Career Highlights: Pandora's Box, The Pursuit of Happiness, Confessions of a Nazi Spy
First Major Screen Credit: Pandora's Box (1929)
Biography
Born in Prague, Francis Lederer was trained at that Czechoslovakian city's Academy of Music and Academy of Dramatic Art. Frequently labelled a "gorgeous man" by the critical press of the time, it took a while for matinee idol Lederer to be taken seriously as an actor. Billed as Franz Lederer in most of his European films, the actor was fortunate enough to be associated with several powerhouse directors, among them G.W. Pabst (Pandora's Box, Atlantic). While appearing on Broadway in 1932, Lederer was "discovered" for Hollywood, where he accepted a string of leading-man assignments in such films as Man of Two Worlds (1934), Romance in Manhattan (1934) and One Rainy Afternoon (1936). His cinematic stock in trade at the time was the outgoing, slightly naïve foreigner at the mercy of aggressive, acrimonious Americans or Britishers. One of his best screen characterizations was the disgruntled German-American bundist in Confessions of a Nazi Spy (1939), which won him the personal praise of his co-star Edward G. Robinson, who wasn't accustomed to handing out empty compliments. As Lederer grew older, he added villains, continental cads and jaundiced cynics to his repertoire; he even played a world-weary vampire in 1958's The Return of Dracula. An extremely wealthy man thanks to his real-estate holdings, Francis Lederer left films altogether in 1959, busying himself with civic, political and philanthropic enterprises. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Lederer was born František Lederer to a Jewish family near Prague (then part of Austria-Hungary), he was raised bilingually and
accordingly also used the German form of his name, Franz Lederer. He first worked
for the stage, but in the late 1920s started his movie career. When the political situation
deteriorated in Germany in the early 1930s Lederer decided to
stay in the United States.
Lederer's final film appearance was in the 1959 film Terror Is a Man. He would continue
to make television appearances the next ten years in such shows as The
Untouchables, Ben Casey, Mission:
Impossible and That Girl. His final appearance was in a 1971 episode of
Night Gallery.
Francis Lederer worked until one week before his death at his self-founded American National Academy
of Performing Arts in Los Angeles. He died at age 100 in Palm Springs, California.
He was one of the last veterans of the Austro-Hungarian Empire from the First World
War.
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