Osa Massen
Osa Massen (born Aase Madsen Iversen; January 13, 1914 – January 2, 2006) was a Danish actress best known for her supporting roles as sophisticated and often villainous women in Hollywood films of the 1940s.[1] Originally aspiring to work as a film editor after training as a newspaper photographer in Copenhagen, she was persuaded to act by Danish director Alice O'Fredericks and made her screen debut in the 1935 film Kidnapped.[2] A second Danish film led to a Hollywood contract with Paramount Pictures, where she became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1941.[3] Massen's American film debut came in Honeymoon in Bali (1939), in which critics noted she outshone stars Madeleine Carroll and Fred MacMurray with her poised performance as a fashion designer.[2] She frequently played femme fatales or enigmatic characters, including the adulterous wife in George Cukor's A Woman's Face (1941) opposite Joan Crawford, the nightclub singer in Fred Astaire and Rita Hayworth's You'll Never Get Rich (1941), and the scientist Dr. Lisa Van Horn in the science fiction thriller Rocketship X-M (1950).[2] Due to frequent confusion with actresses Ona Munson and Ilona Massey, she briefly adopted the stage name Stefanie Paull for the 1948 film Million Dollar Weekend.[2] Her Hollywood career spanned over a dozen features, though she often received second billing in B-pictures and musicals. In the 1950s and early 1960s, Massen transitioned to television, appearing in popular series such as Wagon Train and Perry Mason.[4] She retired from acting in the mid-1960s and lived quietly in California until her death from complications following surgery at a Santa Monica convalescent home.[2]Early Life
Birth and Family
Osa Massen was born Aase Madsen Iversen on January 13, 1914, in Copenhagen, Denmark.[5] Details on her parents and siblings remain scarce in available records. The family resided in Copenhagen during her early years, providing a stable urban environment amid Denmark's early 20th-century social and cultural developments. Her childhood unfolded in the bustling capital city, where she experienced the everyday rhythms of Danish life in the 1910s and 1920s, a period marked by progressive reforms and a burgeoning interest in arts and media. Limited personal accounts survive, but her formative years in this setting laid the groundwork for her later professional pursuits in photography and film. Upon embarking on her career, Aase adopted the stage name Osa Massen, a moniker chosen to suit her entry into the entertainment industry and reflective of her Danish heritage.[5]Education and Early Interests
Massen received her early training as a news photographer in Copenhagen, Denmark, with a particular focus on portraiture techniques. This specialized instruction equipped her with skills in capturing human expressions and compositions, foundational to visual storytelling.[5] Following her training, she pursued a professional career as a newspaper photographer in Denmark during the early 1930s, contributing to print media coverage of local events and personalities. Her work in this field provided practical experience in fast-paced documentation and image selection, honing her eye for narrative through visuals.[2][4] Drawn to the technical side of filmmaking amid the active Danish cinema scene of the interwar period, which saw productions from studios like Nordisk Films Kompagni, Massen aspired to become a film editor. Her photography background directly informed this goal, as the precision required in editing photographs paralleled the demands of assembling cinematic sequences. She sought opportunities in the industry to transition from still imagery to motion pictures before her eventual entry into acting.[2][1]Career
Entry into Acting
Osa Massen's entry into acting stemmed from her early aspirations in the film industry, initially focused on behind-the-camera roles as a newspaper photographer in Denmark. In 1935, prolific director Alice O'Fredericks, recognizing her potential, persuaded her to take a supporting part in the Danish family comedy Kidnapped, co-directed by Lau Lauritzen Jr. for Palladium Productions. Massen debuted as Grethe, a young woman involved in a whimsical plot where friends thwart American gangsters attempting to kidnap a child, marking her shift from photography to performance in a lighthearted production that showcased emerging Danish comedic talents like Ib Schønberg.[6][5] That same year, Massen took on another minor role in the Danish comedy Bag Københavns kulisser, directed by Arne Weel, playing Eva Lindemann in a backstage story exploring the vibrant underbelly of Copenhagen's theater scene. These limited appearances in 1930s Danish cinema provided her initial on-screen experience but remained small-scale, reflecting the modest opportunities available to newcomers in the era's burgeoning national film industry.