Anny Ondra was a Polish-Czech-Austrian-German-French singer and a film and
stage actress. As a child she lived in Prague, where her father was a colonel in the
Austro-Hungarian army. After graduating from convent school in Prague, she studied to be an actress with Professor Bor.
She was already a star in the Czech theater when, at age 16, the teenage beauty was discovered by the film industry.
From 1920--mostly under the direction of
Karel Lamac--she became a major comedic star in Czech cinema, and in 1928 she conquered German cinema. Historically, she was
Alfred Hitchcock's first blonde, appearing in his film
Blackmail (1929), which was England's--and Hitchcock's--first talking film (Hitchcock, knowing that not all theaters supported talkies, also shot a silent
version of the film). In 1930 in Germany she created, with the help of
Karel Lamac, the Ondra-Lamac Film Society, which lasted till 1936. She was
in
Die vom Rummelplatz (1930) ("Those of the Sideshow") but the film was lost and remains so to this day.
She played in German, Czech and French-language versions of all her movies, always
as the leading lady. She became an international cinema superstar and one of the most
beloved of German film stars. She appeared in more than 88 films.
She retired from the industry in 1957 and lived in Hollenstedt in der
Lüneburger Heide, Germany (near Hamburg), with her husband, boxing champion
Max Schmeling,
whom she married in 1933.
She died in Hollenstedt and will never be forgotten by her fans.