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Madam Satan

Madan Satan - AFI Centennial Celebration

April 26, 2025

Recently, Anthony and I had the great honor of being asked by the Film Club of the Art Deco Society of Washington D.C. (ADSW) and the American Film Institute (AFI) to introduce the 1930 movie, Madam Satan, the final film in their series Art Deco on Screen: A Centennial Celebration.

Madam Satan

Title Card for our presentation

To say we were somewhat nervous to take on this assignment is an understatement. With a list of points to hit, and a 12-minute time limit, we set to work.

With a lot of writing, rewriting, editing, moving sections, more editing and reworking dialog almost to the very end, we finally came up with a streamlined, informative, at times humorous (we hoped) and mercifully short presentation.

And so, for those who were unable to attend our presentation, sit back and enjoy.

MGM Logo

The MGM Logo

Madan Satan is a pre-code, 1930 MGM movie.  This was Cecil B. DeMille’s 60th film and the second of a three-picture contract with MGM which included Dynamite in 1929 and his second re-make of The Squaw Man in 1931.

Madan Satan

Title Card of Madam Satan

Written by Jeanie MacPherson, Gladys Unger and Elsie Janis, Madam Satan is DeMille’s only musical.

DeMille wanted Cole Porter to write the music but, “he was busy”. His next choices – Oscar Hammerstein, Rudolf Friml, and Sigmund Romberg – all wanted a cut of the profits.

Madam Satan

Cast and Music Credits

So, Clifford Grey, Herbert Stothart, Elsie Janis and Jack King got the job.

Madam Satan

Director Title Card

Madam Satan isn’t quite sure what it wants to be, as it is a marriage of a bedroom farce and a disaster film.

Think the “Real Housewives” of (enter a city here).

Madam Satan

Preproduction Casting

Going into pre-production and casting in the fall of 1929, DeMille really wanted Gloria Swanson in the leading role but was unable to lure her away from United Artists and Joseph Kennedy – remember that name. Kennedy was Swanson’s paramour at the time.

DeMille previously worked with Kay Johnson in Dynamite and after a long search he settled on her for the lead.

However, in a press release, DeMille was quoted as saying she was his first choice and he couldn’t imagine anyone else in the role. Still, actually not his first choice, he was pleased with her performance and contribution to the film.

CECIL B. DeMILLE

Cecile B. DeMille

Cecile B. DeMille (photo form the web)

DeMille had been a fixture in Hollywood since his first silent film, The Squaw Man produced by The Jesse L Lasky Feature Play Company in 1914.

The Squaw Man

DeMille’s three versions of The Squaw Man

By 1916 Lasky’s company merged with Adolph Zukor’s Famous Players in Famous Plays under the Paramount Pictures umbrella. In 1918, DeMille remade The Squaw Man for the first time, also a silent film.

The Ten Commandments

Ten Commandments (photo from britannica.com)

By the end of the teens, DeMille had become Paramount’s most successful director, producing their most expensive film to date, The Ten Commandments in 1923. It cost approximately $1.4 million dollars.

Concerned with the cost, Paramount reigned in DeMille’s budgets leading to a break with the studio.

Between 1925 and 1928, DeMille became an independent producer at his own studio, Producer Distributer Corporation, releasing through Pathé.

Pathé Logo

1927 Pathé Logo

The King of Kings

The King of Kings (photo from vintage-ads.livejournal.com)

 This is where he made his most successful silent film, the 1927, The King of Kings.

The following year, Joseph Kennedy – the same person who would not lend him Gloria Swanson – joined the board as president of Pathé.

DeMille did not want to work for him. Offered a three-picture deal with MGM, he accepted.

THE CAST

Kay Johnson in Madam Satan

Kay Johnson (Nov. 29, 1904 – Nov. 17, 1975)

Kay Johnson, an accomplished stage actress before her film career, was spotted by DeMille in a production of The Silver Cord in California.

Impressed with her performance, he offered her a contract with MGM with her first film being DeMille’s Dynamite.  Including Madam Satan, Johnson appeared in six movies in 1930; and worked steadily through 1944.

Her final stage appearance was in the 1945 production of State of the Union. And her final film appearance was in the 1954 British film Jivaro.

In 1928, Johnson married actor, director, producer John Cromwell (m. 1928; div. 1946) and had two children; Jonathan Thomas Cromwell adopted in 1938 and actor, James Cromwell, in 1940.

Johnson never achieved the heights of fame she could have had, choosing to provide a stable home for her children over a life of fame in front of the cameras.

Reginald Denny in Madam Satan

Reginald Denny (Nov. 20,1891 – June 16, 1967)

Before films, Reginal Denny appeared on Broadway and used his trained singing voice on the legitimate stage in operetta.

Denny worked with John Barrymore in a Broadway production of Richard III in 1920.  They became good friends, starring in several movies together including the 1922 Sherlock Holmes which feature another star in tonight’s feature – Roland Young.

Though he appeared in a few movies in 1911 and 1912, his career officially started in 1915.  In silent films, he was cast as a typical young suburban American. But unbeknownst to most film audiences, he was British. With the advent of talkies, this became obvious and his career momentarily stalled going from leading man to featured actor.

Denny was able to adapt, and his screen personae became – usually – upper class British, or urbane gentleman. Examples can be seen in such films as the drama, Rebecca and the comedy, Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House.

Roland Young in Madam Satan

Roland Young (Nov. 11 1887 – June 5, 1953)

English born; Roland Young began his career in 1908 on the London Stage. By 1912 he was appearing on Broadway and juggling a successful stage career between London and America.

His American film debut was in the 1922 Sherlock Holmes along side tonight’s leading man, Reginald Denny.

Usually cast as the comedic second banana, he made just three silent films, and five talking pictures before being cast in Madan Satan. He would work again with Cecil B DeMille in the 1931, all talking, and second remake of The Squaw Man.

