Lucy Doraine(1898-1989)
- Actress
- Producer
Ilona (Ilonka) Kovacs began her youthful film career in her native
Hungary, barely out of her teens. That career was initially guided by
the veteran Hungarian director, Mihaly Kertesz (Michael Curtiz), who became
her first husband. Given that "Kovacs" in Hungarian is about as
ordinary as "Smith" in English, she soon replaced that commonplace
surname with the one-of-a-kind, exotic-sounding screen name "Lucy
Doraine". And off-screen she became "Mrs Mihaly Kertesz", the
director's wife. Doraine and Kertesz-Curtiz worked closely together for
about 5 years, beginning while they were still in Budapest and
continuing after they left for Vienna (summer 1919), to escape the
political and military turmoil swirling around in Hungary. That turmoil
included a Socialist revolution, followed by a Communist revolution
and, finally, a Fascist revolution (all in 1918-1919)! Doraine's years
of European film stardom continued up to 1927, both while she was still
directed by Curtiz during their marriage (1918-23, at least 10 films
together), and another few years after their divorce, when she was
guided by German and Austrian directors like Basch and Eichberg. Her
starring vehicles, post-Curtiz, bore spicy romantic titles like "Her
Husband's Wife", "The Prince and the Ballerina" and "Matrimonial
Scandal". Doraine in a sense followed Curtiz's footsteps to Hollywood
(although he had re-married twice), but her acting career in the US
never caught fire, and she found herself playing supporting roles
(directed by Frank Lloyd and William K. Howard) when she was only 30. Her last
documented film acting was in the "parallel" German-language version
(shot in the US) of "Trial of Mary Dugan" (1931), and even speaking
German (in which she was more fluent than English), she was cast in a
supporting role. After that, Doraine evidently left the screen at age
33, but lived on in the US for many decades, until her death at the
ripe old age of 91.