
Fritz Kortner
Acting
Born 1892-05-12 · Vienna - Austria
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Fritz Kortner (12 May 1892 – 22 July 1970) was an Austrian-born stage and film actor and theatre director. Kortner was born in Vienna as Fritz Nathan Kohn. He studied at the Vienna Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. After graduating, he joined Max Reinhardt in Berlin in 1911 and then Leopold Jessner in 1916. Also in that year he made his first appearance in a silent film. He became one of Germany's best known character actors. His speciality was playing sinister and threatening roles, though he also appeared in the title role of 1930's Dreyfus. With the coming to power of the Nazis, Kortner, being Jewish, chose to flee Germany in 1933. He emigrated to the United States, where he found work as a character actor and theatre director for a time before returning to Germany in 1949. Upon his return, he became noted for his innovative staging and direction, particularly of classics such as his Richard III (1964) in which the king crawls over piles of corpses at the end. Kortner died in Munich. Description above from the Wikipedia article Fritz Kortner, licensed under CC-BY-SA,full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Filmography

Hitler: A Career
Jul 8, 1977

Fritz Kortner spricht Monologe für eine Schallplatte
Jul 5, 1966

Fünfter Akt, siebente Szene. Fritz Kortner probt Kabale und Liebe
May 19, 1965

Bluebeard
Nov 1, 1951

Epilogue
Sep 28, 1950

The Last Illusion
Apr 19, 1949

The Vicious Circle
Jul 21, 1948

Berlin Express
May 1, 1948

The Brasher Doubloon
Feb 6, 1947

The Razor's Edge
Nov 19, 1946

Somewhere in the Night
Jun 12, 1946

The Wife of Monte Cristo
Apr 22, 1946

The Hitler Gang
Apr 26, 1944

The Strange Death of Adolf Hitler
Sep 10, 1943

The Eternal Jew
Nov 28, 1940

Midnight Menace
May 4, 1937

The Crouching Beast
Aug 29, 1935

Abdul the Damned
Aug 5, 1935

Little Friend
Nov 18, 1934

Evensong
Sep 3, 1934

Chu Chin Chow
May 1, 1934

The Murderer Dmitri Karamazov
Feb 5, 1931

Danton
Jan 21, 1931

The Love Storm
Nov 21, 1930

The Great Passion
Aug 24, 1930

Dreyfus
Aug 15, 1930

The Other
Aug 11, 1930

Atlantic
Oct 28, 1929

The Ship of Lost Men
Sep 17, 1929

The Woman One Longs For
Apr 29, 1929