Maria Ouspenskaya(1876-1949)
- Actress
- Soundtrack
The daughter of a lawyer, Ouspenskaya studied singing at the Warsaw
Conservatory and acting at Adasheff's School of the Drama in Moscow.
She received her practical training as an actress touring in the
Russian provinces. She later joined the Moscow Art Theatre. It was here
that she first worked under the direction of the great
Konstantin Stanislavski, whose
"Method" she would go on to promote for the remainder of her life. She
came to America with the Art Theatre in 1922 and, upon their return to
Moscow, defected to the US to become a dominant Broadway actress for
more than a decade until she founded the School of Dramatic Art in New
York in 1929. It was to help keep the school funded that she accepted
her first Hollywod film,
Dodsworth (1936). She had appeared in
six silent movies in Russia earlier in her career. This lucrative
association, for Ouspenskaya, Hollywood and the viewing public, would
last for more than a dozen years and two dozen films. Thanks to her
often-superior demeanor and addiction to astrology, she could prove
maddening on the set. She remained in nearly daily communication with
L.A. Times' astrologer Carroll Righter who would advise her on the best
times to appear on camera along with when and where to travel. As a
consequence, most casts and crews disliked the over-bearing, wispy
90-pound actress intensely. She bounced between prestigious A-pictures
(Love Affair (1939),
Waterloo Bridge (1940)) and
B-movies
(Mystery of Marie Roget (1942),
Tarzan and the Amazons (1945)),
performing, and behaving, with equal intensity. She is especially
notable for having appeared in the last great Universal horror entry,
The Wolf Man (1941) and the
interesting
Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man (1943).
A heavy smoker, she fell asleep in bed with a lit cigarette in late
November 1949 and suffered massive burns. She died of a stroke in the
Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital three days
later.