Slezak, Walter [Leo] (1902–83), actor and singer. The son of the famed opera singer Leo Slezak, he was born in Vienna and had a successful career there in musicals before being brought to this country to appear in the musical Meet My Sister (1930). Actually, Lee Shubert had seen Oscar Karlweis in a show, but when an emissary was sent to engage him, Slezak was substituting and was signed by mistake. The pudgy, beady‐eyed actor proved a surprise success and was seen in numerous plays and musicals, the most memorable being Music in the Air (1932), in which he introduced “I've Told Every Little Star”; I Married an Angel (1938); My Three Angels (1953); and Fanny (1954). He was long popular in films. Autobiography: What Time's the Next Swan?, 1962.
Career Highlights: The Pirate, Lifeboat, The Yellow Cab Man
First Major Screen Credit: Sodom and Gomorrah (1922)
Biography
The son of legendary opera star Leo Slezak, Walter Slezak was a medical student before settling into the comfortable position of bank clerk. Slezak was coerced by his friend, actor/director Michael Curtiz, to accept an acting role in Curtiz's 1922 spectacular Sodom and Gomorrah -- and with this film, Slezak's career in the world of finance came to an end. Those familiar with Walter Slezak only as the corpulent supporting player in such films as Sinbad the Sailor (1947), People Will Talk (1951), and Emil and the Detectives (1964) will be surprised upon viewing Slezak's appearances as a slim, romantic leading man in his German silent films. Unable to keep his weight under control, Slezak decided around 1930 to become a character actor. He made his Broadway debut in the 1930 production Meet My Sister. After 12 years of stage work, Slezak was cast in his first American film, 1942's Once Upon a Honeymoon, playing the fifth-columnist husband of social-climbing Ginger Rogers. Equally adept at comedy and villainy, Slezak was able to combine these two extremes in such films as The Princess and the Pirate (1944) and The Inspector General (1949). Occasionally returning to the stage in the 1950s, Slezak won a Tony award for his portrayal of Cesar in the 1955 musical Fanny, and in 1957 followed in his father's footsteps by singing at the Metropolitan Opera. His TV assignments included the role of the Clock King on Batman (1966-1967). Slezak's 1962 autobiography What Time Is the Next Swan? derived its title from the punch line of an apocryphal story involving his father. At the age of 80, despondent over his many illnesses, Slezak committed suicide in his Beverly Hills home. Walter Slezak was the father of actress Erika Slezak, best known for her continuing role on the ABC soap opera One Life to Live. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Born in Vienna, Austria, the son of famed opera star Leo Slezak, he was a medical student and later a bank teller. He was talked into taking his first role, in the 1922Austrian filmSodom und Gomorrha, by his friend and the film's director, Michael Curtiz. In his early movie career, before he gained weight, Slezak was cast as a thin leading man in silent films. He also acted on the stage for many years, debuting on Broadway in 1930.
His autobiography, What Time's the Next Swan? was published in 1962. The book's title refers to an alleged incident in the career of his father, heldentenor Leo Slezak. During a performance in the title role of Lohengrin, the elder Slezak was supposed to finish his aria by stepping into a swan boat and then being pulled offstage. When a stagehand removed the boat prematurely, Slezak supposedly covered for the error by asking the audience "What Time's the Next Swan?".
Personal life
Walter married Johanna "Kaasi" Van Rijn on October 10, 1943. The couple had three children: Ingrid, Erika and Leo. Slezak's daughter Erika went on to become an accomplished actress and has starred on the long-running soap opera One Life to Live since 1971. On various occasions, Walter would join scenes with his daughter, who plays long-running character, Victoria Lord Davidson playing family friend Lazlo Braedecker.
On April 21, 1983, shortly before his 81st birthday, Slezak died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Slezak was reportedly despondent over his advanced physical illness.[1] He is buried at Egern Friedof in Munich, Germany.[2]