Paul Henreid

Paul Henreid
Birth Name: Paul Hernreid Ritter von Wasel-Waldingau
Born: Jan 10, 1908
Trieste, Austria-Hungary
Career: 1933-1982
Countries: USA
Genre/Type: Action
Comedy
Drama
War
Romance
Biography by Hal Erickson
Some sources list actor Paul Henreid's birthplace as Italy. In fact, at the time of his birth, Henreid's hometown of Trieste was still part of the Austro-Hungarian empire. Of aristocratic stock, Henreid felt drawn to theatrical activities while attending college. He briefly supported himself as a translator before Max Reinhardt's assistant Otto Preminger officially discovered him and launched his stage career. Still billed under his given name of Von Hernreid, he made his film debut in a 1933 Moroccan production. Relocating to England in 1935, he was often as not cast as Teutonic villains, most memorably in the 1940 melodrama Night Train.

In 1940, Henreid became an American citizen--and, at last, a leading man. Henreid's inbred Continental sophistication struck a responsive chord with wartime audiences. He spent his finest years as an actor at Warner Bros., where he appeared as Jerry Durrance in Bette Davis' Now Voyager (1942), as too-good-to-be-true resistance leader Victor Lazslo in Casablanca (1942), and as troubled medical student Philip Carey in the 1946 remake of Of Human Bondage (1946). Henreid exhibited a great deal of vivacity in such swashbucklers as The Spanish Main (1945), Last of the Buccaneers (1950) and The Siren of Bagdad (1953); in the latter film, the actor engagingly spoofed his own screen image by repeating his lighting-two-cigarettes bit from Now Voyager with an ornate water pipe. He was also an effective villain in Hollow Triumph (1948, which he also produced) and Rope of Sand (1949).

Henreid's star faded in the 1950s, a fact he would later attribute (in his 1984 autobiography Ladies Man) to the Hollywood Blacklist. He turned to directing, helming such inexpensive but worthwhile dramas as For Men Only (a 1951 indictment of the college hazing process) and A Woman's Devotion (1954). One of his best directorial efforts was the 1964 meller Dead Ringer, starring his former Warners co-star (and longtime personal friend) Bette Davis. In addition, Henreid directed dozens of 30- and 60-minute installments of such TV series as Alfred Hitchcock Presents and Maverick. His last on-camera appearance was as "The Cardinal" in Exorcist 2: The Heretic (1977).

Henreid married Elizabeth Gluck in 1936, with whom he had two daughters, Monica Henreid and Mimi Duncan. On March 29, 1992, he died of pneumonia, following a stroke, in Santa Monica, California.

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Filmography

Movie/Film Released Rating Role Buy
On the Road to Hollywood 1982 Actor [Starring]
Exorcist II: The Heretic 1977 Actor [Starring]
Death Among Friends 1975 Actor [Starring]
The Failing of Raymond 1971 Actor [Starring]
Double Image 1970 Actor [Starring]
The Madwoman of Chaillot 1969 Actor [Starring]
Peking Remembered 1967 Actor [Starring]
Blues for Lovers 1966 Director
Bonanza: A Time to Step Down 1966 Director
Operation Crossbow 1965 Actor [Starring]
Dead Ringer 1964 Director
Alfred Hitchcock Presents: The Kerry Blue 1962 Director
Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Victim Four 1962 Director
Alfred Hitchcock Presents: What Frightened You, Fred? 1962 Director
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour: Annabel 1962 Director
The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse 1962 Actor [Starring]
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Obama and 'Wild Things': President as movie critic (From EW.com - The Movie Critics. 22 October 2009, 1:40 PM, PDT) The Top 10 Macabre Movie Moms in Cinematic History (From FilmSchoolRejects. 9 May 2009, 8:00 AM, PDT)
""Shall we just have a cigarette on it?" Paul Henreid asks Bette Davis at the end of the movie" Only once at the end, but oh, what a cigarette!""Shall we just have a cigarette on it?" Paul Henreid asks Bet...
Paul Henreid was born on January 10, 1905

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