Conrad Veidt
Conrad Veidt | |
---|---|
in 1941 | |
Born | Hans Walter Konrad Weidt (1893-01-22)22 January 1893 Berlin, Germany |
Died | 3 April 1943(1943-04-03) (aged 50) Hollywood, United States |
Cause of death | Heart Attack |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1917–1943 |
Spouse(s) | Gussy Holl (m. 1918; div. 1922) Felicitas Radke (m. 1923; div. 1932) Ilona Prager (m. 1933) |
Children | 1 |
Hans Walter Conrad Veidt (/vaɪt/; 22 January 1893 – 3 April 1943) was a German actor best remembered for his roles in films such as Different from the Others (1919), The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920), and The Man Who Laughs (1928). After a successful career in German silent films, where he was one of the best-paid stars of Ufa, he was forced to leave Germany in 1933 after the Nazis came to power, along with his new Jewish wife. They settled in Britain, where he participated in a number of films, including The Thief of Bagdad (1940), before emigrating to the United States around 1941, which led to him having the role of Major Strasser in Casablanca (1942).
Contents
1 Early life
2 Career
3 Emigration
3.1 Later career in the US
4 Personal life
5 Complete filmography
6 References
7 External links
Early life
Veidt was born in a bourgeois district of Berlin, Germany, the son of Amalie Marie (née Gohtz) and Phillip Heinrich Veidt.[1] (Some biographies wrongly state that he was born in Potsdam, probably on the basis of an early claim on his part.) His family was Lutheran.[1]
In 1914, Veidt met actress Lucie Mannheim, with whom he began a relationship. Later in the year Veidt was conscripted into the German Army during World War I. In 1915, he was sent to the Eastern Front as a non-commissioned officer and took part in the Battle of Warsaw. He contracted jaundice and pneumonia, and had to be evacuated to a hospital on the Baltic Sea. While recuperating, he received a letter from Mannheim telling him that she had found work at a theatre in Libau. Intrigued, Veidt applied for the theatre as well. As his condition had not improved, the army allowed him to join the theatre so that he could entertain the troops. While performing at the theatre, he ended his relationship with Mannheim. In late 1916, he was re-examined by the Army and deemed unfit for service; he was given a full discharge in January 1917. Veidt returned to Berlin to pursue his acting career.[2][3][4]
Career
From 1916 until his death, Veidt appeared in more than 100 films. One of his earliest performances was as the murderous somnambulist Cesare in director Robert Wiene's The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920), a classic of German Expressionist cinema, with Werner Krauss and Lil Dagover. His starring role in The Man Who Laughs (1928), as a disfigured circus performer whose face is cut into a permanent grin, provided the (visual) inspiration for the Batman villain the Joker, created in 1940 by Bill Finger. Veidt also starred in other silent horror films such as The Hands of Orlac (1924), another film directed by Robert Wiene, The Student of Prague (1926) and Waxworks (1924) in which he played Ivan the Terrible.
Veidt also appeared in Magnus Hirschfeld's film Anders als die Andern (Different from the Others, 1919), one of the earliest films to sympathetically portray homosexuality, although the characters in it do not end up happily.[5] He had a leading role in Germany's first talking picture, Das Land ohne Frauen (Land Without Women, 1929).
He moved to Hollywood in the late 1920s and made a few films, but the advent of talking pictures and his difficulty with speaking English led him to return to Germany.[6] During this period, he lent his expertise to tutoring aspiring performers, one of whom was the later American character actress Lisa Golm.
Emigration
Veidt fervently opposed the Nazi regime and donated a major portion of his personal fortune to Britain to assist in the war effort. Soon after the Nazi Party took power in Germany, by March 1933, Joseph Goebbels was purging the film industry of anti-Nazi sympathizers and Jews, and so in 1933, a week after Veidt's marriage to Ilona Prager, a Jewish woman, the couple emigrated to Britain before any action could be taken against either of them.
