. An emphasis on the role of material objects opens up a new dimension of critical engagement with the director. Light is shed on neglected films, and the antifascist dimension of his oeuvre brings his political stance clearly to light. As these essays make clear, Lubtischs cinema is elusive and deserving of our close attention.
Arvustused
"New Approaches to Ernst Lubitsch invites us not only to read the films anew with its authors, but also to explore for ourselves what lies hidden behind Greta Garbos hats, Miriam Hopkinss winks, and all the many doors between Budapest and Paris.[ ...] It serves as a cross-sectional overview of the possibilities for engaging with Lubitsch: illuminating for newcomers, refreshing for experts, and appealing to both to approach Lubitsch anew." Joris Coerdt, rezens.tfm , issue 1, 2025 [ translated from German]"
Acknowledgements
Introduction - Brigitte Peucker and Ido Lewit
Part I. Identity and History
1. Jewishness in Lubitschs Milieu Films: The Pride of the Firm and Shoe
Palace Pinkus - Rick McCormick
2. The Mirror and the Mother-In-Law: Bourgeois Jewish Femininity in The Pride
of the Firm, The Blouse King, and When I Was Dead - Valerie Weinstein
3. Lubitsch Revisits the Schmatta Trade: The Shop Around the Corner -
Jan-Christopher Horak
4. To Be or Not to Be: Revising History in Light of Migrant Interactions -
Claire Demoulin
Part II. Theatricality and Performance
5. Done!: Kurt Richters Perspectival Set Design in Lubitschs German
Films - Janelle Blankenship
6. Lubitschs May McAvoy Trilogy: Threesomes, Triangles, Allegories - Charles
Musser
7. Theatrical Yet Deeply Cinematic: Situating Lubitschs Musicals Within the
Early Sound Era - Michael Slowik
8. Miriam Hopkins Learns to Wink - Maria DiBattista
Part III. Objects and Spaces
9. Regulating the Gaze and the Voice for a Cinema in Transition: Lubitschs
The Merry Jail and So This Is Paris - Ido Lewit
10. In and Out of Bed - Joe McElhaney
11. Ninotchka: Pleasure and Politics Objectified - Susan Felleman and
Catherine Walworth
Part IV. Elusive Style
12. That Uncertain Feeling and the Symptoms of Married Life - Noa Merkin
13. Ernst Lubitsch: Censored and Censoring - William Paul
14. Chaplin/Lubitsch/Chaplin: Influence and Counter-Influence - Donna
Kornhaber
15. Films in Which Nothing Very Much Happens: Unstable Knowledge in
Lubitschs Late Silent Work - Scott Bukatman
Complete Bibliography
Contributors
Index
Brigitte Peucker is the Elias Leavenworth Professor of German and Film and Media Studies Emerita at Yale University. Her books on cinema include Incorporating Images: Film and the Rival Arts; The Material Image: Art and the Real in Film; and Aesthetic Spaces: The Place of Art in Film. She is the editor of Wiley-Blackwells A Companion to Rainer Werner Fassbinder. Ido Lewit is a teaching fellow at the Steve Tisch School of Film and Television, Tel Aviv University. He is the co-editor of Mediamorphosis: Kafka and the Moving Image.