Friday, August 24, 2012

A Tribute to Ricardo Cortez

A Tribute to Ricardo Cortez


Of all the “Latin Lovers” in Hollywood, Ricardo Cortez looked the most like Valentino, and he was invented, named, and groomed to become his direct rival. Ironically, he wasn’t Latin at all, having been born Jacob Krantz in Vienna, Austria, of Jewish parents and having immigrated to New York City with his family at age three. 



Jacob became starstruck growing up in Manhattan, began playing bit parts in New York-based films, and after moving to Hollywood, his appearance in a dance contest won him a Paramount contract. Jacob was a superb ballroom dancer, and he and a partner were taking part in a dance contest at the Coconut Grove in 1922. Jesse Lasky spotted him because of his dark good looks and Lasky’s secretary picked the name “Ricardo Cortez” when it was decided he needed a Latin name. Ricardo was on his way to stardom as a screen “Latin Lover” and successor to Valentino, who was Lasky’s big star at the time. Valentino was threatening to leave the studio, and Lasky cast Ricardo in the next film intended for him and let Valentino go his own way, allowing Ricardo to achieve prominence. Ricardo stayed with Lasky six more years and then moved to MGM where he was the only star billed above Greta Garbo in her first American film, “Torrent” (1926). This film has Ricardo suffer as the spineless son whose mother talks him out of his romance with his sweetheart, played by Greta Garbo.  In the final sequence, it’s devastating to see a past middle-age Ricardo trying to renew his affair with Garbo who looks more magnificent than ever and ridicules him unmercifully.


During the silent era, Ricardo not only starred with Greta Garbo, but also with Gloria Swanson, Bebe Daniels, Florence Vidor and the young Joan Crawford. After a tragic marriage to the morphine addicted silent film actress, Alma Rubens, who died in 1931, at the age of thirty-four, Ricardo moved easily into sound films and went on playing opposite big name female stars during the pre-Code era like Loretta Young in “Big Business Girl” (1931) and “Midnight Mary” (1933). Barbara Stanwyck in “Ten Cents a Dance” (1931) and “Illicit” (1931). Kay Francis in “Transgression” (1931) and “Mandalay” (1934), Bebe Daniels in “The Maltese Falcon” (1931) Mary Astor in “Behind Office Doors” (1931) and “Men of Chance” (1931), Dolores del Rio in “Wonder Bar” (1934), Claudette Colbert in “Torch Singer” (1933), Joan Blondell in “Broadway Bad” (1933), Joan Crawford in “Montana Moon” (1930) and Irene Dunne in “Thirteen Women” (1932) and the tearjerker, “Symphony of Six Million” (1932), in which Ricardo probably gave one of his best performances as Dr. Felix Klauber.



One of my favorites of Ricardo’s films is “The Swan” (1925), an early Paramount Production that also stars Frances Howard and Adolphe Menjou. The love scenes between Ricardo and Frances Howard are very romantic and touching.


Even though Ricardo began his career playing romantic leads, his main focus became character acting by the end of the 1930’s. His strong delivery and New York accent made him an ideal heavy. Ricardo eventually left movies, joined a Wall Street brokerage firm, and made a great deal of money and a happy third marriage. After appearing in over one hundred films, he made one final film appearance in John Ford’s “The Last Hurrah” (1958) and died at the age of seventy-six on April 28, 1977.

4 comments:

  1. I loved Ricardo. He was the perpectual evil character, always getting killed in the end by a strong Precode leading lady (Loretta Young, Kay Francis). Although, no one seems to mention it, I especially liked him in the original 'Maltese Falcon'. He went further with the sleazy, backstreet characterisation than Bogart was allowed to. It is a good, slightly funny film if you dont compare it to the famous forties version.

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  2. I really enjoyed your tribute, Dawn -- I love Ricardo Cortez -- he could always be counted on to give a good performance.

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  3. Thank you silent, for your wonderful Ricardo Cortez, bio. I have always enjoyed his performance in the couple of movies I have seen him in: The Maltese Falcon” and “Ten Cents a Dance”.

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  4. He also appeared with Carole Lombard in "No One Man," leading me to write this entry concerning what Emma mentioned above...

    http://carole-and-co.livejournal.com/162206.html

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