[7] Encouraged by her early work, Massen auditioned successfully for a screen test with 20th Century Fox, leading to her immigration to the United States in 1937. She arrived in New York via the S/S Normandie from Southampton, England, on December 23, documented as 23-year-old Danish actress Aase Madsen-Iversen, with ambitions to expand her career beyond Denmark.[5] Upon arrival, she encountered significant hurdles, including difficulty landing speaking parts due to her striking resemblance to Greta Garbo, which prompted studio executives to initially cast her only as an extra in various productions while changing her professional name to Osa Massen to avoid comparisons.[2] This period of uncredited work and persistence highlighted her transition from European novice to aspiring Hollywood player, enduring financial and professional strains typical of foreign imports navigating the competitive studio system.Hollywood Breakthrough and Peak
Osa Massen signed a Hollywood contract following her supporting role in the 1939 Paramount comedy Honeymoon in Bali, which marked her American film debut and drew attention for her striking resemblance to Greta Garbo.[2] This led to opportunities at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), where she appeared in several productions during the early 1940s, often in supporting roles that showcased her elegant, European allure.[4] She also appeared as the nightclub singer Sonya in the musical You'll Never Get Rich (1941) opposite Fred Astaire and Rita Hayworth.[8] By 1942, her contract transitioned to Warner Bros., allowing her to take on more dramatic parts in espionage thrillers and adventure films, typically as sophisticated, morally ambiguous women.[5] Her breakthrough came with the 1941 MGM drama A Woman's Face, directed by George Cukor, where Massen portrayed Vera Segert, the unfaithful wife of Dr. Gustaf Segert (Melvyn Douglas). In the film, Vera's infidelity and involvement in a blackmail scheme—led by the disfigured Anna Holm (Joan Crawford)—create tension in her marriage, culminating in her desperate attempts to cover up her affair amid the story's exploration of redemption through plastic surgery.[9] Critics noted Massen's effective portrayal of a calculating yet vulnerable adulteress, contributing to the film's emotional depth and earning praise for the ensemble's chemistry, though Crawford dominated reviews. The role established Massen as a reliable supporting actress capable of conveying subtle menace and heartbreak.[2] During her peak in the mid-1940s, Massen solidified her reputation through a series of films that highlighted her femme fatale persona—characterized by icy elegance, foreign intrigue, and romantic duplicity. In Warner Bros.' 1943 espionage thriller Background to Danger, directed by Raoul Walsh, she played Ana Remzi, a mysterious courier entangled in a Nazi plot to destabilize Turkey, smuggling documents that draw American adventurer Joe Barton (George Raft) into a web of spies including Sydney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre; her character's seductive manipulation and eventual sacrifice underscored wartime themes of loyalty. That same year, in RKO's biographical adventure Jack London, Massen portrayed Freda Maloof, a resilient supporter in the life of author Jack London (Michael O'Shea), blending romantic tension with the rugged Klondike setting alongside Susan Hayward.[10] Her typecasting as a beguiling antagonist peaked in the 1950 science-fiction film Rocketship X-M, produced by Lippert Pictures, where she appeared as Dr. Lisa Van Horn, the team's female scientist whose composure unravels during a disastrous Mars mission with Lloyd Bridges, embodying cool intellect amid apocalyptic survival horror.[2] These roles, often involving betrayal or high-stakes deception, cemented Massen's niche as Hollywood's go-to Danish import for enigmatic, alluring villains.[4] Massen's career trajectory was complicated by frequent confusion with other actresses of similar European descent, such as Ona Munson and Ilona Massey, due to shared blonde, sophisticated screen images; this led her to briefly adopt the stage name Stefanie Paull for the 1948 film Million Dollar Weekend in an effort to distinguish herself.[2] The mix-ups, compounded by her limited leading roles, restricted her visibility despite strong supporting performances, ultimately channeling her toward typecast opportunities rather than stardom.[4]Later Roles and Retirement
