Oscar Actors: Schell, Maximillian–Social Background, Career, Awards (Cum Advantage)

Maximillian Schell Career Summary:

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Born in Switzerland

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Film Debut: Children, Mothers, and a General, German film, 1955; age 25; The Young Lions, 1958; aged 28

Breakthrough Role: Judgment at Nuremberg, 1961; age 32

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Maximilian Schell (December 8, 1930–Feb 1, 2014), Swiss actor, born in Austria.

His parents were involved in the arts and he grew up surrounded by performance and literature. While he was still a child, his family fled to Switzerland in 1938 when Austria was annexed by Nazi Germany, and they settled in Zürich.

After World War II ended, Schell took up acting and directing full-time.

Schell won the Best Actor Oscar for playing a lawyer in the legal drama Judgment at Nuremberg (1961). He was Oscar-nominated for playing a character with multiple identities in The Man in the Glass Booth (1975) and for playing a man resisting Nazism in Julia (1977).

Fluent in both English and German, Schell earned top billing in a number of Nazi-era themed films. He acted in films such as Topkapi (1964), The Deadly Affair (1967), Counterpoint (1968), Simón Bolívar (1969), The Odessa File (1974), A Bridge Too Far (1977), and Deep Impact (1998).

On TV, he received two Primetime Emmy Award nominations for the NBC film Miss Rose White and the HBO television film Stalin (1992). He also portrayed Otto Frank in the TV film The Diary of Anne Frank (1980), the Russian emperor Peter the Great in the NBC series Peter the Great (1986), Frederick the Great in the British series Young Catherine (1991), and Brother Jean le Maistre in the miniseries Joan of Arc (1999).

Schell also performed in stage plays, including celebrated performance as Prince Hamlet. Schell was an accomplished pianist and conductor, performing with Claudio Abbado and Leonard Bernstein, and with orchestras in Berlin and Vienna. His elder sister was the internationally noted actress Maria Schell; he produced the documentary tribute My Sister Maria in 2002.

Schell was born in Vienna, Austria, the son of Margarethe (née Noe von Nordberg), an actress who ran an acting school, and Hermann Ferdinand Schell, a Swiss poet, novelist, playwright, and pharmacy owner. His parents were Roman Catholic.

Schell’s father was never enthusiastic about young Maximilian becoming an actor like his mother, feeling that it could not lead to “real happiness”. However, Schell was surrounded by acting in his early youth:

I grew up in a theatre atmosphere and took it for granted. I remember the theatre, as a child, the way most people remember their mother’s cooking. Acting was all around me, and so was poetry. I made my debut in the theatre at the age of three, in Vienna . .

The Schell family fled from Vienna in 1938 to get “away from Hitler” after the Anschluss, when Austria was annexed by Nazi Germany. They resettled in Zürich, Switzerland.

In Zürich, Schell “grew up reading the classics” and, when he was ten, wrote his first play. Schell recalls that as a child, growing up surrounded by the theatre, he took acting for granted and did not want to become an actor at first: “What I wanted was to become a painter, a musician, or a playwright,” like his father.

Schell later attended the University of Zurich for a year, where he also played soccer and was on the rowing team, along with writing for newspapers as a part-time journalist for income. Following the end of World War II, he moved to Germany where he enrolled in the University of Munich and studied philosophy and art history. During breaks, he would sometimes return home to Zürich or stay at his family’s farm in the country so he could write in seclusion:

My father and my uncle hunt deer there, but I do not like to hunt. I like to walk through the forest by myself. In 1948 and 1949, when I wrote part of my first novel, which I have never shown to anyone, I isolated myself in one of the hunting cabins for three months, without a telephone, without electricity, with heat only from a large open fireplace.

Schell then returned to Zürich, where he served in the Swiss Army for a year, after which he attended the sixth form of University College School, London, for one year before re-entering the University of Zurich for another year, and later, the University of Basel for six months. During that period, he acted professionally in small parts, in both classical and modern plays, and decided that he would from then on devote his life to acting rather than pursue academic studies:

I then decided, either you are a scientist or an artist. . . . To me it is much more important . . . to admire and feel and be stimulated and inspired. . . Art comes out of chaos, not out of a mechanical analyzing. So as soon as I made up my mind, there was no sense any more in continuing to study and in getting a degree. It is like an award; it does not mean anything in itself. . . . A university degree is just a title. I don’t think an artist should have a title. It was time for me to concentrate on acting.

His elder sister Maria Schell was also an actor, as were their siblings, Carl (1927–2019) and Immaculata “Immy” Schell (1935–1992).