Young is probably best remembered as the milquetoast businessman, Topper in the movie of the same name, or displaying his dry wit as the licentious Uncle Willy in The Philadelphia Story.

Lillian Roth in Madam Satan

Lillian Roth (Dec.13, 1910 – May 12, 1980)

Stage mother Katie Rutstein groomed Lillian, and her sister Ann, for stardom. Sometimes billed as “Lillian Roth and Co.” or “The Roth Kids”, they worked the Vaudeville circuits, did some extra work in films and in 1917, six-year-old Lillian made her Broadway debut.

She eventually signed a contract with Paramount Pictures. At age 19, Roth was loaned out to MGM for tonight’s feature.

She left Paramount in 1933, possibly due to her growing dependency on alcohol.

Her father had been an alcoholic so the propensity to drink was probably there. Then, the sudden death of David Lyons, her first fiancé, in the 1930s from tuberculosis appears to be the initial trigger. Drinking, she found, made her feel better. At least momentarily.

Roth actively sought to take back control of her life through the years but repeatedly returned to alcohol as a way to cope.

Married and divorced 6 times, husband number 6, T. Burt McGuire, Jr., a recovering alcoholic himself, helped her to overcome her addiction and rebuild her career.

She is best remembered today for her 1954 autobiography, I’ll Cry Tomorrow, co-written with Gerold Frank, and the 1955 movie of the same name. With the  release of her book and the biopic, and as an outspoken advocate for destigmatizing this terrible disease, there was renewed public interest in her.

Roth worked continuously in theatre, concerts, night clubs and tours until a year before her death in 1980.

Her gravestone incudes the inscription, “As bad as it was, it was good.”

COLOR SYSTEM

Madam Satan Color

LA Times – Feb. 21, 1930

It was announced in the winter of 1930 that the picture would be largely shot in Technicolor.

Madam Satan Color

Motion Picture News – March 1, 1930

A few weeks later, MGM planned to use a rival color system and it would be almost entirely shot in Multicolor. But by the time filming began, the use of color had been reduced to one or two sequences.

Madam Satan Color

Variety – March 12, 1930

While we believe some scenes were shot in Multicolor, there is no evidence this footage was used in domestic release. And no contemporary review – that we could find – mentions any sequence in color.

With one exception:

Photo (1940) courtesy of theprincesstheatre.com.au

In 1933, three years after its release, an Australian review for a showing at the New Princess Theatre, Queensland, mentions the many beautiful scenes in color.

Madam Satan Color

1933 Australian Review

It was not unusual for foreign release prints to use alternate takes of scenes – in this case, possibly one with the color sequences.

ACT I

Madam Satan Cast

The Principal Cast of Madam Satan

The first 50 minutes of Madam Satan sets up the relationships between the main characters.

Angela and Bob in Madam Satan

The confrontation

Angela Brooks awakens to find her husband Bob has not returned from a night out with his friend, Jimmy Wade and showgirl Trixie, Bob’s side piece.

Confronting him, she realizes he’s lost interest in their marriage, and specifically her. And they agree to move on without each other.

Madam Satan

The scorned wife has other plans.

But Angela has other plans.

Madam Satan

The bedroom farce begins.

What happens next is a bedroom farce of who is who, and who is where.

Madam Satan

When rivals meet

During the mix ups and mayhem Trixie taunts Angela about giving Bob what he wants – which isn’t a decent woman.

Angela, in a bit of foreshadowing, declares “If he wants hot, she’ll give him a volcano.”

VISUALS

Madam Satan

Invitation to the zeppelin party.

Sets designed by Cederic Gibbons and Mitchel Leisen use subtle touches of deco elements in the domestic scenes, Act II, situated on a Zeppelin – because everybody’s friend has access to one – is decedent, surreal, and over-the-top.

Why? Because DeMille could.

It opens with a miniature set of a Zeppelin moored at an imaginary Jersey City airfield against the New York skyline.

Madam Satan Mooring Mast

Singing “We’re Going Somewhere”.

Guests arrive at the mooring mast singing, “We’re Going Somewhere”. As you can see in the slide, the lyrics are – gripping?

Madam Satan catwalk

Entering via a catwalk.

The Cat Walk from Madam Satan

Singing and dancing the “Cat Walk”.

Entering the Zeppelin via a catwalk, they begin singing the “Cat Walk” escorted by stewardesses dressed like – well, cats.

CGI Cat

Just say no!

And thankfully, not CGI ones!

Madam Satan zeppelin set

Zeppelin interior set.

Chrysler Building inspiration

Top of the Chrysler Building

The symmetry of the multi-level set consisting of staircases, arches and guide-wires appear to loosely mimic the top of the Chrysler Building.

Madam Satan deco touches

The chart room and the band stand.

In the Chart Room, cushions on the modern furnishings are upholstered in Art Deco fabric. And note how the sweep of the girders create a deco backdrop for the band stand.

CHOREOGRAPHY

Theodore Kosloff

“Ballet Electric” or “Ballet Méchanique”

Guests are treated to a bizarre modernistic “Ballet Electric” or “Ballet Méchanique” – depending on the source – danced by Theodore Kosloff, a renowned dancer, and actor.

In a nod to the importance of electricity in modern times, he magically appears with lightning bolts on, and around him.

DeMille hired Kosloff to choreograph Madam Satan but MGM insisted on Leroy Prinz – primarily to cut costs.

Madan Satan Ballet

Living Machinery

Its generally accepted that Kosloff choreographed the ballet as it is in his style. And, it is in no small part, influenced by the robot scene in Metropolis with supporting dancers dressed as parts of living machinery.

The use of over-head photography was not new to films. However, Busby Berkeley redefined the technique. His use of tightly synchronized routines to form patterns was unparalleled, blowing other productions out of the water.

Berkeley’s first film, Whoopee!, released at the same time as Madam Satan was a hit.

Madam Satan

Deco inspiration

If you get a chance to see the film, look for a woman carried in wearing a fantastical sweeping headdress reminiscent of Rene Lalique’s Victoire or Maurice Guiraud’s La Cometé.

