(front row, center) and other members of the
Group Theatre in 1938 In 1922, Carnovsky began his long career on Broadway with his New York stage debut as Reb Aaron in
The God of Vengeance. Two years later, Carnovsky joined the
Theatre Guild acting company and appeared in the title role of
Uncle Vanya (by
Anton Chekhov). This was followed by roles in
Saint Joan (by
George Bernard Shaw),
The Brothers Karamazov, ''
The Doctor's Dilemma'' (also by Shaw) and the role of Kublai Khan in
Eugene O'Neill's
Marco Millions. In 1931, he helped found the
Group Theatre, which specialized in dramas with socially relevant and politically tinged messages. He later explained: "We founded the Group because we were sick and tired of the old romantic theater and the encrusted star system. We weren't interested in stars. We were looking for real, living drama." Carnovsky appeared in almost every major Group Theatre production, often playing parts that had been written specifically for him by his good friend, the actor and playwright
Clifford Odets. Among Carnovsky's major triumphs at the Group Theatre were the Odets plays
Awake and Sing,
Golden Boy,
Paradise Lost and
Rocket to the Moon. He also appeared in the anti-war musical
Johnny Johnson,
Sidney Kingsley's
Men in White, the Elia Kazan-directed
Thunder Rock,
My Sister Eileen, and
Cafe Crown. Writing about the Group's production of
Awake and Sing!, the
New York Times critic
Brooks Atkinson said, "...Morris Carnovsky as the lonely old sage struggling with ideas he cannot resolve or use, gives a performance worth a mayor's reception on the steps of City Hall. Probably Mr. Carnovsky and Mr. Adler would have become remarkable actors in any case. But the discipline of the Group Theatre has given them a mastery of acting they could never have achieved by themselves. The Group Theatre makes good!" In 1937 Carnovsky, along with several other actors from the Group, went to Hollywood in hopes of raising money to bolster the Group's shaky finances by working in films. Carnovsky's movie debut came in the Academy Award-winning best picture of 1937,
William Dieterle's
The Life of Emile Zola starring
Paul Muni. It was followed by a supporting role in
Anatole Litvak's
Tovarich, before Carnovsky returned to New York and a newly re-configured formation of the Group Theatre. After the collapse of the Group Theatre in 1940, Carnovsky returned to Hollywood where he appeared in several more films. In 1939, he provided the narration for a film called
The City that was screened at the
1939 New York World's Fair. He continued his stage work by joining the Actors' Lab, an acting troupe much like the Group, serving as its first director. In 1943, he played a retired
Norwegian school teacher, Sixtus Andresen, in the
Warner Bros. anti-Nazi film,
Edge of Darkness, which starred
Errol Flynn and was directed by
Lewis Milestone. Carnovsky portrayed
George Gershwin's father in
Rhapsody in Blue in 1945, and in
Dead Reckoning (1947), he starred as the villainous nightclub owner Martinelli with
Humphrey Bogart. In 1950, he portrayed LeBret in
Cyrano de Bergerac starring
José Ferrer. Later that year, he played Dr. Raymond Hartley in the mystery
The Second Woman and the kindly judge who sentences a young boy who likes to play with firearms in Joseph H. Lewis's
Gun Crazy. This was to be Carnovsky's last Hollywood film for 12 years. On Broadway, Carnovsky appeared alongside
Fredric March in
Ibsen's
An Enemy of the People, adapted by
Arthur Miller, in the 1950-51 season. Atkinson wrote: "The impact of Mr. March's acting is dramatically balanced by the rich, forceful and accomplished acting of Morris Carnovsky as the cynical mayor of the town." ==Hollywood blacklist==