Schell’s film debut was in the German anti-war film Kinder, Mütter und ein General (Children, Mothers, and a General, 1955). It was the story of 5 mothers who confronted a German general at the front line, after learning that their sons had been “slated to be cannon fodder on behalf of the Third Reich.” The film co-starred Klaus Kinski as an officer, with Schell playing the part of an officer-deserter.[8] The story, which according to one critic, “depicts the insanity of continuing to fight a war that is lost,” would become a “trademark” for many of Schell’s future roles: “Schell’s sensitivity in his portrayal of a young deserter disillusioned with fighting became a trademark of his acting.”

Schell subsequently acted in seven more films made in Europe before going to the U.S.[10] Among those was The Plot to Assassinate Hitler (also 1955).[citation needed] Later in the same year he had a supporting role in Jackboot Mutiny, in which he plays “a sensitive philosopher”, who uses ethics to privately debate the arguments for assassinating Hitler.

In 1958 Schell was invited to the US to act in the Broadway play, “Interlock” by Ira Levin, in which Schell played the role of an aspiring concert pianist.

He made his Hollywood debut in the WWII film, The Young Lions (1958), as the commanding German officer in another anti-war story, with Marlon Brando and Montgomery Clift. Schell portrayed young officers disillusioned with a war that no longer made sense.

In 1960, Schell returned to Germany and played the title role in Hamlet for German TV, a role that he would play in live theatre productions during his career. Along with Laurence Olivier, Schell is considered “one of the greatest Hamlets ever.” Schell recalled that when he played Hamlet for the first time, “it was like falling in love with a woman. … not until I acted the part of Hamlet did I have a moment when I knew I was in love with acting.” Schell’s performance of Hamlet was featured as one of the last episodes of the American comedy series Mystery Science Theater 3000 in 1999.

In 1959, Schell acted in the role of a defense attorney on a live TV production, Judgment at Nuremberg, a fictionalized re-creation of the Nuremberg War Trials, in an edition of Playhouse 90. His performance in the TV drama was considered so good that he and Werner Klemperer were among the only members of the original cast selected to play the same parts in the 1961 film version. He won the Academy Award for Best Actor, which was the first win for a German-speaking actor since World War II.

After winning the New York Film Critics award for his role, Schell received a letter from his older sister Maria Schell, who was already an award-winning actress, “I received the most wonderful letter from Maria. She wrote, ‘Now, when you have my letter in your hand, a beautiful day is coming for you. I will be with you, proud, because I knew such recognition would come one day, leading to something even greater and better. . . . not only because you are close to me but because I count you among the truly great actors, and it is wonderful that besides that you are my brother.’ Maria and I are very close”.

Schell gave a “bravura performance,” where he tried to defend his clients, Nazi judges, “by arguing that all Germans share a collective guilt” for what happened.[9] Biographer James Curtis notes that Schell prepared for his part in the movie by “reading the entire forty-volume record of the Nuremberg trials.” Author Barry Monush describes the impact of Schell’s acting, “Again, on the big screen, he was nothing short of electrifying as the counselor whose determination to place the blame for the Holocaust on anyone else but his clients, and brings morality into question”.[10][14]

Producer-director Stanley Kramer assembled a star-studded ensemble cast which included Spencer Tracy and Burt Lancaster. They “worked for nominal wages out of a desire to see the film made and for the opportunity to appear in it.”

It was nominated for 11 Oscars, winning two.

In 2011, Schell appeared at a 50th anniversary tribute to the film and his Oscar win, held at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, where he spoke about his career and the film.

Beginning in 1968 Schell began writing, producing, directing and acting in his own films: The Castle (1968), a German film based on the novel by Franz Kafka, about a man trapped in a bureaucratic nightmare. Erste Liebe (First Love) (1970), based on a novel by Ivan Turgenev. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

Schell’s The Pedestrian (1974), is about a German tycoon “haunted by his Nazi past”. In this film, notes one critic, “Schell probes the conscience and guilt in terms of the individual and of society, reaching to the universal heart of responsibility and moral inertia.” It was nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar.

Schell then produced, directed, and acted as a supporting character in End of the Game (1975), a German crime thriller starring Jon Voight and Jacqueline Bisset.

He co-wrote and directed the Austrian film Tales from the Vienna Woods (1979). He had previously (1977) directed a stage production of the original play of that name by Ödön von Horváth at the National Theatre in London.

During his career, as one of few German-speaking actors working in English-language films, Schell was in Nazi-era themed films, including Counterpoint (1968), The Odessa File (1974), The Man in the Glass Booth (1975), A Bridge Too Far (1977), Cross of Iron (1977) and Julia (1977). For the latter film, directed by Fred Zinnemann, Schell was again Oscar nominated for his supporting role as an anti-Nazi activist.

Schell played the role of a Jewish character: as Otto Frank, Anne Frank’s father, in The Diary of Anne Frank (1980); as the modern Zionist father in The Chosen (1981); in 1996, he played an Auschwitz survivor in Through Roses, a German film, written and directed by Jürgen Flimm; and in Left Luggage (1998) he played the father of a Jewish family.

