Josef von Sternberg was an Austrian-American film director known for films like ‘Morocco’ and ‘The Scarlet Empress.’ This biography detailed information about his childhood, life, achievements, works & timeline.
@Film Director, Birthday and Life
Josef von Sternberg was an Austrian-American film director known for films like ‘Morocco’ and ‘The Scarlet Empress.’ This biography detailed information about his childhood, life, achievements, works & timeline.
Josef von Sternberg born at
Josef von Sternberg was thrice married. His first marriage to Riza Royce in 1926 ended in 1930. During the 1930s he was obsessed with Marlene Dietrich and is believed to have been sexually involved with her.
His second marriage to Jean Annette McBride in 1945 barely lasted a couple of years and ended in 1947.
He tied the knot for the third time in 1948 with Meri Otis Wilner. The couple had one child and remained together for almost two decades until Sternberg’s death.
Josef von Sternberg was born Jonas Sternberg on 29 May 1894 to a Jewish family in Vienna. His father, Moses (Morris) Sternberg, was a former soldier in the army of Austria-Hungary.
His father moved to the United States in search of work when the boy was two years old. A few years later, Jonas too moved to the US with the rest of his family. The entire family returned to Vienna after three years only to move back to the US eventually.
He grew up in humble surroundings as his family struggled to make ends meet. The boy attended public schools in New York and dropped out of Jamaica High School as a teenager.
He began doing odd jobs soon after dropping out. He was first exposed to the film industry when he landed a job of cleaning and repairing movie prints. By the mid-1910s he was working at the World Film Company at Fort Lee, New Jersey, under William A. Brady.
During this time the French-American film director, Emile Chautard, took the young boy as a protégé and mentored him in the science and art of film-making. He was also guided by the other French-speaking directors and cinematographers at the company.
In 1919, Chautard hired Sternberg as an assistant director for a version of ‘The Mystery of the Yellow Room.’ He honed his directorial skills over the years and made his directorial debut in 1925 with ‘The Salvation Hunters.’
Around this time he adopted the name Josef von Sternberg. The legendary Charlie Chaplin was impressed by the emerging director’s work and the two collaborated to make the film ‘A Woman of the Sea’ (1926) which Chaplin produced and Sternberg directed. The completed film was, however, never publicly screened.
As a director, Sternberg enjoyed moderate success in the late 1920s with silent films like ‘Underworld’ (1927), ‘The Last Command’ (1928), ‘The Docks of New York’ (1928), and ‘Thunderbolt’ (1929).
The film ‘Morocco’, starring Gary Cooper and Marlene Dietrich, was one of Sternberg’s most successful movies. The film, which was about a cabaret singer and a Legionnaire who fall in love during the Rif War, was nominated for four Academy Awards including the Best Director Award for Sternberg.
His film ‘The Scarlet Empress’, a historical drama film about the life of Catherine the Great is well-known for its atmospheric and suggestively demonic production design. Replete with erotic images, the film was considered to be a controversial one at the time of its release though modern critics view it more favorably.