Glamorous Prague typist Maria Lani hit artistically vibrant Paris like a tempest in the Spring of 1928. Less
than three years later she disappeared, just as mysteriously as she had
arrived. Lani had set the city a-tizz, and become known across the globe as “The Lady with 50
Faces” and “The “Muse of Modern Masters”. In December 1929, Vanity Fair called her the “improbable
perfection of her sex. [The] genius of Europe has massed against this one
objective: merely to claim for art the secret of Maria Lani’s smile.” The New York Times said she was "an
international phenomenon”.
The
world would not soon forget Maria Lani, and little wonder. She had fleetingly
proved to be the very essence of an enigma: 59 artists, including
Bonnard, Chagall, Cocteau, Derain, Matisse, Rouault and Suzanne Valadon, had
painted, drawn and sculpted her face, and no two images were alike. Only
the suspicious Pablo Picasso stood apart from the mob crying out for Lani to pose for
them.
Jacqueline Marval's portrait
Georges Rouault's portrait
Maria
Lani was not a 22-year-old Czech, nor an aspiring German film star, as she claimed
at the time. She was Maria Geleniewicz, born on June 24, 1895, in Kolno,
Poland, and raised in Częstochowa. She was the key part of an elaborate
ruse, concocted with her husband, Belarus-born Maximilian Abramowicz (aka Maksymiljan, Maximilian Ilyin
and Mac Ramo) and her brother Alexander Jeleniewicz, to convince artists she needed multiple
portraits for the plot of a horror movie, The
Woman of the Hundred Faces that they claimed to be making. Jean Cocteau fell for the scam and encouraged other artists to become involved. “Maria Lani! Maria Lani! Maria Lani!” wrote the
surrealist Giorgio de Chirico, who found the cry “repeated through the night,
agitating, like the sirens in a factory district.” De Chirico gave up and drew
her faceless above a pile of monument columns (below).
The
evasive Lani and Abramowicz kept the 76 art works, which they exhibited across
Europe and in America, and on March 7, 1941, they escaped war-torn Europe from Lisbon aboard the Excambion, arriving in New York on March 18. Lani, calling herself an actress, and Abramowicz (a "film proudcer"), had managed to get passports issued in Oporto the previous November 20, and had waited on tenterhooks for 13 weeks until they could get a ship to the US. Once there, they settled at 147 West 55th Street,
New York City, later moving to 31 West 53rd Street.
Lani’s mystique remained, such that she was to be the subject of a second planned – and this time real - movie, in 1943, co-written by
Thomas Mann, Louis Bromfield and Abramowicz (as Ilyin), with Jean Renoir as
director and Greta Garbo (or, as one critic claimed Hedy Lamarr) as Hortense
Pichat [Lani]. This was never made either.
In late 1945 Lani was found by LIFE magazine working as a volunteer waitress in a patriotic red, white
and blue apron at the Stage Door Canteen in Manhattan, a recreational centre
for US servicemen.
This
charity work aided Lani and Abramowicz (as Ilyin) in getting instant US
citizenship on May 9, 1946. But on April 6, 1951, Lani left New York and returned
to France alone, docking at Cherbourg on the Queen Elizabeth and telling immigration officials she intended to
stay only six months. Abramowicz (as Ilyin) flew to Paris to join her in late
April 1953. Describing herself as a mere housewife, Lani lived at 11 Rue des
Belles-Feuilles, Paris. Still claiming to have been born in 1905, and therefore
only 48 instead of 58, she died of a brain tumor at 2.30 on the afternoon of
March 11, 1954, at the Hôpital de la Pitié at 83 Boulevard de Hôpital. She was buried
not in a pauper's grave, as some stories suggest, but in the extra muros Cimetière
Parisien de Thiais in the Val-de-Marne department of Île-de-France. There,
in grave two of the 24th row of the 78th division, she lay beside such
luminaries as King Zog of Albania, Kiki the Queen of Montparnasse, and Lev Sedov, son of Léon Trotsky. Abramowicz (as Ilyin)
also died in Paris, on February 5, 1964, aged 71.
San Francisco Examiner, November 30, 1930
1 comment:
Beautiful!
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