In The Man in the Glass Booth (1975), adapted from the stage play by Robert Shaw, Schell played both a Nazi officer and a Jewish Holocaust survivor, in a character with a double identity. His character, Albert Goldman, was “mad, and immensely complicated, and he is hidden in a maze of identities so thick that no one knows for sure who he really is.”

Schell, who at that period saw himself primarily as a director, felt compelled to accept the part: It’s just that once in a long while a role comes along that I simply can’t turn down. This was a role like that — how could I say no to it?

Schell’s acting in the film has been compared favorably to other leading roles. “Maximilian Schell is even more compelling as the quick-tempered, quicksilver Goldman than in his previous Holocaust-related roles, including Judgment at Nuremberg and The Condemned of Altona”. Schell’s acting intensity, the courtroom scenes, where Schell’s character, after supposedly being exposed as a German officer, “attacks Jewish meekness” in his defense, and “boasts that the Jews were sheep who didn’t believe what was happening.” The film suggests that Schell’s character is in fact a Jew, but one whose sanity has been compromised by “survivor guilt.”

Schell was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor. To avoid being typecast, Schell also played more diverse characters, a museum treasure thief in Topkapi (1964); the eponymous Venezuelan revolutionary in Simón Bolívar (1969); 19th-century ship captain in Krakatoa, East of Java (1969); a Captain Nemo-esque scientist/starship commander in the sci-fi The Black Hole (1979).

He took roles such as the Russian emperor in the television miniseries, Peter the Great (1986), opposite Laurence Olivier, Vanessa Redgrave, and Trevor Howard, which won an Emmy Award; a comedy role with Marlon Brando in The Freshman (1990); Reese Witherspoon’s surrogate grandfather in A Far Off Place; a treacherous Cardinal in John Carpenter’s Vampires (1998); as Frederick the Great in a TV film, Young Catherine (1991); as Vladimir Lenin in the TV series, Stalin (1992); a Russian KGB colonel in Candles in the Dark (1993); the Pharaoh in Abraham (1994); and Tea Leoni’s father in the science fiction thriller, Deep Impact (1998).

Schell appeared in many German-language made-for-TV films, such as the 2003 film Alles Glück dieser Erde (All the Luck in the World) opposite Uschi Glas and in the television miniseries Die Rückkehr des Tanzlehrers [de] (2004), which was based on Henning Mankell’s novel The Return of the Dancing Master. In 2006 he appeared in the stage play of Arthur Miller’s Resurrection Blues, directed by Robert Altman, which played in London at the Old Vic.[26] In 2007, he played the role of Albert Einstein on the German television series Giganten (Giants), which enacted the lives of people important in German history.

Schell also served as a writer, producer and director for a variety of films, including the documentary film Marlene (1984), with the participation of Marlene Dietrich. It was nominated for an Oscar, received the New York Film Critics Award and the German Film Award. Originally, Dietrich, then 83 years of age, had agreed to allow Schell to interview and film her in the privacy of her apartment. However, after he began filming, she changed her mind and refused to allow any actual video footage of her be shown. During a videotaped interview, Schell described the difficulties he had while making the film.

Schell creatively showed only silhouettes of her along with old film clips during their interview soundtrack. The true originality of the movie is the way it pursues the clash of temperament between interviewer and star. . . . he draws her out, taunting her into a fascinating display of egotism, lying and contentiousness.”

Schell produced My Sister Maria in 2002, an intimate documentary about his sister. In the film, he chronicles her life, career and eventual diminished capacity due to illness.[citation needed] The film, made three years before her death, shows her mental and physical frailty, leading to her withdrawing from the world.

In 2002, upon the completion of the film, they both received Bambi Awards, and were honored for their lifetime achievements and in recognition of the film

During the 1960s Schell had a three-year-long affair with Soraya Esfandiary-Bakhtiary, former second wife of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the last Shah of Iran. He also was rumored to have been engaged to the first African-American Supermodel Donyale Luna in the mid 1960s.

In 1971 he had an affair with Neile Adams, according to her. In 1985, he met the Russian actress Natalya Andrejchenko, whom he married in June 1985; their daughter Nastassja was born in 1989. After 2002, separated from his wife (whom he divorced in 2005), Schell had relationship with Austrian art historian Elisabeth Michitsch.

In 2008 he became romantically involved with German opera singer Iva Mihanovic, who was 48 years his junior. They eventually married on August 2013.

Schell was a semi-professional pianist for much of his life. He had a piano when he lived in Munich and said that he would play for hours at a time for his own pleasure and to help him relax: “I find I need to rest. An actor must have pauses in between work, to renew himself, to read, to walk, to chop wood.”[4] Conductor Leonard Bernstein claimed that Schell was a “remarkably good pianist.” In 1982 on a program filmed for the U.S. television network PBS, Schell read from Beethoven’s letters to the audience before Bernstein conducted the Vienna Philharmonic playing Beethoven symphonies.