Zeppelin Bar Carts

Zeppelin Bar Carts

And adding to the over-the-top entertainment, libations are brought to guest via zeppelin shaped bar cars driven by women in futuristic garb.

At least DeMille seems amused.

COSTUMES

Adrian - Madam Satan

Adrian Adolph Greenburg

Costume designer Adrian was tasked with bringing DeMille’s jazzy, hedonistic vision to life.

Madam Satan - Censor

Colonel Jason Joy (Photo form Alamy.com)

But many had to be modified to satisfy Hollywood censor. Jason Joy.

Joy worked closely with DeMille adding body stockings, more sequins, and fishnets to ensure the women were not revealing too much.

Adrian original sketch for Madam Satan

Original sketch vs. end product

In the original costume sketch, Madam Satan’s gown has deeper cut panels with barely-there coverage.

No doubt, adjusted to be more modest.

Madam Satan Costumes

Buck Rogers inspired?

Costumes for the male crew appear to be influenced by the popular and futuristic Buck Rogers from Amazing Stories Magazine.

Madam Satan Costumes

Bob’s tame compared to Trixie

Bob’s costume is tame compared to the exciting life he craves. It contrasts with Trixie’s barely-there ensemble – surely with a few added sequins.

And the fantasy doesn’t end there:

Madam Satan Costumes

The Tic-toc zeppelin ladies

Time flies when you’re having fun. Or is this the march of time?

Madam Satan Costumes

Contrasting leading ladies

Adrian deftly reinforces the contrast between the female leads with Madam Satan’s gown regally seductive as opposed to Trixie’s vulgarly overt exuberance of sequins and plumage.

Madam Satan Costumes

Contrasting the two sides of Angela

He does the same with the two sides of Angela / Madam Satan.

THE DISASTER

When disaster strikes - Madam Satan

Lighting bolt ex-machina

The frivolity ends when a lightning bolt “ex machina”, sets the zeppelin loose…

Abandon ship!

Abandon ship!

and the guests into a panic; forcing them to abandon ship.

Remember the Shenandoah!

Remember the Shenandoah!

Remember the Shenandoah!

Disaster inspiration.

There is little doubt that the tragedy of the Shenandoah influenced the fictitious disaster in tonight’s film.

Audiences would remember the actual destruction of the Navy airship, just a few years earlier. On September 3, 1925, turbulence tore the airship apart and 14 of the 43 crew members lost their lives.

SPECIAL EFFECTS

Pre-code special effects for Madam Satan

Before CGI special effects

In a world before CGI, studios needed a way to create special effects. Madam Satan used the Williams Process.

The Williams Process

The Williams Process

Patented in 1918, Frank D. Williams’ system allowed for integration of actors into moving backgrounds, It was first used in the 1922 Universal Film, Wild Honey.

DeMille also used it in 1922 for “Manslaughter”, and F.W. Murnau for Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans in 1927. The last film to use the Williams Process, or at least a version of it, was in 1964 for Mary Poppins.

The next part gets technical, but it’s interesting.

The Williams Process Step 1

The Williams Process Step 1

The Williams Process

The Williams Process Step 2

First, an actor in filmed in front of a black background. Two negatives are made, one is on regular film stock, and the other on high contrast stock.

The Hold-out and cover mattes for the Williams Process

The hold-out and cover mattes for the Williams Process

The latter is processed several times until it creates a solid black hold-out matte – a transparent background and a black foreground.

This is inverted to create a cover matte – with a black background and a transparent foreground.

The Williams Process

Hold-Out Mask overlayed on raw film stock & background filmed

The hold-out matte is overlayed onto raw film stock and the desired background photographed.

The masks in place for the Williams Process

Masks preventing exposure to the film

The hold-out matte was removed, the film rewound, and the cover matte is overlayed onto the newly filmed background preventing further exposure.

Williams Process

Original negative printed into negative space

The Williams Process

The final negative in the Williams Process

And the original negative is printed into the previously masked (unexposed) part of the film creating the final negative.

The Williams Process

The final product

While effective, it presented some technical issues, including light bleed which caused a halo effect around the actors.

PRODUCTION AND RELEASE

Cecil B. DeMille

Cecil B. DeMille (photo George Eastman Museum)

Production started on March 3rd, 1930 with a planned 70-day shoot, wrapping 11 days ahead of schedule on May 2nd.

It was MGM’s most expensive film of the year costing $980,000.

Out of town opening Madam Satan

Out of town opening Madam Satan

Suspecting audience’s waning interest in musicals, MGM opened it in Kansas City, September 12th, 1930; followed soon by other smaller markets before moving it to New York in early October.

In the end, it lost $390,000.

Released a year too late, public tastes had changed and musicals were on the decline. And the typical operetta convention of a mask and a fake French accent worked better on the stage where there is distance between the audience and the actors – less so in movies with close-ups.

REVIEWS

NYT Film Critic Mordaunt Hall in his, Oct. 6, 1930 review wrote:

Cecil B. De Mille’s latest audible film, ‘Madam Satan,’ is a strange conglomeration of unreal incidents that are set forth with no little technical skill.’ 

Robert Eber review Madam Satan

Robert Eber (Photo via X)

Robert Ebert stated:

I cannot believe that I have gone this long in life without basking in its total and heedless insanity. The film’s first half is a sparky romantic farce…slick, stylish and entertaining as can be but it is in the second half that it makes its grand leap towards genius/insanity… [It] could not possibly get any stranger … [Then] DeMille—comes in to transform it into a full-on disaster film…You have almost certainly never seen a film even remotely like “Madam Satan” before in your life.

