How are you related to Susan Kohner?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Susan Kohner

Birthdate:
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Paul Kohner and Lupita Tovar
Widow of John Weitz
Mother of Paul Weitz and Chris Weitz
Sister of Private

Occupation: Retired actress
Managed by: Kenneth Kwame Welsh, (C)
Last Updated:
view all

Immediate Family

About Susan Kohner

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susan_Kohner

Susan Kohner (born November 11, 1936) is an American actress who worked in film and television. She is best known for her role as Sarah Jane in Imitation of Life (1959), for which she was nominated for an Oscar[1] and won a Golden Globe award. She played a light-complexioned mulatto woman who "passed" for white as a young adult.[2]

After Kohner married menswear designer and writer John Weitz in 1964, she retired from acting to devote time to her family. Her two sons, Chris Weitz and Paul Weitz, have both become film directors, screenwriters and sometime actors.[3]

Contents [show] Early life[edit] Kohner was born in Los Angeles, California, the daughter of Lupita Tovar, a Mexican-born actress who had a career in Hollywood, and Paul Kohner, a film producer who was born in Bohemia, Austria-Hungary.[4] Her mother is Roman Catholic, and her father was Czech Jewish.[5]

Career[edit] Most of Kohner's film roles came during the late 1950s and early 1960s, including co-starring with Sal Mineo in both Dino (1957) and The Gene Krupa Story (1959).

In her most notable role, Kohner played Sarah Jane in Imitation of Life, portraying an African-American woman who "passes" as white. The 1959 film was a remake of a 1934 version of a book of the same name. The expensive, glossy Ross Hunter production, directed by Douglas Sirk and starring Lana Turner, was a box office smash. In addition, Kohner was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award for her role in the film, and won a Golden Globe as Best Supporting Actress and one as Best New Actress.

Following her role in Imitation of Life, Kohner appeared in All the Fine Young Cannibals opposite Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner. She later had guest roles on various television series, including Hong Kong, Going My Way, and Temple Houston. She made her last film appearance in 1962, co-starring with Montgomery Clift in Freud: The Secret Passion. She retired from acting in 1964.

Personal life[edit] In 1964, Kohner married John Weitz, a German-born novelist and fashion designer.[6] She retired from acting to devote time to her family. They had two sons together, Chris and Paul Weitz, who both became film directors and producers in Hollywood, producing films such as American Pie (1999) and About a Boy (2002). Chris Weitz is also known for directing New Moon (2009), part of the The Twilight Saga.

On April 23, 2010, a new print of Imitation of Life (1959) was screened at the TCM Film Festival in Los Angeles, California, to which Kohner and co-star Juanita Moore were invited. After the screening, the two women appeared on stage for a question-and-answer session hosted by TCM's Robert Osborne. Kohner and Moore received standing ovations.

Theater[edit] 1958: Love Me Little by John G. Fuller at Helen Hayes Theatre. Role: Emily Whittaker.[7] Broadway debut.[8] 1962: Pullman Car Hiawatha by Thornton Wilder at Circle in the Square Theatre. Role: Harriet Milbury.[9] 1963: Saint Joan by George Bernard Shaw at Vancouver Theater Festival. With Mike Nichols.[10] Filmography[edit] Film Year Film Role Notes 1955 To Hell and Back Maria 1956 The Last Wagon Jolie 1957 Trooper Hook Consuela Dino Shirley Alternative title: Killer Dino 1959 Imitation of Life Sarah Jane, age 18 Also: Performer: "Empty Arms" The Big Fisherman Princess Fara The Gene Krupa Story Ethel Maguire Alternative title: Drum Crazy 1960 All the Fine Young Cannibals Catherine McDowall 1961 By Love Possessed Helen Detweiler 1962 Freud: The Secret Passion Martha Freud Alternative title: Freud Television Year Title Role Notes 1956 The Alcoa Hour Joanna 1 episode Four Star Playhouse Anita 1 episode Cavalcade of American 1 episode: "A Bed of Roses" Climax! 2 episodes: "Child of the Wind/Throw Away the Cane," segment "Child of the Wind"; "Ten Minutes to Curfew" 1956–1957 Schlitz Playhouse of Stars Angela O'Neill; Lynn Howell 2 episodes: "Date for Tomorrow" as Angela O'Neill; "Dual Control" as Lynn Howell 1957 Matinee Theatre Joanna Marshall 2 episodes: " - "Letter to a Stranger"; "Laugh a Little Tear" Wagon Train Mokai 1 episode: "The Charles Avery Story" Suspicion Gina 1 episode: "The Flight" 1958 Alfred Hitchcock Presents Therese 1 episode: "The Return of the Hero" 1960 Playhouse 90 Rachel Heller 1 episode: "In the Presence of Mine Enemies" 1961 The DuPont Show with June Allyson Clare Anderson 1 episode: "The Guilty Heart" Hong Kong Elena 1 episode: "The Innocent Exile" 1961–1963 Route 66 Katy Webster; Midge Pierrepont 2 episodes: "The Quick and the Dead" as Katy Webster; "But What Do You Do in March" as Midge Pierrepont 1962 Checkmate Vicki Angelo 1 episode: "Down the Gardenia Path" The Dick Powell Show Miriam Marks 1 episode: "Tomorrow, the Man" 1963 The Doctors and the Nurses Terry Collins 1 episode: "Root of Violence" Going My Way Elaine Brady 1 episode: "One Small Unhappy Family" Temple Houston Ellena Romolo 1 episode: "Toll the Bell Slowly" 1964 Rawhide Abbie Bartlett 1 episode: "Incident at Ten Trees" Channing Rena 1 episode: "A Bang and a Whimper" Awards and nominations[edit] Year Award Result Category Film 1959 Academy Award Nominated Best Supporting Actress Imitation of Life 1959 Golden Globe Award Won Most Promising Newcomer - Female
-
1959 Best Supporting Actress Imitation of Life 1962 Nominated Best Supporting Actress Freud: The Secret Passion 1958 Laurel Awards Nominated Top New Female Personality
-
1959 2nd Place Top Female New Personality
-

view all

Susan Kohner's Timeline

1936
November 11, 1936
1965
November 19, 1965
1969
November 30, 1969
New York, New York, United States