Following her prominent supporting roles in major Hollywood productions during the early 1940s, Osa Massen's film career shifted toward lower-budget features and leading parts in B-movies. In 1948, she took the lead role of Cynthia Strong, a woman entangled in a murder plot aboard a plane, in the crime comedy Million Dollar Weekend, directed by and starring Gene Raymond; the film was released by United Artists and marked one of her few starring vehicles in the postwar period.[11] Earlier in the decade, she had appeared in the horror film Cry of the Werewolf (1944), playing the supporting role of Elsa Chauvet, a character involved in a gypsy curse mystery, which exemplified the genre work she undertook at Columbia Pictures.[12] These roles highlighted her continued typecasting as enigmatic, seductive women, though opportunities in A-list features dwindled as the studio system began to erode. By the 1950s, Massen's screen appearances grew sporadic amid the industry's transition to television and the decline of traditional B-movie production. She starred as Dr. Lisa Van Horn, a scientist on a doomed space mission, in the science-fiction thriller Rocketship X-M (1950), a low-budget Lippert Pictures release that became a cult favorite for its early depiction of space travel. Her final film role came in 1958 with Outcasts of the City, where she portrayed Leda Mueller, a German woman navigating postwar romance and jealousy, directed by Boris Petroff for Republic Pictures.[13] During this period, she increasingly turned to television, guest-starring in episodes of popular series such as Perry Mason (three appearances between 1958 and 1962, including as murder suspect Minnie Newcomb in "The Case of the Tarnished Trademark") and Wagon Train (1957–1965), which provided steadier but less prominent work. Massen's acting career effectively concluded in the early 1960s, with her last credited role being the 1962 Perry Mason episode. Factors contributing to her retirement included the aging out of her signature femme fatale persona amid Hollywood's evolving preferences for younger talent and the medium's pivot toward television, which favored episodic formats over feature films; by her mid-40s, such shifts limited roles for actresses like her who had been pigeonholed in dramatic supporting parts.[2] Post-retirement, she contributed to the film industry in a non-acting capacity, serving on the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' foreign film selection committee, leveraging her Danish background and bilingual expertise to evaluate international submissions.[5]Personal Life
Marriages and Relationships
Osa Massen's first marriage was to Allan Hersholt, the son of Danish-American actor Jean Hersholt, on December 15, 1938; the union ended in divorce on March 14, 1945.[5] Allan Hersholt was a screenwriter and occasional actor in Hollywood. Following her divorce, Massen married Dr. Harvey Robert Cummins, a physician, on February 16, 1947; she had met him while volunteering with the Red Cross.[5] The marriage lasted until Cummins's death on September 18, 1951.[5][14] Massen's third marriage was to Dr. Stanley William Vogel, a dentist known for pioneering dental implants and veneers, on December 25, 1954.[5][15] The couple divorced in November 1962 after eight years together.[5] Massen had no children from any of her marriages, and there are no reported romantic relationships outside of these unions.[5]Citizenship and Residences
Born in Copenhagen, Denmark, Osa Massen held Danish citizenship throughout her early life. She first arrived in the United States in 1937, traveling aboard the S/S Normandie and disembarking in New York on December 23 as Aase Madsen Iversen, listed as a 23-year-old Danish actress.[5] Following a screen test arranged by 20th Century Fox, she relocated to Hollywood in 1938 under a studio contract that functioned as her initial work visa, marking the beginning of her permanent move to the U.S.[5] Massen became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1941, renouncing her Danish citizenship in the process.[5] Her marriages to American citizens further solidified her ties to the United States, influencing her decision to establish a long-term residence there. During the peak of her acting career in the 1940s, Massen resided in Hollywood, California, where she was immersed in the film industry.[2] No records indicate significant returns to Denmark in the subsequent decades, as she continued working in American media through the 1950s and 1960s. In her later years, Massen lived in a convalescent home in Santa Monica, California, where she passed away in 2006.[2]Death and Legacy