A Song in the Dark

A Song in the Dark (photo via Amazon.com)

In his book about early musicals, A Song in the Dark, Richard Barrios, had this to say:

The Depression had begun to alter the national mood irretrievably while Madam Satan was still in production; by the time it reached theatres it was obsolete…How fitting that Madam Satan, the utmost example of the trend, winds up with a well staged blimp wreck; in one clean sweep this scene now seems to embody the end of the Jazz Age, the collapse of American prosperity, the death throes of early musicals, and, most literally, the flop of this last baroque gasp of twenties frivolity.

Cecil B. DeMille’s use of metaphor was usually painfully literal and obvious. This one, ironically, he never intended.

IN CLOSING

Madam Satan Posters

Just a few of the many graphics for Madam Satan

It’s been 95 years since its release. Is it a great movie? No. Is it worth the watch? We think so. And if you do see it, just go along for the ride and judge for yourself.

Thank you Madam Satan

Thank you for joining us!

Thank you!

 

Chris and Anthony (The Freakin’ ‘tiquen Guys)

Edgard Sforzina (1881 – 1941)

Union Terminal, Cincinnati

Union Terminal, Cincinnati (Photo via DrivingForDeco)

This article is an exclusive interview with Denise E. Allen, granddaughter of Edgard Sforzina an early French designer, decorator, and architect of L’ Art Moderne ~ Art Deco.

Denise: Anthony and Chris, thank you for the opportunity to discuss my grandfather, Edgard Désiré Sforzina.

How did this project come about?

To preserve our grandfather’s legacy, my sisters and I agreed to establish a collection of his works that we could donate to a museum, design school, or an organization interested in its preservation. We would like this collection to be accessible to all interested parties for the purposes of education, research, and scholarship, particularly for people interested in Art Deco.

….

I would like to express my unbounded thanks to my wonderful, albeit far-flung, family in America, France, Germany, and the Netherlands; my friends, and last but not least, the Art Deco Society of Washington D.C. (ADSW) for all their support in curating the collection and raising awareness of Edgard Sforzina and his contributions to Art Deco.

But back to my grandfather.

Edgard Sforzina He came to America in the Fall of 1922 at the request of his company, L. Alavoine & Co. to work in their New York City office located at 712 5th Avenue. His success continued during the years between the Great Wars and on a number of occasions he was noted in magazines and newspapers for his interior designs and design innovations. Tragically, he died from gastro-intestinal ulcers in 1941 at the age of 59, and leaving behind a legacy of his design drawings and furnishings.

Would you tell us more about his background?

Edgard SforzinaSforzina was born and educated in France as a “dessinateur” (a designer or decorator). He arrived in the Port of New York on November 17, 1922; his first trip to America. Forty – two years old and fresh off the S.S. Rochambeau.                                    …                                                                              For the initial visit, he stayed long enough to confirm that he would take the new position and establish a residence for his family. Once accomplished, he returned to Paris to pack up his household. He returned in February 1923 with his young wife and infant daughter. In making this permanent move to live in America, Sforzina became one of the early French-American designers of L’ Art Moderne, arriving two years before the 1925 International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts in Paris, France.

A story my mother enjoyed sharing was that Mémé (grandmother) did not want to leave her family and friends in France. She made it clear to Pépé (grandfather), that he had to bring her younger sister, Tautine (Teresa), and their cat, Mitzi to America, and oh by-the-way, she had to have a mink coat.  All of this he did, except for the mink coat. He tricked her by buying rabbit instead,

When they immigrated to America, he brought his illustrated copy of “La Tour du Monde en 80 Jours”, (Around the World in 80 Days). He won the book as a prize when he was 11 years old, possibly the first prize he ever won. We have no idea what he accomplished to win the book, but on the inside cover page there is a handwritten inscription commemorating the event. Passed down from my Mémé to my Mom then to me, I value the book because it provides insights about his mind set and clues about his personality. ……

How did you become aware of the work of your grandfather’s (1881 – 1941)?

We initially became aware of Pépé (grandfather) and his work from our French / American family. This includes our mother, Lucile Ellison, nee Sforzina; Mémé (Isabelle Sforzina); and our French grand aunt and uncle, Tautine (Teresa) and Ernest.

Edgard SforzinaThey all told us stories about Edgard and pointed out the furniture in our home that he designed and commissioned. Mémé kept a collection of  original magazines, newspaper clippings and articles. Also, professional photos, and two privately published commemorative books showing items he designed and rooms he furnished.

We literally grew up amid furniture he created for his home and possibly for the showrooms of Forzina, Inc., the design salon he owned between 1928 and c.1932.

Edgard SforzinaAfter he passed, Mémé must have put the furniture in storage. In 1954 when our parents first started their medical office, they furnished the waiting room and office area with several show room furnishings from the Forzina Salon.[1] That furniture in the waiting room disappeared years later when my parents moved the office to a new location.

[1]  Our father, David S. Ellison, was a surgeon and our mother the office manager. Like her father, she was ahead of her time. She always paid herself a salary and she provided retirement benefits to their employees, who were all women.

Edgard SforzinaThe office furniture moved to our house to furnish our mother’s home office.  In the picture to the right, the two tables (the smaller one is on rollers) were in our home. I remember most of the other items. It is possible to find all these items in one or more of his designs.

LuLu Bed by Edgard SforzinaThis is the “Lulu Bed.” My children established the name when my daughter Claire used it as her own bed and the name has stuck. Edgard actually designed the bed for my mother when she was a child (c. 1928). It is an excellent example of Moderne style with a variety of beautiful woods veneered atop a thick (heavy) hardwood core, a striking design.

Edgard had our mother’s nick name, Lulu veneered into the face-top of the footboard. And, yes, if you look closely, you can see that our mother personalized the graphic with her own artwork. It is still usable as a bed, and we even have the original mattress springs too. However, his furniture is closing in on 100 years of age. The veneers are chipping off and every time it gets moved there is a bit more damage. These pieces need protection from further wear and tear.

 

LuLu bed by Edgard Sforzina

Detail of “LuLu” veneered into the face of the footboard and the LuLu graphic designed by Edgard Sforzina, note the small drawing by daughter Lulu.

