Marietta Olly

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Marietta Olly, Der Weltspiegel. January 8, 1905

Marietta Olly , born Maria Amalia Nowak , married Wolffskeel von Reichenberg , married Hutter , (born January 4, 1873 in Vienna , Austria-Hungary ; † May 1, 1946 in Vienna, Austria ) was an Austrian dancer as well as a theater and film actress.

Life

She was born Maria Amalia Nowak in Vienna. She made her debut as a dancer at the kk Hofoper in Vienna, where she performed as a corp dancer between 1890 and 1896. She must have restarted her career and changed her name to Olly around 1896. She claims to have had her first appearance in a carnival matinee at the Hoftheater in Munich and then toured Italy for nine months. What is certain is that Ernst von Possart engaged her in Munich in the spring of 1897 and that she was one of three court ballet solo dancers from 1900. She stayed (with her mother) until April 1, 1902. On June 30, 1903, she married in Marylebone, London, without the permission of his family and his superiors in the army, the young nobleman Eberhard Graf Wolffskeel von Reichenberg , who therefore moved to the Far East was moved. As a result they were divorced and she married a Viennese privateer named Eduard Hutter. She played at the Deutsches Theater Berlin and worked as a film actress until 1936. She played the actress at the Vienna premiere of Arthur Schnitzler's Reigen in 1921.

Marietta Olly, New York Times, March 27, 1910

Trivia

During a guest performance in New York in 1910 and 1911, it was published twice as a cigarette collector's picture, once for Fatima Turkish Cigarettes , once for Old milk cigarettes .

Filmography

  • 1921: I did it (short film)
  • 1922: The man who forgot to laugh
  • 1933: The Flower of Hawaii
  • 1935: Attack on Schweda
  • 1935: Hilde Petersen in poste restante

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. death certificate Marietta Hutter, Wien 902/1946
  2. anno.onb.ac.at
  3. ^ Interview in the New York Tribune , April 3, 1910
  4. Pia Mlakar, Pino Mlakar: Immortal Theater Dance: From 1860 to 1967. Noetzel 1996, p. 60.
  5. ^ New York Times , December 22, 1904
  6. Complete collection
  7. www.antiquefabric.com