Background Svengali was based on the 1894
George du Maurier novel
Trilby. The novel is titled after the story's doomed heroine, but the character that caught the public's attention was the villain Svengali, a
Jewish hypnotist and pianist who hypnotizes Trilby into becoming a great vocalist. The success of
Trilby was a surprise to du Maurier as the novel was adapted to the stage, where
Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree performed as Svengali in the United Kingdom and
Wilton Lackaye portrayed him in 1895 in the United States. At least six
silent film adaptations of
Trilby were made, ranging from 1908's
Trilby to 1923. Actor
John Barrymore had performed on Broadway in early du Maurier adaptations, including the title role in
Peter Ibbetson. In November 1930,
Louella Parsons reported "the most surprising news of the year" that Warner Bros. had purchased the rights to adapt
Trilby and that Barrymore was set to play the role of Svengali.
Pre-production While on his
yacht, Barrymore cabled his ideas for the film to Warner Bros., specifying that Svengali "must be funny and get lots of laughs." Warner Bros. initially wanted
Evelyn Laye for the role of Trilby. Stories conflict as to why Laye was not cast; one account holds that the actress wanted to return to England for a vacation while another story claims that Laye was exhausted from overwork and was under treatment in a
sanitarium. After testing many candidates, including big names, Warner Bros. hired relative unknown
Marian Marsh for the role of Trilby. The cinematographer was Barney "Chick" McGill, who was director Archie Mayo's cameraman for
The Doorway to Hell.
Production Svengali began shooting in January 1931 at Stage 8 at Warner Bros.' First National lot in Burbank. Filming was completed on February 21. According to daily production notes, the script was unfinished when filming began, with screenwriter
J. Grubb Alexander writing the scenes one at a time. On February 14, production was moved to
Universal City, where Warner Bros. rented Universal's Phantom Stage, used originally for
The Phantom of the Opera (1925). ==Release==