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Opinion

It’s not just Kubrick and Sellers who made Lolita a Jewish film

The story ’s theme of an outsider battling against the social order is — despite the troubling subject matter — typically Jewish

September 2, 2022 11:49
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5 min read

How did they ever make a movie of Lolita?” was the question posed by the posters advertising the film version of Vladimir Nabokov’s notoriously scandalous novel, released in the UK on 6 September, 1962. The “they” in question were two Jewish boys from New York: the famous director Stanley Kubrick and his then producing partner James B Harris.

Fresh from the big-budget success of Spartacus in 1960, Kubrick and Harris wanted to carve out their niche in the film industry, and what better way to do this, they thought, in the newly liberalising 1960s than to adapt a novel about rival paedophiles vying for the affections of a teenage girl?

Their adaptation became filled with Jewishness. Nabokov himself had put Jews in his novel possibly through the influence of his Jewish wife, Vera, who we now know played an instrumental role in his career in general and this novel in particular, even saving it from being burned by its author.

Lolita’s protagonist, Humbert Humbert, is composed of “a salad of racial genes”, as Nabokov wrote, and is constantly mistaken for being Jewish because of his foreign and hence exotic-sounding name, dark looks, European extraction, and manners. He is therefore a victim of the type of genteel antisemitism and various racial slurs prevalent in postwar America.

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