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Hollywood and The Nazis on Eve of War: Case Mortal Storm
Barnes and Noble
Hollywood and The Nazis on Eve of War: Case Mortal Storm
Current price: $130.00
Barnes and Noble
Hollywood and The Nazis on Eve of War: Case Mortal Storm
Current price: $130.00
Size: Hardcover
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This book establishes the profound significance of MGM's 1940 film
The Mortal Storm
, the first major Hollywood production to depict the plight of Jews in Germany before the Holocaust.
Based on Phyllis Bottome's best seller, also titled
, the film was made amidst the bitter debate that occurred between 1938 and 1941 over whether the United States should involve itself in another European war or remain an isolationist country, as Charles Lindbergh among others urged.
In 1941, the film triggered the first hostile Congressional investigation of Hollywood where the studios were accused of allegedly propagandizing for war. Lindbergh had secretly urged the Hollywood hearings, inspired by his own growing antisemitism, as his unpublished diary reveals. Hollywood studios, in turban, regarded the growing European crisis with ambivalence. They feared being accused in a film like
of using the movies to represent the fate of Europe's imperiled Jews. Louis B. Mayer, the head of MGM, insisted the word “Jew” be removed from the film and “non-Aryan” be used instead, hoping to confuse American audiences about the film's real intent.
Jimmy Stewart, who starred in the film, took it on the road to urge American aid to Britain, while Lindbergh prepared his own campaign to denounce American Jews for luring the country into war. The book reveals how closely Hollywood and politics were entwined on the eve of war. It also reveals how closely the plight of Europe's Jews and American antisemitism were entwined at the same time.
The Mortal Storm
, the first major Hollywood production to depict the plight of Jews in Germany before the Holocaust.
Based on Phyllis Bottome's best seller, also titled
, the film was made amidst the bitter debate that occurred between 1938 and 1941 over whether the United States should involve itself in another European war or remain an isolationist country, as Charles Lindbergh among others urged.
In 1941, the film triggered the first hostile Congressional investigation of Hollywood where the studios were accused of allegedly propagandizing for war. Lindbergh had secretly urged the Hollywood hearings, inspired by his own growing antisemitism, as his unpublished diary reveals. Hollywood studios, in turban, regarded the growing European crisis with ambivalence. They feared being accused in a film like
of using the movies to represent the fate of Europe's imperiled Jews. Louis B. Mayer, the head of MGM, insisted the word “Jew” be removed from the film and “non-Aryan” be used instead, hoping to confuse American audiences about the film's real intent.
Jimmy Stewart, who starred in the film, took it on the road to urge American aid to Britain, while Lindbergh prepared his own campaign to denounce American Jews for luring the country into war. The book reveals how closely Hollywood and politics were entwined on the eve of war. It also reveals how closely the plight of Europe's Jews and American antisemitism were entwined at the same time.