Final Years
After retiring from acting in the mid-20th century, Osa Massen resided quietly in Santa Monica, California, where she had made her long-term home. She led a low-profile life in her later decades, with no documented hobbies or public engagements surfacing in available records. In her 90s, health challenges necessitated her admission to a convalescent home in Santa Monica.[2]Death
Osa Massen died on January 2, 2006, at the age of 91, while recovering from surgery at a convalescent home in Santa Monica, California.[2] The cause of death was complications arising from the procedure, attributed to her advanced age, with no further specific medical details released.[2][16] Her remains were interred at Westwood Memorial Park in Los Angeles, California, in the Urn Garden, Section D.[16] No public announcements regarding funeral arrangements or immediate family notifications were reported following her passing.[2]Cultural Impact
Osa Massen contributed to the popularization of the femme fatale archetype in 1940s Hollywood cinema, particularly within film noir and emerging science fiction genres, where she portrayed seductive, morally ambiguous women who drove narrative tension through betrayal and intrigue. Her roles often embodied the archetype's blend of allure and danger, as seen in her performance as the unfaithful wife entangled in blackmail in George Cukor's A Woman's Face (1941), which highlighted her ability to steal scenes from stars like Joan Crawford.[2] This characterization influenced the era's portrayals of complex female antagonists, bridging noir's psychological depth with sci-fi's speculative elements in films like Rocketship X-M (1950), where she played the icy yet thawing Dr. Lisa Van Horn.[2] In modern retrospectives, Massen's work has garnered cult appreciation, especially for her role in Rocketship X-M, recognized as one of the earliest post-World War II space exploration films and a low-budget precursor to more ambitious productions like Destination Moon. The film's cult status stems from its innovative use of Theremin music, thematic warnings about nuclear devastation, and frequent airings on television, culminating in its feature on the premiere episode of the second season of Mystery Science Theater 3000 in 1990, which revived interest in her portrayal of a pioneering female scientist amid apocalyptic Martian ruins.[17][18] This has positioned her performances within discussions of underappreciated B-movie gems that shaped genre tropes. Following her death in 2006, obituaries and tributes portrayed Massen as an underrecognized talent whose scene-stealing presence in classic Hollywood elevated supporting roles, often lamenting her shift to television and early retirement as overshadowing her cinematic contributions. The Los Angeles Times obituary emphasized her enduring fame as a femme fatale, noting how her Danish background and versatile portrayals added exotic depth to 1940s films, while highlighting her as a performer whose potential was curtailed by typecasting.[2]Filmography
1930s
Osa Massen's early film work in the 1930s consisted of two Danish films and one American production, marking her entry into cinema.[19]| Year | Title | Role | Director | Studio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1935 | Kidnapped | Grethe | Lau Lauritzen, Alice O'Fredericks | Palladium Film (Denmark) |
| 1935 | Bag Københavns kulisser | Eva Lindemann | Arne Weel | Palladium Film (Denmark) |
| 1939 | Honeymoon in Bali (aka My Love for Yours) | Noel Van Ness | Edward H. Griffith | Paramount Pictures |
1940s
Massen appeared in numerous supporting roles during the 1940s, often portraying enigmatic or sophisticated women in Hollywood productions. Her standout performance in this decade included the role of Vera Segert in A Woman's Face (1941), where she depicted an unfaithful wife entangled in blackmail.[2][19]| Year | Title | Role | Director | Studio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1941 | Accent on Love | Osa | Richard Wallace | 20th Century Fox |
| 1941 | The Devil Pays Off | Valeria DeBrock | John H. Auer | RKO Radio Pictures |
| 1941 | Honeymoon for Three | Julie Wilson | William A. Seiter | Columbia Pictures |
| 1941 | A Woman's Face | Vera Segert | George Cukor | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
| 1941 | You'll Never Get Rich | Sonya Wallowa | Sidney Lanfield | Columbia Pictures |
| 1942 | Iceland | Helga Jonsdottir | H. Bruce Humberstone | 20th Century Fox |
| 1943 | Background to Danger | Ana Remzi | Raoul Walsh | Warner Bros. |
| 1943 | Jack London | Freda Maloof | Alfred Santell | United Artists |
| 1944 | Cry of the Werewolf | Elsa Chauvet | Edgar G. Ulmer | Columbia Pictures |