Goebbels had imposed a "racial questionnaire" in which everyone employed in the German film industry had to declare their "race" to continue to work. When Veidt was filling in the questionnaire, he answered the question about what his Rasse (race) was by writing that he was a Jude (Jew).[7] Veidt was not Jewish, but his wife was Jewish, and Veidt would not renounce the woman he loved.[7] Additionally, Veidt, who was opposed to anti-Semitism, wanted to show solidarity with the German Jewish community, who were rapidly being stripped of their rights as German citizens in the spring of 1933. As one of Germany's most popular actors, Veidt had already been informed that if he was prepared to divorce his wife and declare his support for the new regime, he could continue to act in Germany. Several other leading actors who had been opposed to the Nazis before 1933 switched allegiances. In answering the questionnaire by stating he was a Jew, Veidt rendered himself unemployable in Germany, but stated this sacrifice was worth it as there was nothing in the world that would compel him to break with his wife.[7] Upon hearing about what Veidt had done, Goebbels remarked that he would never act in Germany again.
After arriving in Britain, he perfected his English and starred in the title role of the original anti-Nazi version of Lion Feuchtwanger's novel, Jew Süss (1934) directed by German-born US director Lothar Mendes and produced by Michael Balcon for Gaumont-British. He became a British citizen by 1938. By this point multi-lingual, Veidt made films in both French with expatriate French directors and in English, including three of his best-known roles for British director Michael Powell in The Spy in Black (1939), Contraband (1940) and The Thief of Bagdad (1940).
Later career in the US
By 1941, he and Ilona had moved to Hollywood to assist in the British effort in making American films that might persuade the then-neutral and still isolationist US to join the war against the Nazis, who had conquered all of continental Europe and were bombing the United Kingdom at the time. Before leaving the United Kingdom, Veidt gave his life savings to the British government to help finance the war effort.[5] Realizing that Hollywood would most likely typecast him in Nazi roles, he had his contract mandate that they must always be villains.[5]
He starred in a few films, such as George Cukor's A Woman's Face (1941) where he received billing just under Joan Crawford's and Nazi Agent (1942), in which he had a dual role as both an aristocratic German Nazi spy and as the man's twin brother, an anti-Nazi American. His best-known Hollywood role was as the sinister Major Heinrich Strasser in Casablanca (1942), a film which was written and began pre-production before the United States entered World War II.
Personal life
Conrad Veidt married three times: he first married Augusta Holl, a cabaret entertainer known as "Gussy", on 18 June 1918. They divorced four years later. Gussy later married German actor Emil Jannings. Veidt's second wife Felicitas Radke was from an aristocratic German family; they married in 1923. Their daughter, Vera Viola Maria, called Viola, was born on 10 August 1925. He last married Ilona Prager, a Hungarian Jew called Lily, in 1933; they were together until his death.[citation needed]
Conrad Veidt died on 3 April 1943 of a massive heart attack while playing golf at the Riviera Country Club in Los Angeles with singer Arthur Fields and his personal physician, Dr. Bergman, who pronounced him dead on the scene.[5][8] Veidt was 50 years old. In 1998, his ashes were placed in a niche of the columbarium at the Golders Green Crematorium in north London.[9][10]
Complete filmography
Der Weg des Todes (1916) as Rolf
Wenn Tote sprechen (1917) as Richard von Worth
Furcht (Fear) (1917) as Indian Priest
Die Seeschlacht (1917)
Der Spion (1917)
Das Rätsel von Bangalor (The Mystery of Bangalore) (1918) as Dinja
Die Serenyi (1918)
Das Tagebuch einer Verlorenen (1918 short) as Dr. Julius
Jettchen Geberts Geschichte (Jettchen Gebert's Story) (1918) as Doktor Friedrich Köstling
Colomba (1918) as Henrik van Rhyn
Es werde Licht! 4. Teil: Sündige Mütter (1918) as Herr Kramer
The Story of Dida Ibsen (1918) as Erik Norrensen
Henriette Jacoby (1918) as Doktor Friedrich Köstling
Opfer der Gesellschaft (1918) as Prosecutor Chrysander
Der nicht vom Weibe Geborene (1918) as Satan
Die Japanerin (1919) as The Secretary
Die Prostitution (1919) as Alfred Werner
Around the World in Eighty Days (1919) as Phineas Fogg
Peer Gynt - 2. Teil: Peer Gynts Wanderjahre und Tod (1919) as Ein fremder Passagier
Peer Gynt (1919) as Ein fremder Passagier
Anders als die Andern (Different from the Others) (1919) as Paul Körner
Die Okarina (1919) as Jaap
Die Prostitution, 2. Teil - Die sich verkaufen (1919) as Alfred Werner
Prinz Kuckuck - Die Höllenfahrt eines Wollüstlings (1919) as Karl Kraker
Wahnsinn (Madness) (1919) as Bankier Lorenzen
Unheimliche Geschichten (1919) as Der Tod (framing story) / The stranger (ep.1) / The assassin (ep.2) / Traveller (ep.3) / Club president (ep.4) / Husband (ep.5)
Nocturne of Love (1919) as Frederic Chopin
Die Mexikanerin (1919)
Der Graf von Cagliostro (The Count of Cagliostro) (1920) as The Minister
Nachtgestalten (Figures of the Night) (1920) as Clown
Satanas (Satan) (1920) as Lucifer / Hermit / Gubetta / Grodski
Opium (1920) as Dr. Richard Armstrong Jr.
Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari (The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari) (1920) as Cesare
Der Reigen (The Merry-Go-Round) (1920) as Petre Karvan
Patience (1920) as Sir Percy Parker
Die Nacht auf Goldenhall (1920) as Lord Reginald Golden / Harald Golden
Die Augen der Welt (The Eyes of the World) (1920) as Julianne's Lover, Johannes Kay
Kurfürstendamm (1920) as Teufel
Der Januskopf (The Head of Janus) (1920) as Dr. Warren / Mr. O'Connor
Moriturus (1920)
Die Sippschaft (1920)
Abend – Nacht – Morgen (Evening – Night – Morning) (1920) as Brilburn - Maud's brother
Manolescus Memoiren (Manolescu's Memoirs) (1920) as Manolescu
Weltbrand (1920) as Christian Wahnschaffe
Künstlerlaunen (Temperamental Artist) (1920) as Arpad Czaslo
Menschen im Rausch (1921) as Professor Munk, Komponist
Das Geheimnis von Bombay (The Secret of Bombay) (1921) as Dichter Tossi
Der Gang in die Nacht (Journey into the Night) (1921) as Der Maler
Sehnsucht (Desire) (1921) as Ivan - a young Russian dancer
Liebestaumel (1921) as Jalenko, the Gypsy
Die Liebschaften des Hektor Dalmore (The Love Affairs of Hector Dalmore) (1921) as Hektor Dalmore
Christian Wahnschaffe, 2. Teil - Die Flucht aus dem goldenen Kerker (1921) as Christian Wahnschaffe
Landstraße und Großstadt (1921) as Raphael, der Geiger
Danton (1921)
Lady Hamilton (1921) as Lord Nelson
Das indische Grabmal (The Indian Tomb) (1921; released in two parts) as Ayan III / Fürst von Eschnapur / The Majarajah of Bengal
Der Leidensweg der Inge Krafft (1921) as Hendryck Overland
Lucrezia Borgia (1922) as Cesare Borgia
Paganini (1923) as Nicolo Paganini
Wilhelm Tell (William Tell) (1923) as Hermann Gessler
Glanz gegen Glück (1923) as The Count
Bride of Vengeance (1923) as Cesare Borgia
Carlos und Elisabeth (Carlos and Elisabeth) (1924) as Don Carlos
Orlacs Hände (The Hands of Orlac) (1924) as Paul Orlac
Das Wachsfigurenkabinett (Waxworks) (1924) as Ivan the Terrible
Nju - Eine unverstandene Frau (Husbands or Lovers) (1924) as Der Liebhaber, ein Dichter
Le comte Kostia (Count Kostia) (1925) as Comte Kostia
Schicksal (Destiny) (1925) as Graf L. M. Vranna
Ingmarsarvet (1925) as Hellgum
Der Geiger von Florenz (The Fiddler of Florence) (1926) as Renées Vater
Kreuzzug des Weibes (The Woman's Crusade) (1926) as Wenzel Schellenberg / Michael Schellenberg
Liebe macht blind (Love Is Blind) (1926) as Dr. Lamare
Dürfen wir schweigen? (Should We Be Silent?) (1926) as Paul Hartwig, Maler
Kreuzzug des Weibes (1926) as Der Staatsanwalt
Der Student von Prag (Der Student von Prag) (1926) as Balduin, ein Student
Die Flucht in die Nacht (The Flight in the Night) (1926) as Heinrich IV
The Beloved Rogue (1927) as King Louis XI
A Man's Past (1927) as Paul La Roche
Gesetze der Liebe (1927)
The Man Who Laughs (1928) as Gwynplaine / Lord Clancharlie
Das Land ohne Frauen (Land Without Women) (1929) as Dick Ashton, telegrapher
The Last Performance (1929) as Erik the Great
