Inventing a stage name "Boleslawski" (later spelled also
"Boleslavsky"), young Pole Boleslaw Ryszard Srzednicki left his second
home (Odessa, Russian Empire) to study theatre and train as an actor at
the world-famous Moscow Art Theatre before and during WW I. He also
acted in a few early Russian films. In the chaotic wake of the Russian
Revolution, Civil War and then Soviet Russia's war with Poland
(1918-21)--in which Boleslawski fought as a Polish soldier--he left Russia forever, traveling through Poland
and Germany, and wound up in the US. In the 1920s he became, along with
Maria Ouspenskaya, one of the first
teachers in the US of the serious, emotionally grounded, ensemble style
of the Moscow Art Theatre (later known as "The Method"). To put his
thespian theories into action, Boleslawski created the American
Laboratory [Stage] Theatre in New York in 1923 (the forerunner of the
Group Theatre of the 1930s and the Actors Studio" after WW II).
Boleslawski also wrote serious theoretical articles about acting for
"Theatre Arts Magazine", and in 1933 collected them in a book, "Acting--The First Six Lessons". The coming of sound to motion pictures, and
the financial collapse of the American Laboratory Theatre, forced
Boleslawski to abandon the New York stage and accept an offer to direct
films in Hollywood, beginning in 1929. He made several important films
at major studios like MGM and Fox before his premature death in January
1937. Among his most important directing assignments were
Rasputin and the Empress (1932)
(the only film in which
John Barrymore,
Lionel Barrymore and
Ethel Barrymore appeared together),
Men in White (1934)
(
Clark Gable and
Myrna Loy),
The Painted Veil (1934)
(
Greta Garbo),
Les Misérables (1935)
(
Fredric March and
Charles Laughton) and
Theodora Goes Wild (1936)
(
Irene Dunne)--a wide range of genres. He
even directed a musical,
Metropolitan (1935)
(
Lawrence Tibbett) and a western,
Three Godfathers (1936)
(
Chester Morris).
Boleslawski was married at least three times. From his last
marriage--to pianist-actress
Norma Drury--he had
one child, a son named Jan (1935-1962) who tragically was to lose his
father before he was two years old, and later to lose his own life at
the tender age of 27. Boleslawski's death of cardiac arrest, at
age 47--before he had completed his final film
(
The Last of Mrs. Cheyney (1937)
with
Joan Crawford)--was shockingly
sudden and from unclear causes. One explanation, probably incorrect,
traces his illness to his penultimate film,
The Garden of Allah (1936)
(with
Marlene Dietrich), the exteriors
of which were shot in the burning heat of the southwestern American
desert. At some point, it is claimed, he unwisely "drank [unboiled]
water" rather than soft drinks and bottled water (as the company had
been advised to do).