Paul Henreid
Paul Henreid was an Austrian-British-American actor, director, producer, and writer. He is best remembered for two film roles: Victor Laszlo in Casablanca and Jerry Durrance in Now, Voyager, both released in 1942.
Early life
Born Paul Georg Julius Hernried in the city of Trieste, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Henreid was the son of Maria-Luise and Karl Alphons Hernried, a Viennese banker, born as Carl Hirsch, who converted in 1904 from Judaism to Roman Catholicism, due to anti-semitism. Henreid's father died in April 1916, and the family fortune had dwindled by the time he graduated from the exclusive Maria Theresianische Akademie.Stage and film careers
Henreid trained for the theatre in Vienna, over his family's objections, and debuted there on the stage under the direction of Max Reinhardt. He began his film career acting in German and Austrian films in the 1930s. During that period, he was strongly anti-Nazi, so much so that he was later designated an "official enemy of the Third Reich".England
In 1937 Henreid played Prince Albert in the stage production Victoria Regina in 1937. With the outbreak of World War II, Henreid risked deportation or internment as an enemy alien, but Conrad Veidt spoke for him, and he was allowed to remain and work in England's film industry. Veidt himself was an avowed anti-Nazi, with a Jewish wife. Thanks to such support, Henreid was able to continue his work in British films. In 1939 he had a notable supporting role as Staefel in Goodbye, Mr. Chips and the next year third billing as a German espionage agent in the thriller Night Train to Munich. In 1940 he also performed in a minor role in the British musical comedy spy film Under Your Hat.RKO, Warner Bros., and MGM
After relocating to the United States and having a successful run on Broadway in Flight to the West, Henreid was put under contract by RKO in 1941. The studio changed his name from von Hernried to the simpler and less overtly Germanic Henreid. That year, Henreid became a citizen of the United States. His first film for the studio was Joan of Paris, released in 1942, that became a big hit.Moving to Warner Bros. in 1942, Henreid was cast in Now, Voyager, playing the romantic lead opposite Bette Davis. His next role was as Victor Laszlo, a heroic anti-German resistance leader on the run, in Casablanca with Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman. Warners then tried to consolidate Henreid's new status by co-starring him with Ida Lupino in a romantic drama, In Our Time then putting him in Between Two Worlds, a remake of Outward Bound. The Conspirators was an attempt to repeat the success of Casablanca with Henreid fighting Nazis in an ostensible neutral city with a supporting cast that included Sydney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre. Henreid turned down the male lead in Watch on the Rhine and Mrs Skeffington.
Henreid returned briefly to RKO to play a pirate swashbuckler in the studio's 1945 release The Spanish Main. Returning to Warner Bros., he was cast the following year in Devotion, a biopic of the Brontë family in which Henreid portrays Arthur Bell Nicholls. He was next cast opposite Eleanor Parker in an adaptation of Of Human Bondage. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer then borrowed Henreid from Warners play Robert Schumann in Song of Love opposite Katharine Hepburn. Henreid wrote in his memoirs that he bought out his Warner Bros contract for $75,000 and was offered a long term contract at MGM for $150,000 a year but turned it down.
Blacklisting and brief return to European films
In his 1984 autobiography Ladies Man Henreid recounts that he was one of a group of Hollywood stars who went to Washington to protest the excesses of the House Committee on Un-American Activities, following which he was semi-blacklisted. He says he was blacklisted from the major studios for five years - apart from Rope of Sand which was directed by a friend - before the blacklist was lifted and never understood why.After leaving Warner Bros., Henreid decided to turn producer, making the film noir Hollow Triumph in which he also appeared. He was a villain in a Burt Lancaster adventure film Rope of Sand. In 1950 he made a low-budget film for Edward and Harry Danziger, So Young, So Bad, which was followed by an offer from Sam Katzman to play pirate Jean Lafitte in Last of the Buccaneers. He then went to France for Pardon My French before returning to Katzman for Thief of Damascus. He directed and played the lead role in For Men Only. Later, in England, he made film noirs Stolen Face and Mantrap, then went back to Katzman for Siren of Bagdad. In 1954, once again working for MGM, Henreid performed in a minor role in Deep in My Heart, his first "A" film in a several years.
