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Horst Buchholz

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Cause of death
  
Pneumonia

Spouse
  
Myriam Bru (m. 1958–2003)

Role
  
Actor

Name
  
Horst Buchholz

Years active
  
1951–2003


Horst Buchholz Pictures amp Photos of Horst Buchholz IMDb

Full Name
  
Horst Werner Buchholz

Born
  
4 December 1933 (
1933-12-04
)
Berlin, Germany

Children
  
Christopher Buchholz, Beatrice Buchholz

Parents
  
Maria Hasenkamp, Hugo Buchholz

Movies
  
Similar People
  
Brad Dexter, Myriam Bru, Christopher Buchholz, Robert Vaughn, Nicoletta Braschi

Died
  
3 March 2003 (aged 69) Berlin, Germany

Horst Werner Buchholz (December 4, 1933 – March 3, 2003) was a German actor, best known in English-speaking countries for his roles in The Magnificent Seven, in which he played Chico, Fanny, and the Billy Wilder comedy One, Two, Three. Worldwide, from 1951 to 2002, he appeared in more than sixty feature films. During his youth he was sometimes called "the German James Dean".

Contents

Horst Buchholz Horst Buchholz Wikiwand

Olegar fedoro horst buchholz in r quiem for granada


Eternal Myriam Bru and Horst Buchholz


Life and work

Horst Buchholz Horst Buchholz Der fremde schne Deutsche Feuilleton FAZ

Horst Buchholz was born in Berlin, the son of Maria Hasenkamp. He never knew his biological father, but took the surname of his stepfather Hugo Buchholz, a shoemaker, whom his mother married in 1938. His half-sister Heidi, born in 1941, gave him the nickname "Hotte", which he kept for the rest of his life. During World War II he was evacuated to Silesia and at the end of the war found himself in a foster home in Czechoslovakia. He returned to Berlin as soon as he could. He barely finished his schooling before seeking theater work, first appearing on stage in 1949. He soon left his childhood home in East Berlin to work in West Berlin. He established himself in the theater, notably the Schiller Theater, and also on radio.

Horst Buchholz httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenccbHor

Able to speak several languages, Buchholz expanded into film work by doing foreign-language voice dubbing. In 1951 he started getting small uncredited on-screen parts. He had a marginally larger role in Marianne (1954), directed by Julien Duvivier, then won a Best Actor award at Cannes for his part as Mischa Bjelkin in Helmut Käutner's Himmel ohne Sterne (1955). His youthful good looks next brought him a part in Die Halbstarken (1956), which made him a teen favorite in Germany; an English-dubbed version was released in the US as Teenage Wolfpack, with Buchholz billed as "Henry Bookholt" and promoted as a new James Dean. Full-fledged stardom resulted from Confessions of Felix Krull (1957), in which he played the lead; it was directed by Kurt Hoffmann and based on the novel by Thomas Mann.

Horst Buchholz European Film Star Postcards Horst Buchholz

In 1958 Buchholz married French actress Myriam Bru. They had two children.

Horst Buchholz Horst Buchholz Flickr Photo Sharing

Buchholz began appearing in English-language films in 1959, when he co-starred in the British production Tiger Bay with Hayley Mills. He followed that with The Magnificent Seven (1960), the romantic drama Fanny (1961) with Leslie Caron and Maurice Chevalier, and the Berlin-set comedy One, Two, Three (1961), directed by Billy Wilder. Though filmed in Mexico, France and Germany respectively, these were Hollywood productions and Buchholz had begun a period of residence in Los Angeles. He proved to be popular with American audiences, but several missed opportunities thwarted the upward trajectory of his career and it began to stall. Filming schedule conflicts prevented him from accepting the offered roles of Tony in West Side Story (1961) and Sherif Ali in Lawrence of Arabia (1962). Later, on the advice of his agent, like many others who were asked, he turned down the starring role in A Fistful of Dollars (1964).

A versatile actor, Buchholz appeared in comedies, horror films, wartime dramas and other genres, but his best work was mostly behind him by the mid-1960s. The quality of the films in which he appeared diminished, with poorly regarded made-for-television films and episodic television making up the majority of his appearances during the 1970s. One exception was Le Sauveur (1971), directed by French film critic Michel Mardore. In a few of his late-career films he was again given meatier roles in more substantial fare, starring in the bleak And the Violins Stopped Playing (1988) and portraying Dr. Lessing in Roberto Benigni's Oscar-winning Life Is Beautiful (1997).

Usually reticent about his private life, in a 2000 interview in the German magazine Bunte Buchholz publicly came out, saying "Yes, I also love men. Ultimately, I'm bisexual. ... I have always lived my life the way I wanted." He explained that he and his wife of nearly 42 years had a stable and enduring arrangement, with her life centered in Paris and his in Berlin, the city that he loved. Their son Christopher Buchholz, also an actor and the producer of the feature-length documentary Horst Buchholz...Mein Papa (2005), has publicly acknowledged his father's bisexuality.

Buchholz died unexpectedly at the age of sixty-nine in the Berlin Charité from pneumonia that developed after an operation for a hip fracture. Berlin was the city to which his loyalty was constant, and he was buried there in the Friedhof Heerstraße.

Dubbing Roles

  • Lampwick - Pinocchio (1940 film) (1951 dub)
  • References

    Horst Buchholz Wikipedia


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