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Frederick Valk

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Occupation
  
Actor

Spouse
  
Diana Valk (m. 1941–1956)

Role
  
Actor

Name
  
Frederick Valk

Years active
  
1920s–1956



Born
  
10 June 1895 (
1895-06-10
)
Hamburg, Germany

Died
  
July 23, 1956, London, United Kingdom

Movies
  
Dead of Night, The Flanagan Boy, The Colditz Story, Hotel Reserve, Magic Fire

Similar People
  
Robert Hamer, Basil Dearden, Alberto Cavalcanti, Reginald Le Borg, Charles Crichton

Frederick Valk (10 June 1895 – 23 July 1956) was a German-born Jewish stage and screen actor of Czech Jewish descent who fled to the United Kingdom in the late 1930s to escape Nazi persecution, and subsequently became a naturalised British citizen. Despite making his later career in the English-speaking world, Valk never attempted to shed his heavy Mitteleuropa accent in either his stage or film work, and it became a trademark, particularly in film where he was often the first choice for a role which called for a German or Central European accent.

Contents

Stage career

Valk made his first appearance on the London stage in 1939, going on to play in numerous productions of classic drama including leading roles in Shakespeare, with his performances as Shylock in The Merchant of Venice and in the title role of Othello attracting critical admiration. In 1946 he won the Ellen Terry Award for best actor for his performance in Fyodor Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov.

Valk also toured overseas, in the 1950s performing at the fledgling Stratford Shakespeare Festival in Canada. When challenged by local journalists that as a Jew he should feel uneasy about playing Shylock, he replied that the assertion made no more sense than saying a Scotsman should baulk at playing Macbeth, that he in fact found a strong pro-Semitic message in the play and that he deplored "that people are beset with prejudices of all sorts and can't bring themselves to wipe their eyes and read and think". Critics responded with fulsome praise for his performance: "Mr Valk works in the grandest continental manner...every gesture breathes intelligence and every vocal note is true". The Canadian Jewish Congress however, who had protested vociferously over the inclusion of the play in the Stratford programme, loathed the production, stating: "We were assured...in advance of the staging of the play that it would not emerge an anti-Semitic production, that Frederick Valk would rise to great heights as Shylock. These predictions did not materialize: the play remains the vilest anti-Semitic production on record."

Film career

Valk's strong accent led somewhat ironically to his frequently being cast in film as German officers or functionaries, credited under such titles as "Kommandant", "Gestapo Officer", or "Sturmführer". He also found a niche in a succession of roles as Central European doctors or psychiatrists. Valk's stage reputation meant that the quality of films in which he was offered parts was generally high, with his filmography containing more prestige productions than B-movies and programmers. He never received top-billing in films, but was happy to accept supporting roles in good screen productions. High-profile films in which he featured include The Young Mr Pitt and Thunder Rock (both 1942), A Matter of Life and Death (1946), Mrs. Fitzherbert (1947), The Magic Box (1951), and The Colditz Story (1955). His most famous screen appearance came in 1945, with the role of the sceptical psychoanalyst Dr. Van Straaten in the classic Dead of Night.

Death

Aged 61, Valk died suddenly in London on 23 July 1956 during the run of the play Romanoff and Juliet in which he was appearing. His wife Diana subsequently wrote a memoir entitled Shylock for a Summer in which she revealed that Valk had been planning to write an autobiography at the time of his death, and had written a note to himself stating: "I don't want to talk at length of my histrionic adventures – the idea of this is to draw a curve of a life, lived in shadow and sun but lived with gratefulness."

Filmography

Actor
1956
Zarak as
Haji Khan - Zarak's Father
1956
Aggie (TV Series) as
Prefect of Police
- Snap Judgment (1956) - Prefect of Police
1956
Wicked as They Come as
Mr. Reisner
1955
What Price Freedom (Short) as
Commissar Krause
1955
Encounter (TV Series)
- The Glass Empire (1955)
1955
Magic Fire as
Minister von Moll
1955
Secret Venture as
Otto Weber
1955
Folio (TV Series) as
Othello (segment 'Othello')
- Betrayal (1955) - Othello (segment 'Othello')
1955
I Am a Camera as
Doctor
1955
The Colditz Story as
Kommandant
1954
Rheingold Theatre (TV Series) as
Donaffrio / Vanderhof
- The Mix-Up (1954) - Donaffrio
- The Rehearsal (1954) - Vanderhof
1953
Break to Freedom as
Camp Kommandant
1953
Wednesday Theatre (TV Series) as
Prince Patiomkin
- Great Catherine (1953) - Prince Patiomkin
1953
Bad Blonde as
Giuseppe Vecchi
1953
Never Let Me Go as
Kuragin
1953
Ho scelto l'amore
1952
Mr. Potts Goes to Moscow as
Rakov
1951
Outcast of the Islands as
Hudig
1951
The Magic Box as
Maurice Guttenburg
1949
Dear Mr. Prohack as
Dr. Viega
1948
Saraband as
The Elector Ernest Augustus
1947
Mrs. Fitzherbert as
King George III
1946
A Matter of Life and Death as
RAF Chaplain (uncredited)
1946
Thunder Rock (TV Movie) as
Dr. Stephen Kurtz
1945
Frenzy as
Dr. Ivan Krasner
1945
Dead of Night as
Dr. Van Straaten
1944
Hotel Reserve as
Emil Schimler alias Paul Heimberger
1942
Thunder Rock as
Dr. Stefan Kurtz
1942
The Young Mr. Pitt as
Minor Role (uncredited)
1941
Suicide Squadron as
Polish Bomber Commander
1941
Death Cell as
Dr. Moger
1941
Gasbags as
Sturmfuehrer
1940
Neutral Port as
Captain Traumer
1940
Night Train to Munich as
Gestapo Officer (as Fritz Valk)
1939
The Torso Murder Mystery as
German Ambassador (uncredited)
1927
Der Sohn der Hagar
Self
1955
Fighting Words (TV Series) as
Self - Panelist
- Episode dated 4 September 1955 (1955) - Self - Panelist
1946
Man: One Family (Documentary short) as
Saul

References

Frederick Valk Wikipedia