A few months ago, I was a bit stunned to see a picture of the LuLu bed on the Internet! It never occurred to me that Peré may have had professional photos of it taken or that he might have shown the bed in an exhibit before giving it to our mother. We still have all the pieces shown in the photo. It is certainly possible that two sets were made, but knowing the effort he went to make this bed unique for our mother, it seems unlikely.

You can see the entire bed set on the untapped new york website. The site posted an article by Julia Vitullo-Martin on Marilyn Friedman’s book, “Making America Modern: Interior Design in the 1930’s” (Bauer & Dean, 2018). All of the pieces shown in the photo are part of the Sforzina Collection. Just for fun, here is a picture of our mother and Mitzi on the Bed.

Edgard SforzinaAs children, we knew our mother had many of her father’s drawings and designs. Unlike the furniture we grow up with, we rarely saw them. I have vague memories of seeing photostats of the design plans for the Cincinnati Union Terminal executive suite and other drawings. Our Mom did not want to risk damaging them by letting us riffle through them. So, for decades she kept them in a bureau up in the attic. But, we may have peeked into the forbidden bureau a time or two. It may have been as late as 2015 before I had better look at them.

Edgard Sforzina designUntil Art Deco Society of Washington members Deborah Sorensen (curator), Jim Linz (Art Deco author), and I unfolded and unrolled all the drawings, I did not realize how many there were. In truth we saw several of his designs for the very first time as we inventoried the collection. Predominantly, Edgard used pastels or pencils to create his designs. Until 2003, his portable wooden container of design & drafting tools was in our basement. Sometime between then and when we created the collection, it has gone missing. Hopefully it is somewhere in one of the homes among our family.

The variety and beauty of his drawings is impressive. It includes, sketches, architectural elevations, renderings and levels, concept plans and technical plans. The breadth and depth of his design abilities ranged from a simple object (e.g., a lamp, a vase, etc.,) to furniture, a room set, a composite of rooms, houses of varying levels and size, architectural drawings of large commercial buildings and towers. It even includes some of his personal artwork. You see a range of design styles other than Modernism. The collection includes a few designs in Louis XV and French Directorate Style. Other designs could be considered minimalistic; their omission of decor is balanced solely by simple accents from nature.

 …

When did you realize the significance of your grandfather’s work?

I slowly began to grasp the significance artistry as I worked with the ADSW to establish the collection. Edgard’s works had been a privately shared collection within our family network for over seventy years. Its significance was its familial heritage and its connection to our brilliant and creative grandfather. I did not know how to think about it from historical, social or cultural perspectives.

As our family’s self-appointed historian, I always knew I would write something about our grandfather to let our children’s children learn of him. I wanted to write up the stories and deeds our mother shared, not as a straight repeat of her words, but with more substantiation of the events and accomplishments of his life.  Never did I anticipate where that little thought of mine would lead us.

,,,

Edgard Sforzina

Photo: Designs for Modern Living Rooms. Edgard Sforzina. Sforzina Collection

When Steve, Jim, Deborah and I first started, I was concerned that I was asking the ADSW to investigate a collection that may not have enough cultural significance to merit their time and effort. I felt “aghast” at the thought of that prospect.

At the same time, I felt a strong conviction that we needed to understand this collection, and if merited, then Edgard and his work should be preserved and his story become part of our cultural history.  To me, that translated into, the recognition that we may need to donate his collection.

Steeling myself for possible mortification, I placed my faith in our mother’s trust and moved on. As Jim and Deborah and I worked, and their enthusiasm grew and I felt relieved.

The 2022 Modernism Show in Washington (April 30 – May 1), was the first public viewing of anything created by Sforzina since, well, before 1941. It was the first public viewing of his work in my lifetime. Some people scanned the material and moved on. Others stopped and took their time reading, absorbing the images, pointing, and talking with their companion(s) about the exhibit, or something they noticed, or a memory it invoked. Several people, like you (Anthony), stayed to talk with my sisters and me, and ask questions or to share their story about a connection they felt to one of the buildings he decorated.

,,,

Something happened soon after that was life altering. Can you tell us about that?

Yes. In June 2022, Jim Linz, my husband Harry, and I were invited to meet with the staff and leadership of the Museums of Cincinnati, Ohio which is housed in the Cincinnati Union Terminal.

After giving us a private tour of the terminal, museums, library, and their archives, we sat down and focused the conversation on Sforzina’s work with Fellheimer & Wagner, (F&W) on the Terminal. We were able to show them our copies of our grandfather’s drawings of the Suite.

The historian carefully examined the designs. It may have been the longest few minutes of my life.  Finally, he said that he was comfortable to say that our documents depicted the final plans of the Executive Suite and moving forward his organization would assign attribution to Sforzina for this work (this is not a quote, rather this is what I heard).

It seems silly, but it was so emotional that time went into slow motion. In the expanse of that single statement, in the time it took for the Historian to speak his words, he affirmed for me and my family, forever, that our grandfather drew these designs, something we always believed, and could now speak freely about. We did not have to feel sheepish or make any caveats.

It is so hard to describe that feeling of gravitas that comes over you sometimes. On this occasion, it was accompanied by a deep sense of peace to have this question resolved, and overwhelming feelings of joy for our mother and grandfather.  While I don’t think that anyone noticed, it took me about five minutes before I started processing again.

To clarify for the readers, it was a “matter-of-fact” to our mother that Edgard drew these design plans for the Cincinnati Union Terminal on behalf of F&W. Our grandfather worked with or for F&W from 1930 to 1933 on this project.  During that time, she was 8 – 10 years old and she knew what her father was working on, it was a big deal for him professionally and his projects were a huge focus of this tiny family. We also have his copy of his designs. Unfortunately, he was not given any mention or credit for that work or other design plans and decorations he drew during that time. So, he did not benefit from follow-on work from other large companies. Our research on our grandfather’s career suggests that he and Fellheimer maintained a business friendship from 1929 onward. He was clearly an employee of F&W, as an architect as of 1938 through 1941 when he passed away.