| 1944 | The Master Race | Helena | Herbert J. Biberman | RKO Radio Pictures |
| 1944 | The Black Parachute | Marya Orloff | Lew Landers | Columbia Pictures |
| 1946 | Deadline at Dawn | Helen Robinson | Harold Clurman | RKO Radio Pictures |
| 1946 | The Gentleman Misbehaves | Chincilla | George Sherman | RKO Radio Pictures |
| 1946 | Strange Journey | Christine Jenner | James Tinling | Republic Pictures |
| 1946 | Tokyo Rose | Greta Norburg | Lew Landers | Lippert Pictures |
| 1948 | Million Dollar Weekend | Cynthia Strong | Gene Raymond | United Artists |
| 1949 | Night Unto Night | Lisa | Don Siegel | Warner Bros. |
1950s
In the 1950s, Massen's film roles became sparser, with notable contributions to science fiction, including her portrayal of Dr. Lisa Van Horn, a scientist on a doomed space mission, in Rocketship X-M (1950). Her final film appearance was in 1958.[19][25]| Year | Title | Role | Director | Studio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1950 | Rocketship X-M | Dr. Lisa Van Horn | Kurt Neumann | Lippert Pictures |
| 1958 | Outcasts of the City | Leda Mueller | Boris Petroff | Republic Pictures |
Television Appearances
Following her peak in film during the 1940s, Osa Massen adapted to the emerging medium of television in the 1950s and early 1960s, taking on guest roles in anthology series, westerns, and crime dramas that showcased her versatility in supporting parts.[1] Her television output was relatively sparse compared to her film career, consisting primarily of one-off appearances that highlighted her elegant presence in dramatic narratives.[1] Massen's most notable television contributions were her three guest spots on the long-running legal drama Perry Mason, where she portrayed complex characters entangled in legal intrigue. She first appeared in 1958 as Lisa Bannister, the sophisticated stepmother in "The Case of the Desperate Daughter," a storyline involving family secrets and international ties.[26] In 1959, she played Sarah Werner, a woman caught in a web of deception and murder, in "The Case of the Shattered Dream."[27] Her final Perry Mason role came in 1962 as Lisa Pedersen, a businesswoman defending her tarnished family legacy, in "The Case of the Tarnished Trademark."[28] Beyond Perry Mason, Massen appeared in a variety of other series, often in episodes centered on mystery, espionage, or human drama. In 1958, she guest-starred as Minnie, a resilient traveler facing peril on a journey, in the western Wagon Train episode "Around the Horn."[29] That same year, she featured in anthology formats like Climax!'s "Strange Sanctuary," portraying a figure in a tense southwestern bank robbery tale.[30] Other credits included the espionage-themed Behind Closed Doors in 1959, where she played Tamara in the episode "Crypto 40," delving into Cold War secrets.[31] Earlier appearances encompassed Code 3 (1957) as Marie Thayer in "The Sniper," a police procedural about a serial shooter;[32] Richard Diamond, Private Detective (1957) as Janet Morrisey in "The Homicide Habit," involving insurance fraud;[33] The Millionaire (1956) as Helen Ramsey in "The Story of Helen Ramsey," exploring sudden wealth's consequences; Schlitz Playhouse of Stars (1955) in "The Journey"; Science Fiction Theatre (1955) in "The Unexplored"; Climax! (1957) in "The Fifth Wheel"; and General Electric Theater (1954) in "The Dark, Dark Hours." These roles underscored her shift to episodic television amid the industry's growth. Additionally, she appeared in the 1955 TV production Wiegenlied as Ernestine Schumann-Heink.[1][34]| Year | Show | Episode | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1954 | General Electric Theater | "The Dark, Dark Hours" | Unspecified |
| 1954 | Dynamite, the Story of Alfred Nobel (TV Movie) | N/A | Baroness Von Suttner |
| 1955 | Science Fiction Theatre | "The Unexplored" | Unspecified |
| 1955 | Schlitz Playhouse of Stars | "The Journey" | Unspecified |
| 1955 | Wiegenlied | N/A | Ernestine Schumann-Heink |
| 1956 | The Millionaire | "The Story of Helen Ramsey" | Helen Ramsey |
| 1957 | Climax! | "The Fifth Wheel" | Unspecified |
| 1957 | Code 3 | "The Sniper" | Marie Thayer |
| 1957 | Richard Diamond, Private Detective | "The Homicide Habit" | Janet Morrisey |
| 1957 | Climax! | "Strange Sanctuary" | Unspecified |
| 1958 | Wagon Train | "Around the Horn" | Minnie |
| 1958 | Perry Mason | "The Case of the Desperate Daughter" | Lisa Bannister |
| 1959 | Perry Mason | "The Case of the Shattered Dream" | Sarah Werner |
| 1959 | Behind Closed Doors | "Crypto 40" | Tamara |
| 1962 | Perry Mason | "The Case of the Tarnished Trademark" | Lisa Pedersen |