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Alexander Kolowrat

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Occupation
  
Film producer

Years active
  
1909–1927


Name
  
Alexander Kolowrat

Role
  
Film producer

Alexander Kolowrat static2habsburgernetfilesstylesmediumpublic

Full Name
  
Alexander Joseph Graf Kolowrat-Krakowsky

Born
  
January 29, 1886 (
1886-01-29
)
Glen Ridge, New Jersey, United States

Died
  
December 4, 1927, Vienna, Austria

Spouse
  
Sophie Nikolajevna Trubecka (m. 1923–1927)

Parents
  
Count Leopold Philipp von Kolowrat-Krakowsky, Nadine Freiin von Huppmann-Valbella

Siblings
  
Bertha Kolowrat-Krakowsky, Heinrich Kolowrat-Krakowsky, Friedrich Kolowrat-Krakowsky

Movies
  
Sodom und Gomorrha, The Moon of Israel, Cafe Elektric, The Prince and the Pauper, Die Pratermizzi

Similar People
  
Gustav Ucicky, Michael Curtiz, Alexander Korda, Walter Reisch, Giuseppe Becce

Count Alexander "Sascha" Joseph von Kolowrat-Krakowsky (29 January 1886 – December 4, 1927), was an American-born Austrian film producer of Bohemian-Czech descent from the House of Kolowrat. A pioneer of Austrian cinema, he founded the first major film studio Sascha-Film in Vienna.

Contents

Alexander Kolowrat Alexander Kolowrat Wikipedia

Life

Alexander Kolowrat Alexander Kolowrat Biography Film director Film producer United

He was born in Glen Ridge, New Jersey, the son of Count Leopold Filip Kolowrat-Krakowsky (1852–1910) and his wife Nadine Freiin von Huppmann-Valbella (1858–1942), the daughter of a successful cigarette manufacturer from Saint Petersburg. He had three siblings: Bertha, Friedrich and Heinrich.

The reason "Sascha" Kolowrat-Krakowsky was born in the US is described in a letter of March 30, 1984 from his nephew Count Colloredo-Mansfeld to the Austrian film scholar Walter Fritz:

After Count Leopold Kolowrat had been granted a reprieve by Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria, the family returned to Austria-Hungary. Sascha Kolowrat studied at the Catholic University of Leuven (present-day Katholieke Universiteit Leuven) in Belgium where he became a member of the German Catholic fraternity Katholische Academische Verbindung Lovania Leuven. He served in the army and was able to speak many European languages. After he had met Charles Pathé in Paris in 1909, he got into cinematography, besides his interests in motorcycle and car racing, aviation and ballooning. In 1909, he privately filmed a car racing at the Semmering Pass.

After the death of his father in 1910 and the inheritance of his estates in Bohemia, Alexander Kolowrat founded the Sascha-Film factory and a film laboratory at his castle Groß Meierhöfen (today Velké Dvorce) in Pfraumberg (Přimda). In 1912, he moved to Vienna and founded the Sascha-Filmfabrik on Pappenheimgasse 2/Treustraße in Brigittenau. One of his first productions with Sascha-Film was the documentary Die Gewinnung des Erzes am steirischen Erzberg in Eisenerz ("The Ore Mining in the Styrian Erzberg in Eisenerz"). In 1915, he took over the film branch of the k.u.k. Kriegspressequartier (War Media Quarters) in Vienna and also produced several propaganda movies during World War I.

Kolowrat-Krakowsky worked with many actors, e.g. the then-obscure Marlene Dietrich and Willi Forst, who both performed in the 1927 silent film Café Elektric directed by Gustav Ucicky. He did important pioneering work in all film genres of the time. The high points of his artistic work were the productions of monumental silent movies like Sodom and Gomorrah (1922) or Die Sklavenkönigin (1924), both directed by Michael Curtiz, on the Laaer Berg in Vienna-Favoriten. In 1916, he erected Austria's first huge studio in Vienna-Sievering. Together with his Sascha-Film company, he was the owner of several cinemas. He personally loved to attend the Münstedt Cinema in the Prater park, as well as the Burgkino and the Opernkino. In the Vienna Prater, west of the Rotunde, he erected "Old London" in 1920 for film shots, similar to the "Venice in Vienna" theme park nearby, but smaller.

The count owned a large city palace on Wenceslas Square in Prague. An enthusiastic mobilist he financed the development of a lightweight sports car ("Sascha-Wagen") designed by the Austro-Daimler engineer Ferdinand Porsche, which ran at the 1922 Targa Florio with Alfred Neubauer at the wheel.

Kolowrat died of cancer in 1927 in Vienna, aged 41. He would be referenced in the hit Dietrich-von Sternberg film collaboration Dishonored (1931), in which Marlene Dietrich plays a spy whose civilian name is Marie Kolowrat.

Filmography

  • Die Gewinnung des Eisens am steirischen Erzberg in Eisenerz (1912)
  • Der Millionenonkel (directed by Hubert Marischka, 1913)
  • Wien im Krieg (propaganda film, 1916)
  • Der Märtyrer seines Herzens (1918)
  • Eine versunkene Welt (1920)
  • Sodom und Gomorrha (directed by Michael Curtiz, 1922)
  • Der junge Medardus (directed by Michael Curtiz, 1923)
  • Die Sklavenkönigin (directed by Michael Curtiz, 1924)
  • Das Spielzeug von Paris (directed by Michael Curtiz, 1925)
  • Salammbô (co-production with Gaumont, 1925)
  • Café Elektric (directed by Gustav Ucicky, 1927)
  • Literature

  • Fritz, W., & Zahradnik, M. (eds.), 1992: Erinnerungen an S. Kolowrat (Schriftenreihe des Österreichischen Filmarchivs 31) (in German)
  • Hübl, I. M. & S. K., 1950: Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der österreichischen Kinematographie (in German)
  • References

    Alexander Kolowrat Wikipedia