What was your grandfather’s background in art and design?

Our grandfather received both a traditional and a formal background in art and design. His immersion in the world of art and design was lifelong. This is a great topic regarding Edgard.

Family background: We know from family records and French civil documents that our line of Sforzina’s were stone masons, les tailleurs de pierre, and artisans. His forefathers: Antonio (1790–1860), Dominique (1815-1887), and Jean-Antoine (1853–1914) passed down their skills and their trade, father to son, for roughly 100 years and possibly longer. Jean-Antoine Sforzina, grew up in Nice. After completing his formal education, he moved to the Left Bank  in the heart of Montparnasse and lived there for the rest of his life. The only details I know about his career are that he worked in the Notre Dame Cathedrale de Paris on l’ÎIe de la Cité for his entire career.  Apparently one of his duties involved maintaining the Rose Windows.

This is where Edgard grew up. It was also the time when that district was becoming a cultural hub for artists, writers, social reformers, and others.

Edgard was the eldest son of M. Jean-Antoine and Mme. Marie Joachine (Chichaud) Sforzina. By family accounts, he demonstrated an innate talent and a natural affinity for the Arts early in his life.

Traditional Education: Edgard and his brother, Parfait, were born at a time when children could still work side by side with their parents and learn the skills of their trade.

Another book our grandfather brought to the United States when he immigrated was a soft leather-bound textbook printed in both Italian and French. Jean-Antoine received it from his father, Dominique, and passed it to Edgard. On the front page of the book, someone, possibly, Dominique himself, wrote his name, address, and the date “1827”. If the date reflects the year Dominique received the book, then he was 12 years old at the time[2] and well on his way toward learning his trade as a mason.

Edgard SforzinaPublic Education: Edgard received his entire education in Paris, France, largely within walking distance from his home. He earned his Baccalaureate and was then accepted into the L’Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs[3]  (Note: this is the current name of the school) where he studied architecture, design, and decoration. In American vernacular, L’ Ecole Nationale Supérieure” is the name of the institution, and Arts Décoratif is its institutional division.  The school was officially opened in 1767 by letter patent of King Louis XV.  Its goal then, and now, is to develop arts-related professions and thereby to increase the quality of industrial products.”

[2]  In the 18th century the Sforzina family lived in (what is today) Veli Lošinj, Croatia. Dominque moved to Nice (a.k.a. Nizza) before 1853 when it was still part of the Kingdom of Savoy. The family lived there until 1876 when Jean Antoine moved to 76 Boulevard Edgard Quinet in Paris, France at the age of 23. Nizza/Nice did not become part of France permanently until 1860.
[3] “Grande école | French education | Britannica”. www.britannica.com, (accessed 29 May 2022).

The program has evolved considerably since its founding. Since 2010, a diploma from the school is equivalent to a Master’s degree. (see History). Former students from the school include well known figures such as Henri Matisse, Charles Garnier, and Jean-Paul Goude among others (see History).”

 

When Sforzina immigrated to the United States, how did he establish himself in the design field?

He was fortunate because he did not have to start from scratch. He was already established in Paris having totaled 16 years of working consecutively with four of the most highly respected “Maisons” of art, design, and furniture. This includes Alavoine & Co. with whom he worked since 1919 in their Paris office before transferring to their New York office. It is possible that he already knew some of his colleagues in the NYC office through school, previous employment, or inter-office correspondence.

His association with such an eminent firm gave him access to their network of architects, designers, artisans, etc., as well as to their wealthy and sophisticated clientele.

In 1929 the Arts in Industry Group invited 18 of the “most up and coming” New York City designers to compete for the opportunity to display their design in an exhibition being hosted by the Group. Sforzina was one of the designers invited to exhibit. In effect this was a subtle way for the group to enlarge itself and to have some influence over what comprised American Modern Art.

A double page spread in the Upholstery and Interior Decorator Magazine on April 15, 1928, quotes Charles Milgrim as saying,

“When Charles Milgrim first decided to give to the new store a perfect entity of modern decoration, he sent for Edgard Sforzina of Paris, and entrusted to him the scheme of decoration.”

 

Because your grandfather was French, he was at ground zero for the new modern style that has become known as Art Deco. Do you think his work had influence on American designers and the modern design field?

Yes, I think so. Sforzina tended to be an early adapter. In our traveling exhibit, we dedicated an entire panel to his innovations for which we found supporting citations.

 …

Can you tell us more about your grandfather’s employers?

Yes. The source information for his work history comes mainly from two documents, one written c. 1934 and the other in 1939. The dates are refined by information from family clippings of advertisements, newspapers, professional journals, and magazines during the Art Deco era. Additionally, ADSW members, Mr. Jim Linz, President Emeritus, Board Member, Author, and Proprietor of the on-line store, www.Deco-Rations.net, Ms. Deborah Sorensen, Curator, and I researched his employers and clients and more information.

1902 – 1904 Mercier Frères, (1828 -) At this time most companies offering interior furniture and decor services were primarily art and antique dealers. They started providing other services by hiring the craftsmen and artisans as needed on a commission-only basis. Mercier Brothers, became a well-known and reputable furniture and décor manufacturer.

1905 – Carlhian & Beaumetz, of Paris, France with offices in Cannes, London, New York, and Buenos Aires (1867 – 1988). Like Mercier Frères, Carlhian & Beaumetz started as an Art and Antique company. Sforzina worked there around the time that the firm was transitioning from its two founders to Carlhian’s two sons. The Duveen Brothers were one of their most important clients. They worked with Carlhian as an intermediary for dealings, and export commissions in the French market not involving fine art and antique objects. Sforzina states in his 1939 resume that he worked “almost exclusively for their primary client, Sir Joseph Duveen.”

….

