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Francis Lederer

Francis Lederer

cumpleaños: 1899-11-05 | lugar de nacimiento: Prague, Bohemia, Austria-Hungary [now Czech Republic]

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Francis Lederer (November 6, 1899 – May 25, 2000) was a Czech-born film and stage actor with a successful career, first in Europe, then in the United States. His original name was František Lederer. Lederer's first American movies were Man of Two Worlds (1934), Romance in Manhattan (1934), with Ginger Rogers, The Gay Deception (1935), with Frances Dee, and One Rainy Afternoon (1936). He was cast as the lead with Katharine Hepburn in the 1935 film Break of Hearts, but the producers replaced him with Charles Boyer. It was Irving Thalberg's plan to make Lederer "the biggest star in Hollywood" but the death of Thalberg ended this possibility. Although he continued to play leads occasionally – notably when he was a playboy in Mitchell Leisen's Midnight with Claudette Colbert and John Barrymore in 1939 – in the late 1930s Lederer began to expand his character parts, even playing villains. Edward G. Robinson praised Lederer's performance as a German American Bundist in Confessions of a Nazi Spy in 1939, and he earned plaudits for his portrayal of a fascist in The Man I Married (1940) with Joan Bennett. He also played Count Dracula for The Return of Dracula in 1958. Throughout his career, Lederer, who studied with Elia Kazan at the Actors Studio in New York City, continued to take stage acting seriously, and he performed often both in New York and elsewhere. He appeared in stage productions of Golden Boy (1937), Seventh Heaven (1939), No Time for Comedy (1939), in which he replaced Laurence Olivier, The Play's the Thing (1942), A Doll's House (1944), Arms and the Man (1950), The Sleeping Prince (1956) and The Diary of Anne Frank (1958). Although he took a break from making films in 1941, in order to concentrate on his stage work, he returned to the silver screen in 1944, appearing in Voice in the Wind and The Bridge of San Luis Rey, and in films such as Jean Renoir's The Diary of a Chambermaid (1946) and Million Dollar Weekend (1948). He took another break from Hollywood in 1950, after making Surrender (1950), and returned in 1956 with Lisbon and the light comedy The Ambassador's Daughter. His final film appearance was in Terror Is a Man in 1959. During the 1950s, he served as honorary mayor of Canoga Park. He would continue to make television appearances for the next 10 years in such shows as Sally, The Untouchables, Ben Casey, Blue Light, Mission: Impossible and That Girl. His final television appearance occurred in a 1971 episode of Rod Serling's Night Gallery called "The Devil Is Not Mocked". In it, he reprised his role as Dracula from The Return of Dracula.

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Lista de obras

año
título

rol

1958
The Return of Dracula

as    Count Dracula

1958
Maracaibo

as    Miguel Orlando

1956
A Filha do Embaixador

as    Prince Nicholas Obelski

1956
Lisboa

as    Seraphim

1953
Stolen Identity

as    Claude Manelli

1950
Missão de Vingança

as    Baron Rocco de Greffi

1950
Surrender

as    Henry Vaan

1948
Million Dollar Weekend

as    Alan Marker

1946
The Madonna's Secret

as    James Harlan Corbin

1946
Segredos de Alcova

as    Joseph

1941
Puddin' Head

as    Prince Karl

1939
Meia-Noite

as    Jacques Picot

1939
Confissões de um Espião Nazista

as    Kurt Schneider

1938
As Jóias da Coroa

as    Michael Lanyard

1935
Romance em Nova York

as    Karel Novak

1935
The Gay Deception

as    Sandro

1933
Ihre Majestät die Liebe

as    Fred von Wellingen

1930
Susanne macht Ordnung

as    Robert

1929
A Caixa de Pandora

as    Alwa Schön

1929
Meineid

as    Karl Fenn

1929
Die wunderbare Lüge der Nina Petrowna

as    Lt. Michael Rostof