In 1983, he and Bernstein co-hosted an 11-part TV series, Bernstein/Beethoven, featuring nine live symphonies, along with discussions between Bernstein and Schell about Beethoven’s works.

Schell worked with Italian conductor Claudio Abbado and the Berlin Philharmonic, which included a performance in Chicago of Igor Stravinsky’s Oedipus Rex and another in Jerusalem of Arnold Schoenberg’s A Survivor from Warsaw.[5] Schell also produced and directed a number of live operas, including Richard Wagner’s Lohengrin for the Los Angeles Opera. He worked on the film project Beethoven’s Fidelio, with Plácido Domingo and Kent Nagano.[2]

Schell was a guest professor at the University of Southern California and was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership in Chicago.

In 1994, producer Diana Botsford sued Schell for sexual harassment, after he allegedly propositioned her and tried to fondle her while working together on a television movie she was an associate producer on. The lawsuit was settled out of court for an undisclosed amount later that year.

In 2023, his niece Marie Theres Relin (daughter of Maria Schell), wrote that she was abused and lost her virginity to an “uncle” in 1980, when she was 14. She later confirmed to the media that the uncle was Maximilian Schell. Shortly thereafter, Schell’s daughter Nastassja said that she had known about this, and that she herself had also been sexually abused by her father as a child.

Schell died at the age of 83 on February 1, 2014, in Innsbruck, Austria, after “sudden and serious illness”; he had been receiving treatment for pneumonia.

Filmography (1955-2015)

1955 Kinder, Mütter und ein General Deserteur
1955 The Plot to Assassinate Hitler Member of the Kreisau Circle
1955 Ripening Youth Jürgen Sengebusch
1956 The Girl from Flanders Alexander Haller
1956 The Marriage of Doctor Danwitz Dr. Oswald Hauser
1956 A Heart Returns Home Wolfgang Thomas
1957 The Last Ones Shall Be First Lorenz Darrandt
1958 The Young Lions Captain Hardenberg
1958 Ludmila [de] Josef Ospel
1961 Judgment at Nuremberg Hans Rolfe
1962 Five Finger Exercise Walter
The Condemned of Altona Franz von Gerlach
The Reluctant Saint Giuseppe
1964 Topkapi Walter Harper
1965 Return from the Ashes Stanislaus Pilgrin
The Doctor and the Devil
1967 The Deadly Affair Dieter Frey
The Desperate Ones Marek
1968 Counterpoint General Schiller
The Castle ‘K.’
Krakatoa, East of Java Captain Hanson
1969 Simón Bolívar Simón Bolívar
1970 Erste Liebe Father
1972 Paulina 1880 [fr] Michele Cantarini
Pope Joan Adrian
1973 The Pedestrian Andreas Giese
1974 The Odessa, File Eduard Roschmann
The Rehearsal
1975 The Man in the Glass Booth Arthur Goldman
Der Richter und sein Henker Robert Schmied on Audiotape Voice; Uncredited
The Day That Shook the World Djuro Sarac
1976 St. Ives Dr. John Constable
1977 Cross of Iron Hauptmann von Stransky
A Bridge Too Far Wilhelm Bittrich
Julia Johann
1979 Players Marco
Geschichten aus dem Wienerwald Theatre Visitor Uncredited
Avalanche Express Col. Nikolai Bunin
Together? Giovanni
The Black Hole Dr. Hans Reinhardt
1980 Arch of Triumph
1981 The Chosen Professor David Malter
1983 Les Îles [fr] Fabrice
1984 Man Under Suspicion Lawyer Landau
1986 Laughter in the Dark
1988 An American Place Alfred Steiglitz
1989 The Rose Garden Aaron
1990 The Freshman Larry London
1991 Labyrinth
1993 A Far Off Place Colonel Mopani Theron
Justice Isaak Kohler
1994 Little Odessa, Arkady Shapira
1996 The Vampyre Wars Rodan
1997 Through Roses Carl Stern
1997 Telling Lies in America Dr. Istvan Jonas
1998 The Eighteenth Angel Father Simeon
Left Luggage Mr. Silberschmidt
Vampires Cardinal Alba
Deep Impact Jason Lerner
1999 On the Wings of Love [de] Hochberg
2000 I Love You, Baby Walter Ekland
Just Messing About Poser
2001 Festival in Cannes, Viktor Kovner
2006 The House of Sleeping Beauties Kogi
2008 The Brothers Bloom, Diamond Dog
2009 Flores negras Jacob Krinsten

2015 Les brigands, Mr. Escher, Final film role; filmed in 2012

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