Between 1906 – 1917. In his 1939 resume, Sforzina states that on his own, he worked for Waring and Gillow of Rue de la Boetie, Paris, France, and other large firms. Waring and Gillow were a notable English furniture manufacturing company that also an antique dealer, headquartered in London. He notes that the office was just off the Champs-Élysées. The firm closed in 1988.

1919 – Probably 1927.  L. Alavoine & Co., 9 Rue Caumartin Office, Paris, France
This company transferred Sforzina to their office at 712 5th Avenue, New York City, New York, USA (1922 – c.1927).

1928 – April 12. Sforzina leased the entire 4th floor of the tower at 424 Madison Avenue, New York City to open his Interior Design and Decoration firm Forzina, Inc., (Brooklyn Eagle 1928, 64). The following provides some insights about when he transitioned to working full time with F&W:

1930 – 1933 Sforzina in his 1939 resume states, “3 years, designer, Fellheimer & Wagner, Architects, 42 St. [New York City]– for plans, designs, and decorations….” for the Cincinnati Union Terminal. (Translated from French and verified).

1932 – December 1st. Sforzina wrote a letter of recommendation for his secretary, in which he states that she had worked for him for three years.  He goes on to say he that the only reason she is losing her job is because the “…present bad business conditions compel” him to close his office.

1933/4 – 35/6. Collaborated with Mr. Samuel Mandeville as “Mandeville and Sforzina” though there is no evidence that they were formally partners.

1938 – 1941. Employee of Fellheimer & Wagner

1941 – February 7, Sforzina passed away unexpectedly from Peptic Ulcer disease.

Who were your grandfather’s Clients? 

We have no information about his clients in Europe. We have a growing list of his clients in the United States from NYC, New York State, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Illinois, and Ohio.  Here is a sampling of his clients between 1928 – 1941.

United States: Known Clients, dates unknown but probably completed by 1934:

  • Persifor Frazer III, 3 Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, PA

  • F. G. M., Penthouse, 440 West End Street, NYC, NY

  • Frederick Lewisohn, 730 Park Avenue, NYC, NY

  • Stewart Walker, 369 Lexington Avenue, NYC, NY

  • Stanley Simon, 480 Park Ave., NYC, NY

  • T. A. Goldsmith, 36 East 31 Street, NYC, NY

  • Gimbel Bros., Philadelphia, PA

Unites States: Clients and Dates

  • 1928 – Milgrim New York City, NY, 6 West 57th Street, NYC, NY Forzina, Inc.

  • 1928 – Slattery’s Department Store; Forzina, Inc., Boston, MA

  • 1928 – Hutzler Brothers, Baltimore, MD, Forzina, Inc.

  • 1928/ 29 – Saks Fifth Avenue Department Store, NYC, NY., Forzina, Inc.

  • 1928/29 – Mr. George Gershwin, 33 Riverside Drive, NYC, NY, Forzina, Inc.

  • 1929/30 – Mr. Albert Fellheimer, 110 Riverside Drive, NYC, NY; Forzina, Inc.

  • 1930 – 1933 – Fellheimer & Wagner, Architects, NYC, NY, Forzina, Inc.

  • 1930 – Hirsh Lilienthal Stockbrokers, NYC, NY, Probably Forzina, Inc.

  • 1930 – International Ticket Office, Chicago, IL, Probably Forzina, Inc.

  • 1931 – Mrs. C. B. Harding, 110 Riverside Dr., NYC, NY, Forzina, Inc.

  • 1934 – Lilly Dache, Inc., 485 Madison Avenue, NYC, NY

  • 1934 – Wallach Bros. NYC, NY, Mandeville & Sforzina

  • 1935 – McCarthy Dry Goods, Woonsocket, RI, Mandeville & Sforzina

  • 1935 – Germaine Millinery, 5th Avenue, NYC, NY; Mandeville & Sforzina

  • 1935 –Witherall Department Store, Syracuse, NY

  • 1935 – Brooks, 5th Avenue, NYC, NY; Mandeville & Sforzina

  • 1936 – Miss G. Germaine, 440 West End Avenue, NYC, NY

  • (1940) CBS Building, 49 East 52 Street, NYC, NY; with Fellheimer & Wagner

Even if your grandfather’s name isn’t immediately known, what are some of his works that people are familiar with? 

By far the most famous project is the Cincinnati Union Terminal, followed by Gershwin’s Riverside Drive apartment, the Cloud Club of the Chrysler Building, and the CBS building.

Cloud Club, Chrysler Building

Cloud Club (Photo via ephemeralnewyork.wordpress.com)

Your grandfather passed away in 1941 this is now considered the tail end of the Art Deco era; do you feel that had he lived longer he would have adapted his style to the changing tastes of the times?

Absolutely. You see in his drawings his diversity of styles. One of my mother’s descriptions of him was that he was ahead of his time. Around 1935, four years before the 1939 World’s Fair, he started designing furniture for the emerging middle class. Also, when he died, he was working for Fellheimer and Wagner, who were already preparing to build Airports.

If he could have lived, without the problems of peptic ulcers, he still had a bright future ahead of him.

When your grandfather designed the furniture that went into the rooms, did he have these pieces custom made? 

Yes, I believe so. Forzina, Inc. operated from 1928 through December, 1931 and after that he had to sell it. During that time period we know that the Milgrim store (1928) furniture was made by artisans and the furniture in Slattery’s (1928) was made by “Boston Artisans.”

After your grandfather’s passing, where did the archive of his works (drawings, sketches, paperwork) end up? 

Until 2020 these items stayed within the family. Some of the furniture went to Tautine and her husband and unfortunately, that furniture is gone now.

Mémé must have kept the rest of the furniture in storage until she moved to Florida. Then, as stated previously, our parents must have had the items in storage, until they opened their medical practice in 1954. They used Edgard’s furniture to furnish their waiting room and business office.

They placed the bedroom furniture and other items in our home. Later when our parents moved their office to a new location, the furniture that had been in the waiting room disappeared. We assume the furniture was worn out.