He moved next to Columbia Pictures, where he appeared in Pirates of Tripoli for Katzman; and then, yet again, to MGM for a part in Meet Me in Las Vegas. He also appeared at this time on Broadway in Festival.
Directing and final performances
In the early 1950s, Henreid began directing both film and television productions. His "small-screen" directorial credits include episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Maverick, Bonanza, The Virginian, and The Big Valley. He also directed on the "big screen" A Woman's Devotion in which he played a supporting role, Girls on the Loose, and Live Fast, Die Young. In 1964, he directed Dead Ringer, which stars Bette Davis and features in a minor role Henreid's daughter Monika.While working as a director, Henreid continued to accept some small parts as well in Ten Thousand Bedrooms, Holiday for Lovers, Never So Few, and Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Additional film appearances include Operation Crossbow, The Madwoman of Chaillot, and The Failing of Raymond. In 1973, prior to his last screen appearance in , Henreid returned to Broadway to perform in Don Juan in Hell.
Personal life and legacy
Henreid married Elizabeth Camilla Julia "Lisl" Glück in 1936; the couple adopted two daughters. In 1992, at age 84, Henreid died of pneumonia in Santa Monica, California after suffering a stroke. He was buried in nearby Woodlawn Cemetery.In Los Angeles, California in 1960, to honor Henreid's significant contributions to the entertainment industry as both an actor and director, two stars were dedicated to him and installed on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. One of those stars, which recognizes his career in film, is located at 6366 Hollywood Boulevard; the other, for television, is at 1720 Vine Street.
Complete filmography
As actor
- Morgenrot
- Baroud as Bit Part
- Love in Morocco as bit part
- Hohe Schule, aka The Secret of Cavelli as Franz von Ketterer
- Eva, the Factory Girl as Fritz
- ...nur ein Komödiant as Velthen
- Victoria the Great as uncredited minor role
- Goodbye, Mr. Chips as Staefel
- Mad Men of Europe as Victor Brandt
- Night Train to Munich as Capt. Karl Marsen
- Under Your Hat as bit part
- Joan of Paris as Paul Lavallier
- Now, Voyager as Jerry Durrance
- Casablanca as Victor Laszlo
- In Our Time as Count Stefan Orwid
- Between Two Worlds as Henry Bergner
- The Conspirators as Vincent Van Der Lyn
- The Spanish Main as Capt. Laurent Van Horn
- Devotion as Rev. Arthur Nicholls
- Of Human Bondage as Philip Carey
- Deception as Karel Novak
- Song of Love as Robert Schumann
- Hollow Triumph, aka The Scar as John Muller / Dr. Bartok
- Rope of Sand as Commandant Paul Vogel
- So Young So Bad as Dr. John H. Jason
- Last of the Buccaneers as Jean Lafitte
- Pardon My French - Paul Rencourt
- For Men Only as Dr. Stephen Brice
- Thief of Damascus as General Abu Amdar
- Stolen Face as Dr. Philip Ritter
- Dans la vie tout s'arrange as Paul Rencourt
- Mantrap, aka Woman in Hiding as Hugo Bishop
- Siren of Bagdad as Kazah the Great
- ' as Konrad Hegner
- Deep in My Heart as Florenz Ziegfeld
- Pirates of Tripoli as Edri al-Gadrian
- Meet Me in Las Vegas as Pierre
- A Woman's Devotion as Capt. Henrique Monteros
- Ten Thousand Bedrooms as Anton
- Holiday for Lovers as Eduardo Barroso
- Never So Few as Nikko Regas
- Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse as Etienne Laurier
- Operation Crossbow as Gen. Ziemann
- The Madwoman of Chaillot as The General
- The Failing of Raymond as Dr. Abel
- Death Among Friends as Otto Schiller
- ' as The Cardinal
As himself or narrator
- Hollywood Canteen - himself
- Peking Remembered - narrator
As producer
- Hollow Triumph
- For Men Only
As director
Film
- For Men Only
- A Woman's Devotion
- Live Fast, Die Young
- Girls on the Loose
- Dead Ringer
- Ballad in Blue
Television
- Maverick "Passage to Fort Doom"
- The Californians, various episodes
- "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" TV series episode "Cell 227"
- The June Allyson Show episode 'The Lie'
- The Virginian "Long Ride to Wind River"
As writer
- Ballad in Blue
Music
- Deception
- Stolen Face
Radio appearances