Still image from the 1931 film Svengali.

Svengali

Directed by Archie Mayo

A hypnotist falls in love with a girl using his powers to turn her into a great singer.

1931 1h 16m Horror/Science-Fiction TV-G

Expires: April 4th


CAST
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Archie Mayo, Director
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Archie Mayo
Director

1

John Barrymore, Svengali
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John Barrymore
Svengali

2

Marian Marsh, Trilby [O'Ferrall]
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Marian Marsh
Trilby [O'Ferrall]

3

Donald Crisp, The Laird
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Donald Crisp
The Laird

4

Bramwell Fletcher, Little Billee
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Bramwell Fletcher
Little Billee

5

Carmel Myers, Honori
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Carmel Myers
Honori

FULL SYNOPSIS

When attractive but untalented Honori confesses to her sinister singing teacher Svengali that she has left her husband but refused his offer of money, he fixes her with an intense stare that drives her screaming from the room. A short time later her body is found in the Seine. Untouched by her death, Svengali and his flatmate Gecko visit the studio of English artists, The Laird, Taffy, and Billee, in search of a meal. On leaving they meet a lovely young milkmaid and artist's model, Trilby O'Ferrall. Svengali is enchanted by her, but she falls in love with the handsome, young Billee. One day under the pretext of curing her headache, Svengali hypnotises her and thereafter is able to control her by the power of his thoughts. When Billee discovers Trilby posing nude for a group of artists, they quarrel, and Svengali convinces her to fake a suicide and leave Paris with him. Five years later, as Madame Svengali the singer, she has become the toast of Europe with the help of his powers. Her old friends attend her Paris debut and they are astonished to see the woman they thought was dead. Determined to win her back from Svengali, Billee haunts her performances. His powers weakened by the strength of her attachment to Billee, Svengali keeps cancelling performances until finally they are reduced to an engagement in an Egyptian cabaret. When Svengali suffers an attack, his power over Trilby fails, she falters and sings horribly off key. As he dies, he begs to be granted her love in death as he never was in life. As if in response, she then dies in Billee's arms.


VIDEOS
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My Manufactured Love...
Movie Clip
I Had To Come
Movie Clip
My Funny Headaches
Movie Clip
Open, Speaking Of Music...
Movie Clip

ARTICLES
Svengali (1931), starring John Barrymore as the malevolent maestro who uses telepathic powers to transform a beautiful model (Marian Marsh) into a great singer, won Oscar nominations for the striking art direction of Anton Grot and the black-and-white cinematography of Barney McGill. This film version of the George du Maurier novel Trilby helped the word "Svengali" enter the English language with the Webster definition of "a person who attempts to dominate another, usually with evil or selfish intentions." Barrymore, a notorious drinker who had appeared to be under the influence of alcohol in his previous film, Moby Dick (1930), suffered an illness before beginning work on Svengali that may actually have benefited his work in the latter movie. With an ulcer causing severe gastric hemorrhaging, he was forced into a regimen of abstinence and bland food. According to Margot Peters in her biography The House of Barrymore, "His performance, blurred in Moby Dick, is now in sharp focus." Costar Marsh remembered Svengali as a pleasant experience: "These were happy days for Jack Barrymore. He was on his best behavior, I might add; he was happily married to Dolores Costello, and he wasn't drinking." Marsh further recalled that when the Barrymores' infant daughter, Dolores Ethel, visited the set she protested when her father kissed her because the beard he wore as Svengali tickled her. Peters considers that the key to Barrymore's "sexual power" in Svengali lies in - his...

NOTES

Barney McGill's photography on this film won him an Academy Award nomination. The first of many films based on the George Du Maurier novel was Trilby and Little Billee made by Biograph in 1896. In 1915, Equitable produced a film entitled Trilby which starred Clara Kimball Young and Wilton Lackaye and was directed by Maurice Tourneur (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1911-20; F1.4559). In 1923, First National produced a version starring Arthur Edmund Carew which was directed by James Young (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1921-30; F2.5845). In 1955, M-G-M produced Svengali, directed by Noel Langley and starring Hildegarde Neff and Donald Wolfit.

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