Elissa Landi(1904-1948)
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Elissa Landi was born in Venice, Italy on December 6, 1904. From an early age, she
wanted to be an actress and writer. Her acting career started at the Oxford Repertory
Company and on London's West End performing with actors such as Laurence Olivier
and John Gielgud. She played Desdemona in "Othello" and appeared in plays with and
by Noel Coward (most notably "Blithe Spirit, in which she was forced to enter through
the fireplace when the door jammed). She made her London debut in "The Storm," which
lasted for five months and for which she received rave reviews for her performances.
That led to meaty leads in "Lavendar Ladies" and other plays. European film producers
took notice of the photogenic beauty, and Elissa starred in eight films over the next
two years. Her first film was the German-made Synd (1928). Her career didn't
impress critics, though, until she played Anthea Dane in
The Price of Things (1930). She felt that she would make more headway in the U.S., so she went
to New York in 1931 to star in the stage version of "A Farewell to Arms." Although the
play made no huge impression, Hollywood sat up and took notice, and she soon
appeared in
Body and Soul (1931) opposite
Charles Farrell. However, it
wasn't until Cecil B. DeMille's
biblical epic
The Sign of the Cross (1932)
that many moviegoers got their first glimpse of Elissa, and they were
enthralled, although she was among such heavyweight stars as
Claudette Colbert,
Fredric March,
Charles Laughton, and
Vivian Tobin. Completed in under eight weeks, the film was a
smash hit. After
A Passport to Hell (1932) and
Devil's Lottery (1932), Elissa
scored again in
The Warrior's Husband (1933),
a film about the intrigues and intricacies of the old Roman Empire that
starred Marjorie Rambeau and
Ernest Truex. In 1934 Elissa co-starred
with Robert Donat in the classic
The Count of Monte Cristo (1934).
The next year saw Elissa as world-class singer Lisa Robbia, (singing voice dubbed by Nina
Koshetz) in
Enter Madame! (1934) with
Cary Grant, the era's greatest leading man.
In Cary Grant's biography, he mentions seeing Elissa at a typewriter, pursuing her other
passion, writing, between takes throughout the filming process. After a mediocre role in
Mad Holiday (1936),
Elissa had a better part as the tormented Selma Landis in the hit
After the Thin Man (1936), the
second film in the series. She appeared in only three movies after that, the last being
the low-budget
Corregidor (1943) for
bottom-of-the-barrel Producers Releasing Corporation. When that picture
was completed, Elissa left films behind and concentrated on writing; she produced six
novels and poetry volumes. After Hollywood she concentrated on Broadway, regional
theater, and summer stock near Kingston, New York, where she lived with her husband
Curtis Thomas and their daughter.
Elissa succumbed to cancer on October 21, 1948 at just 43 years old.