Michael Curtiz was a Hungarian American film director best known for the classic ‘Casablanca.’ This biography of Michael Curtiz provides detailed information about his childhood, life, achievements, works & timeline.
@Film Director, Timeline and Childhood
Michael Curtiz was a Hungarian American film director best known for the classic ‘Casablanca.’ This biography of Michael Curtiz provides detailed information about his childhood, life, achievements, works & timeline.
Michael Curtiz born at
Michael Curtiz was thrice married. He married Lucy Doraine in 1918 and divorced her in 1923.
His second marriage to Lili Damita in 1925 was very short-lived and ended the following year.
He was known to be a short-tempered and difficult man to work with, though he was a brilliant director. His marriages too, were very tumultuous and volatile. He married actress and screenwriter, Bess Meredyth, in 1929. This marriage too was not a happy one though the couple did not divorce. Curtiz was never loyal to his wives and had sexual relationships with other women throughout the marriages. He also fathered children out of wedlock.
He was born as Manó Kaminer to a Jewish family in Budapest, Hungary (then Austria-Hungary). Not much is known about his early life as no credible records exist. Even his birthday which is generally believed to be December 24, 1886, is open to debate.
He told tall tales about his childhood, often contradicting himself. According to his own account he had run away from home to join the circus and had been a member of the Hungarian fencing team at the 1912 Olympic Games. However, no proofs exist to validate these claims.
He probably had a normal middle-class upbringing. He studied at Markoszy University and the Royal Academy of Theatre and Art, Budapest.
He began his career as a stage actor in 1910 and went on to act in and direct many stage plays. When the film industry emerged in Hungary, the ambitious young men ventured into it and starred in ‘Today and Tomorrow’ (1912), the first feature film released by the nascent Hungarian film industry.
He went to Denmark in 1913 where he spent six months at the Nordisk studio in Denmark, honing his craft. When the World War I broke out, he briefly served in the artillery of the Austro-Hungarian Army but was back to film-making by 1915.
On his return to Hungary, he directed a number of silent films and had earned a reputation for himself by the late 1910s. He left the country in 1919 and moved to Vienna for a few years. He continued his prolific film-making career and made many movies including the Biblical epics ‘Sodom und Gomorrha ‘(1922) and ‘Die Sklavenkönigin’ (1924).
One of his films caught the attention of Jack Warner who invited the Hungarian director—who eventually changed his name to Michael Curtiz—to Hollywood in 1926. He began his Hollywood career with silent films and soon moved to the talkies with the part-sound films ‘Tenderloin’ and ‘Noah’s Ark’ (both 1928).
He began the 1930s with a string of successes. He experimented with the adventure-drama genre and formed a highly productive collaboration with Errol Flynn, who he directed in ‘Captain Blood’ (1935), ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade’ (1936), ‘The Adventures of Robin Hood’ (1938), ‘The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex’ (1939), ‘The Sea Hawk’ (1940) and ‘Santa Fe Trail’ (1940).
Michael Curtiz directed the classic film ‘Casablanca’ starring Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, and Paul Henreid. A romantic drama set during the World War II, the film was a critical and commercial success at the time of its release and consistently ranks near the top of lists of the greatest films in history.
He directed Joan Crawford in the title role in the film noir ‘Mildred Pierce,’ a story about a middle-age mother who struggles with an ungrateful daughter. The film earned Crawford an Academy Award and was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" and selected for preservation in the United States Library of Congress National Film Registry in 1996.