Our parents either donated or let the furniture go to the dump. By that time, the family had already moved into our final home. In that home, the parents’ continued to use Edgard’s furniture in their bedroom and our mother’s home office. The drawings and other papers went into storage in the attic. Other furniture was used in the living room or as accents some here or relegated to the garage attic.

In summary, there have been several more exchanges of address where we stored items and who was using which piece of furniture.  More recently our children have their own homes and have wanted to use the some of the furniture. Over the years we have also lost some of the smaller tables and.  All in all, I would say we have only half the furniture that was originally part of Edgard’s legacy.

Paper is such a fragile medium. How have you preserved or plan to preserve the archive of your grandfather’s work? Is any of it digitized?

Starting in 2019, my family is donating their items from Edgard’s legacy to the collection. Items received prior to 2021 have been inventoried, digitized, and placed in archival containers inside a rented storage locker. This represents the bulk of the collection.  The items received after 2021 have been inventoried and are in storage.  These items are not in archival containers yet.

The Art Deco Society of Washington DC. was essential to my success with gathering and archiving his collection. Now that we have finished our book, I will pursue my goal to donate this collection to the right organization, museum, or design school.

 …

Is there anything you’d like to add to the Sforzina story? 

Sforzina had a relatively short career spanning 35 years, 38 years if including his military service. He was an early and important French / American decorator, designer, innovator, and architect. He brought his career to the United States before the 1925 International Exposition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts in Paris.

For 29 years he was an employee of the leading design companies in Paris, France where the full extent of his talent and contributions are veiled. He worked no more than 9 years for himself. During which he was considered a well-known designer.

The Edgard Sforzina Collection preserves 600+ artifacts of his work, including a variety of documents, furniture, and predominantly working designs depicting his process between 1930 and January 1941, a ten-year period. It is a wonderful collection and yet just a small portion of his total works.

Whether employee or employer, he influenced and was influenced by his peers, which collectively contributed to how we live today.  During his brief periods with Forzina and later Mandeville & Sforzina, he and his associates were a powerhouse of constructive productivity that drew the attention of the press, journalists, and photographers.

He was recognized for his innovations and he developed a strong business relationship with Fellheimer.

During his short life he accomplished so much. His last nine years especially, his star shined so bright.  He lived his dream of owning and operating his own design firm, Forzina, Inc. and the freedom to follow his own lead. Most of all, he got to have his say about Modern design and living.

Thank you, Denise, for your time in answering our questions. And, for giving us the opportunity to help get your grandfather’s name and accomplishments out into the world. 

We are pleased to announce to our readers that a comprehensive book regarding Edgard Sforzina is being released shortly. This exciting, color-illustrated book delves deeper into his treasure trove of work. It was written and soon to be published with the gracious assistance and in association with the Art Deco Society of Washington, D.C.

You can meet and talk to the authors at the 20th Century Cincinnati Show, on February 26th at 10:00am with a book signing following.

20th Century Cincinnati Show

Chris & Anthony (The Freakin’, Tiquen Guys)

_________________________________________________________________________

Reference List

“Art in Industry.” 1928. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. November 4, 1928. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/112345525/1928-art-in-industry/ (Accessed Oct. 13, 1922).

Barozzio de Vignole, Jacques. N.d. Rules of the Five Orders of Architecture by M. Jacques Barozzio de Vignole: With a new augmentation by Michel Angelo Bonaroli and others. Paris : Chez la Ve de la F. Chéreau [Rue Saint-Jacques aux 2 Piliers d’Or].

.“Beauty Combined with Convenience in Modernistic Rooms.”1929. Art & Decoration. February, 1929

Bender, Marylin. “Hattie Carnegie’s Shop to Close Early in Year.”: https://www.nytimes.com/1964/11/26/archives/hattie-carnegies-shop-to-close-early-in-year.html (Accessed November, 2022)

Carlhian (Firm) records. 1867-1988. The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, Accession no. 930092. https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8z89dsn/entire_text/. Accessed November 27, 2022

“Commercial Leases.” 1928. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, April 12 1928. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/112345295/1928-forzina-inc-lease/ (Accessed Oct 31, 2022)

GGArchives.com. 2022. “SS Rochambeau Passenger List – 7 November 1922.” https://www.ggarchives.com/OceanTravel/Passengers/FrenchLine/Rochambeau-PassengerList-1922-11-07.html

Internet Archive, “The New Art — American Made”, https://archive.org/details/sim_interiors_1928-04-15_80/page/108/mode/2up (Access 09 Nov 2022)

Miller, Tom. 2017. “The L. Alavoine & Co. Façade – No. 712 Fifth Avenue.” Daytonian in Manhattan. https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/search?q=Alavoine. (Accessed, October, 2022)

Patterson, Curtis. 1931. “Georgian Calm with Modernist Repose.” Harper’s Bazaar, April, 1931

Stern, Robert A. M., Gilmarten, Gregory, and Mellins, Thomas. 1987. New York 1930: Architecture and Urbanism between the two World Wars. New York: Rizzoli

Thorne, Oliver. 1930. “The New York Salons of Forzina.” Home and Field Magazine. January, 1930.

Wikipedia contributors, “Waring & Gillow,” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Waring_%26_Gillow&oldid=1110612657  (accessed November 27, 2022).

Other Articles that were not Cited

Boyd, Jr., John Taylor. 1929. “Milgrim — A Fashion Shop for Women.” Architectural Record. Vol 65. June 1929 523-33

“An Art Moderne Setting for Women’s Apparel.” 1928. Good Furniture. May 30, 1928. 239-44.

Rose, Linda C., Rose, Patrick, Yungblut, Gibson, Hord, Edmonston 2003. Cincinnati Union Terminal: The Design and Construction of an Art Deco Masterpiece. Vol. 1. Cincinnati Railroad Club: Ohio. 75 – 80