Tamara Desni

Tamara Desni
Born
Tamara Brodsky

(1913-10-22)22 October 1913
Berlin, Germany
Died7 February 2008(2008-02-07) (aged 94)
Years active1931–1950
Spouses
Hans Wilhelm
(m. 1929; div. 1930)
(m. 1937; div. 1940)
Roland Gillett
(m. 1940; div. 1945)
(m. 1947; div. 1951)
Albert Lavagna
(m. 1956; died 2002)
Children2
ParentXenia Desni

Tamara Desni (22 October 1913 – 7 February 2008) was a German-born British actress. She became a star of the London theater stage and film in the 1930s. Her film career lasted until 1950.

Biography

Desni was born in Berlin as Tamara Brodsky,[1] the daughter of actress Xenia Desni (1897-1962). Her mother was born in Kyiv, Russian Empire, and during the Russian Revolution, she fled first to Constantinople, where she worked as a variety dancer, from there to Berlin and during the silent era she became a star of German cinema.

As a child, Desni studied ballet. While a teenager, director Erik Charell accepted her into his ensemble at the Großes Schauspielhaus in 1930. Desni enjoyed great success in his productions of Die lustige Witwe (The Merry Widow) and the legendary premiere of Ralph Benatzky's White Horse Inn, she married a dentist and appeared in her first three films. After the separation in 1931, she moved to Great Britain with her mother. She made her stage debut in Great Britain in 1931 in the operetta The White Horse Inn. She followed this up with another leading role in Benatzky's operetta Casanova at London Coliseum, featuring music by Johann Strauss, Jr.

Desni's film career took off in 1933 with Falling for You, and continued through 1950. Other film credits include Dick Barton at Bay, The Torso Murder Mystery, Fire Over England, and Hell's Cargo. In 1946, she appeared in the Durbridge film adaptation Send for Paul Temple.

Marriages

Desni met her second husband, actor Bruce Seton, on the set of Blue Smoke in 1934. They married in Hendon in March 1937,[2] but divorced in 1940. Eight days after her divorce, she married film producer Roland (Bill) Gillett, though that marriage was dissolved before the end of World War II. Her fourth marriage was to the Canadian-born actor Raymond Lovell in 1947, the two separating in 1951. Her stepdaughter during this short marriage was the actress Simone Lovell. In France, she met Albert Lavagna, a builder. They built the popular inn 'L'Auberge Chez Tamara', marrying in 1956, shortly after Desni discovered she was pregnant for the first time. They had two daughters.

Death

Desni's health began declining while in her late eighties. She died, a widow, on 7 February 2008 in Valence d'Agen, France, aged 94.

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1931 Terror of the Garrison Annemarie
1931 In the Employ of the Secret Service Natascha, hans datter
1931 Marriage with Limited Liability
1933 Falling for You Sondra von Moyden
1934 Jack Ahoy Conchita
1934 The Diplomatic Lover Helen
1934 Bypass to Happiness Tamara
1934 Forbidden Territory Marie-Louise
1935 McGlusky the Sea Rover Flame
1935 Dark World Birgitta
1935 Blue Smoke Belle Chinko
1936 Love in Exile Tanya
1937 Fire Over England Elena
1937 The Squeaker Tamara
1939 Traitor Spy Marie Dufreyne
1940 His Brother's Keeper Olga
1945 Flight from Folly Nina
1946 Send for Paul Temple Diana Thornley
1947 The Hills of Donegal Carole Wells
1950 Dick Barton at Bay Anna (final film role)

References

  1. ^ "Tamara Desni" The Telegraph (15 February 2008). Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  2. ^ "Snow-Flecked Bride". Belfast News-Letter. 8 March 1937. Retrieved 28 December 2018 – via British Newspaper Archive.