Scope and arrangement
The collection dates from 1913 to 1974 and documents the acting career of Lili Darvas through scrapbooks, photographs, correspondence, biographical material, and production files.
Biographical material in the collection consists of feature stories on Darvas, awards, biographical sketches, passports, travel documents, and material relating to her mother's immigration to the United States. Condolence letters sent to Darvas after her mother's death are also present. A Hungarian film award from Magyar Újságírók Országos Szövetsége (National Association of Hungarian Journalists) is a metal plaque housed in a custom case. Also included is a decorative metal box encrusted with stones.
Correspondence chiefly consists of fan mail and good-luck telegrams on the opening nights of shows. Fan letters commend Darvas on her screen performances in Star in the Summer Night (Goodyear Playhouse, 1954) and Szerelem (1971).
Other correspondence documents Darvas's professional relationship with Max Reinhardt. Letters from Rudolf Kommer (Reinhardt's representative during the 1920s) to Darvas discuss the planning stages of Reinhardt's Das Mirakel (The Miracle), which debuted on Broadway at the Century Theatre in 1924. Other correspondence relates to Reinhardt and Erich Wolfgang Korngold's 1944 production of Helen Goes to Troy. The letters discuss casting, contracts, and pitching songs and scenes to potential actors. Reinhardt's letters to Gertrude Lawrence and Jarmila Novotna concern the early planning stages of the production. The correspondence is accompanied by script and scene synopses and the production contract. Correspondents include Reinhart, Darvas, Korngold, Helene Thimig, and the general manager of the New Opera Company, Yolanda Mero-Irion. Several of the letters and notes here are in German.
Photographs exhibit several aspects of Darvas's personal and professional life. Personal photographs documenting Darvas's travels in Switzerland, Germany, Italy, and France throughout the 1930s and 1940s have been compiled into labeled photograph albums. Other personal photographs display the interior of Darvas's house, coupled with a magazine article in which her home was featured. Portraits of Darvas span the length of her career from her beginnings in Hungary until after the success of her performance in Szerelem. Early images depict Darvas at the Magyar Színház in Budapest, and as the title role in Ferenc Molnár's production of Olympia. Portraits and casual photographs of Darvas with Max Reinhardt, Ferenc Molnár, and other friends and colleagues are also present. Production stills depict scenes from Anastasia (Yale, 1956), Chéri (1959), Les Blancs (1970), and many unidentified stage productions in Berlin, Vienna, and the United States. Several of the personal and publicity photographs show Darvas with her West Highland White Terriers.
Production files document stage and screen productions that Darvas acted in, including Bravo!, The Miser, Les Blancs, and The Hidden River. Each production file generally contains reviews, programs, and photographs. Some files, such as those for Les Blancs, contain script excerpts and notes on scenes. Smaller files include those for Labor for the Wind and Adeline Girard, which only hold scripts. Szerelem files contain a copy of her 1971 Cannes International Film Festival Award; a timeline of events surrounding the film; film stills and publicity photographs; and extensive film reviews in English, Hungarian, and French. Programs and reviews represent the breadth of Darvas's acting career in Hungary, Germany, Italy, and the United States
There are two scrapbooks in the collection. One contains clippings from Hungarian newspapers documenting Darvas's early performances in Budapest from 1919 to 1921. The other scrapbook documents Darvas's stage and television performances in the United States through reviews, programs, and photographs dating from 1941 to 1958. Productions represented include Soldier's Wife, Hamlet, Bravo!, and Horses in Midstream. Photographs consist of headshots and portraits of Darvas in her home.
Material in the collection is in English, Hungarian, German, and some French.
Arrangement
The collection is arranged alphabetically by format. Production files are arranged alphabetically by title.