Fritz Kortner | |
|---|---|
1959年コルトナー | |
| 誕生 | フリッツ・ネイサン・コーン (1892年5月12日)1892年5月12日 |
| 死去 | 1970年7月22日(1970年7月22日)(78歳) |
| 埋葬地 | ミュンヘン・ヴァルトフリートホーフ |
| 職業 | 俳優、演出家 |
| 活動期間 | 1915~1968 |
| 配偶者 | ( 1924年生まれ )子供たち |
| 2 | フリッツ・コルトナー(本名:フリッツ・ナタン・コーン、1892年5月12日 - 1970年7月22日)は、オーストリアの舞台・映画俳優、演出家でした |

Kortner was born in Vienna as Fritz Nathan Kohn into a Jewish family. He studied at the Vienna Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. After graduating, he joined Max Reinhardt in Berlin in 1911 and then Leopold Jessner in 1916. After his breakthrough performance in Ernst Toller's Transfiguration in 1919, he became one of Germany's best-known character actors and the nation's foremost performer of Expressionist works. He also appeared in over ninety films beginning in 1916.
His specialty was in playing sinister and threatening roles, although he also appeared in the title role of Dreyfus (1930). He originally gained attention for his explosive energy on stage and his powerful voice; but as the 1920s progressed, his work began to incorporate greater realism, as he opted for a more controlled delivery and greater use of gestures.
With the coming to power of the Nazis, Kortner fled Germany in 1933 with his wife, actress Johanna Hofer, returning first to his native Vienna and, from there, on to Great Britain, and finally, in 1937, to the United States,[1] where he found work as a character actor and theater director.
He returned to West Germany in 1949, where he became noted for his innovative staging and direction of classics by William Shakespeare and Molière, such as a Richard III (1964) in which the king crawls over piles of corpses at the finale.
Kortner died at Munich in 1970, aged 78, of leukemia.[2]
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