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Heinz Rühmann

 
Actor: Heinz Rühmann
  • Born: Mar 07, 1902
  • Died: Oct 04, 1994
  • Occupation: Actor, Writer
  • Active: '30s-'60s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: Faraway, So Close!, Der Mann, Der Sherlock Holmes War, Gefundenes Fressen
  • First Major Screen Credit: Der Brave Suender (1931)

Biography

Diminutive German character actor Heinz Rühmann performed in over 100 films and, during his seven-decade career, was designated his country's most popular actor 12 times. A versatile performer, Rühmann was particularly adept at comedy and specialized in playing an idealized sort of average man, the so-called Good German, a man who inwardly thumbs his nose at the authority he outwardly tries to respect and who gets through even the stickiest situations on the strength of his cleverness.

Rühmann originally played leading men with the Munich Kammerspiele theater company in 1925 (he would continue to work occasionally on stage throughout his career). He made his feature film debut in The German Mother Heart (1926), but he didn't become a star until he appeared in his first talkie, Three From the Gas Station (1930). He made his directorial debut in 1938 with Lauter Lügen and, over the next two decades, directed five more features.

When the Nazis took over the German government in 1933, they pressured Rühmann to divorce his wife, Maria Bernheim, because she was Jewish. In a fashion typical of his film persona, rather than acquiesce fully, Rühmann helped her escape to Sweden. With the heat off, he continued his career. After the war, Rühmann and his wife reunited, publicly proclaiming on television that their breakup was solely due to political oppression.

The years after the war were difficult for Rühmann. Tired of being typecast, he founded Comedie, his own film company, in hopes of changing his image. But the public didn't want a change, the company failed, and the actor went back to what he did best. As a result, his popularity skyrocketed. Many still consider his best role to be the title one in The Captain From Koepenick (1956). Over the years, he received many German awards for excellence. In addition to his film and stage work, he often appeared on television, especially after the 1960s. Rühmann made his final screen appearance in Far Away, So Close (1993). He passed away the following year, at the age of 92. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
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Heinz Rühmann

Heinz Rühmann in 1937
Born Heinrich Wilhelm Rühmann
March 7, 1902(1902-03-07)
Essen, Germany
Died October 3, 1994 (aged 92)
Berg, Germany
Occupation actor

Heinrich Wilhelm "Heinz" Rühmann (March 7, 1902 – October 3, 1994) was a popular German film actor.

Contents

Life and work

Rühmann was born in Essen, Rhineland.

Rühmann's role in the 1930 movie Die Drei von der Tankstelle (Those Three from the Gas Station) led him to immediate stardom. He remained highly popular as a comedic actor (and sometimes singer) throughout the 1930s and early 1940s. Although he never supported the Nazi regime, he remained in Germany and continued to work during the Nazi period, as did his friend and colleague Hans Albers. In 1944, he starred in a nostalgic comedy of mistaken identities, Die Feuerzangenbowle, which must now be called the most popular film of his career, especially as a cult movie for students at university. Rühmann had a difficult time resuming his career after the war, but by the mid-1950s the former comedian had established himself again as a star, only this time as Germany's leading character actor.

In 1956, Rühmann starred in the title role of the internationally acclaimed picture Der Hauptmann von Köpenick (The Captain of Köpenick), the true story of a Prussian cobbler, Wilhelm Voigt, who dressed up as an army officer and took over the town hall in Köpenick. In the days of the German Empire, the army had an almost sacred status, and this cobbler embarrassed army officers and civil servants, who obeyed him without questioning. Rühmann was also the leading man in the 1960 film version of The Adventures of the Good Soldier Schweik, set during the First World War, after the novels of Czech author Jaroslav Hašek. In 1965, Rühmann was brought to Hollywood by producer Stanley Kramer for a supporting role in his all-star movie Ship of Fools.

Rühmann was a favorite actor of Holocaust diarist, Anne Frank, who pasted his picture on the wall of her room in her family's hiding place during the war, where it can still be seen today. The enormous range of Rühmann's popularity during the Nazi era is illustrated by the fact that he was also a favorite actor of Adolf Hitler and his propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels.

Rühmann died in Aufkirchen, Bavaria, in 1994. He also was buried there.

Awards

Filmography

Heinz Rühmann

Autobiography

Literature

  • Franz J. Görtz, Hans Sarkowicz: Heinz Rühmann 1902 - 1994. Der Schauspieler und sein Jahrhundert. Beck, München 2001, ISBN 3-406-48163-9
  • Torsten Körner: Ein guter Freund: Heinz Rühmann. Aufbau-Verlag, Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-7466-1925-4
  • Hans-Ulrich Prost: Das war Heinz Rühmann. Bastei, Bergisch Gladbach 1994, ISBN 3-404-61329-5
  • Fred Sellin: Ich brech die Herzen..., das Leben des Heinz Rühmann. Rowohlt, Reinbek 2001, ISBN 3-498-06349-9
  • Gregor Ball, Eberhard Spiess, Joe Hembus (Hrsg.): Heinz Rühmann und seine Filme. Goldmann, München 1985, 3-442-10213-8
  • Hans Hellmut Kirst, Mathias Forster, et al.: Das große Heinz Rühmann Buch. Naumann & Göbel / VEMAG, Köln o.J., ISBN 3-625-10529-2

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Heinz Rühmann" Read more