Harry Baur
Actor/Actriz
43
Filmes
0
Séries
Harry Baur (12 April 1880 – 8 April 1943) was a French actor.
Initially a stage actor, Baur appeared in about 80 films between 1909 and 1942. He gave an acclaimed performance as the composer Ludwig van Beethoven in the biopic Beethoven's Great Love (Un grand amour de Beethoven, 1936), directed by Abel Gance, and as Jean Valjean in Raymond Bernard's version of Les Misérables (1934). He also acted in Victorin-Hippolyte Jasset's silent film, Beethoven (1909), and in La voyante (1923), Sarah Bernhardt's last film.
In 1942, while in Berlin, to star in his last film Symphone eines Lebens, Baur's wife was arrested by the Gestapo and charged with espionage. His effort to secure her release led to his own arrest and torture. He was being falsely labelled as a Jew but confirmed freemason. He was released in April 1943, but died in Paris shortly after in mysterious circumstances.
Academy Award-winning American actor Rod Steiger cited Baur as one of his favorite actors who had exerted a major influence on his craft and career.
Como Ator/Atriz
Volpone
Volpone
Les Misérables
Jean Valjean / Champmathieu
Un grand amour de Beethoven
Ludwig van Beethoven
Poil de carotte
Mr. Lepic
L'Assassinat du Père Noël
Gaspard Cornusse
La Tête d'un homme
Commissaire Jules Maigret
Golgotha
Hérode
Samson
Jacques Brachart
David Golder
David Golder
Crime et Châtiment
Porphyre
Sarati, le terrible
Cesar Sarati
La Tragédie impériale
Rasputin
Nitchevo
Mollenard
le capitaine Mollenard
Le Golem
L'empereur Rodolphe II, roi de Bohème
Nostalgie
Virine, le maitre de poste
Un carnet de bal
Alain Regnault
Les Yeux Noirs
Ivan Ivanovitch Petroff
Les Nuits moscovites
Piotr Brioukow
Les Secrets de la mer Rouge
Les Hommes nouveaux
Bourron
La Voyante
Monsieur Detaille
Moscow Nights
Peter Brioukow
Rothchild
Rothchild
L'Assommoir
Le Patriote
Tsar Paul 1st
The Rebel Son
Taras Bulba
Le Président Haudecœur
President Haudecoeur
Paris
Cette vieille canaille
Guillaume Vautier