Die letzte Kompagnie (The Last Company) (1930) as Hauptmann Burk
Menschen im Käfig (People in the Cage) (1930) as Kingsley
The Great Longing (1930) as Himself
Der Mann, der den Mord beging (The Man Who Murdered) (1931) as Marquis de Sévigné
Die Nacht der Entscheidung (1931) as General Gregori Platoff
Der Kongreß tanzt (The Congress Dances) (1931) as Prince Metternich
Die andere Seite (The Other Side) (1931) as Hauptmann Stanhope
Rasputin, Dämon der Frauen (Rasputin, Demon with Women) (1932) as Grigori Rasputin
Congress Dances (1932) as Prince Metternich
Der schwarze Husar (The Black Hussar) (1932) as Rittmeister Hansgeorg von Hochberg
Rome Express (1932) as Zurta
Ich und die Kaiserin (The Empress and I) (1933) as Marquis de Pontignac
F.P.1 (1933) as Maj. Ellissen
I Was a Spy (1933) as Commandant Oberaertz
The Wandering Jew (1933) as Matathias
Wilhelm Tell (William Tell) (1934) as Gessler (both German- and English-language versions)
Jew Suss (1934) as Josef Süss Oppenheimer
Bella Donna (1934) as Mahmoud Baroudi
The Passing of the Third Floor Back (1935) as The Stranger
King of the Damned (1935) as Convict 83
Dark Journey (1937) as Baron Karl Von Marwitz
Under the Red Robe (1937) as Gil de Berault
Tempête sur l'Asie (Storm Over Asia) (1938) as Erich Keith
The Chess Player (1938) as Le baron de Kempelen
The Spy in Black (1939) as Captain Hardt
Contraband (1940) as Capt. Andersen
The Thief of Bagdad (1940) as Jaffar
Escape (1940) as General Kurt von Kolb
A Woman's Face (1941) as Torsten Barring
Whistling in the Dark (1941) as Joseph Jones
The Men in Her Life (1941) as Stanislas Rosing
All Through the Night (1942) as Ebbing
Nazi Agent (1942) as Otto Becker / Baron Hugo Von Detner
Casablanca (1942) as Major Heinrich Strasser
Above Suspicion (1943) as Hassert Seidel
References
^ ab Allen, Jarry. Conrad Veidt: from Caligari to Casablanca. boxwood. p. 5. ISBN 978-0940168046..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}
^ "Conrad Veidt: The Cinema's Master". The Conrad Veidt Society.
^ "Conrad Veidt". A History of Horror.
^ "Conrad Veidt: Cinema's Dark Prince, 1893–1943". Monster Zine. October–December 2000. Archived from the original on 7 February 2005.
^ abcd "Meet Conrad Veidt, Badass". Badass Digest. 9 July 2013.
^ Turner Classic Movies Conrad Veidt
^ abc Hull, David Stewart Film in the Third Reich, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1973 page 90.
^ "Conrad Veidt Obituary," Los Angeles Times, 1943
^ "Newspaper reports of reinterrment". Conrad Veidt Society. Retrieved 23 November 2017.
^ "Conrad Veidt". Find A Grave. Retrieved 23 November 2017.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Conrad Veidt. |
Conrad Veidt on IMDb
Conrad Veidt at the TCM Movie Database
Conrad Veidt at Find a Grave
Pictures of Conrad Veidt.- Conrad Veidt – The German-Hollywood Connection
- Pictures of Conrad Veidt
- The Conrad Veidt Home Page
- Conrad Veidt Biography