Marlene Dietrich, John Lodge, Sam
Jaffe, Louise Dresser, Maria Sieber, C. Aubrey Smith
Of the two 1934 film versions of the life
of Russia's Catherine the Great, Josef von Sternberg's The Scarlet
Empress was the most opulent and exotic. Marlene Dietrich plays
the German-born Catherine, who is required to marry Russia's mad
Grand Duke Peter (Sam Jaffe, decked out in a Harpo Marx wig). As
if her joke of a marriage isn't torment enough, Catherine must endure
the excesses of her new mother-in-law, Empress Elizabeth (Louise
Dresser). Eventually, Catherine finds solace -- and romance -- in
the form of Count Alexei (John Lodge). But even this balm is denied
her when the ambitious Alexei begins wooing the much-older Elizabeth.
When the old Empress dies, Catherine ascends to the Russian throne,
knowing full well that her addled husband would kill her at the
slightest provocation. Soon her power outstrips Peter's, and the
opportunistic Alexei now comes back into her life. The finale finds
Catherine emerging triumphant over all her enemies -- and, in the
film's least subtle sequence (which is saying a lot!), the new Empress
is shown astride a horse, to whom she displays far more affection
than any of her human compatriots. The Scarlet Empress has even
less to do with accuracy than Paul Czinner's Catherine the Great
of the same year, which starred Elizabeth Bergner. Watch for Dietrich's
real-life daughter Maria Sieber (aka Maria Riva) as the 7-year-old
Catherine in the early scenes. |