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Helmuth Schneider

German postcard by F.J. Rüdel, Filmpostkartenverlag, Hamburg-Bergedorf, no. 704.

 

Blond, handsome actor Helmuth Schneider (1920 - 1972) appeared in more than 50 films and also worked as an assistant director. He worked in Germany, but also in Latin America, Italy and France.

 

Helmuth (often Helmut) Schneider was born in Munich, Germany in 1920. Her studied medicine in Munich in 1938, and attended the drama school of the Deutsches Theater in Berlin. In 1942 he made his stage debut in the comedy Sophienlund. He had to quit his engagement at the Deutsches Theater for the war effort. He was wounded in France. Schneider made his film debut for the UFA with a small part in the musical drama Träumerei/Daydream (1944, Harald Braun) about the love story of Clara Wieck Schumann (Hilde Krahl) and Robert Schumann (Mathias Wieman). In 1946, he left Germany and stayed in Latin America where he worked in the film business under the name Alexandre Carlos. In 1952, he was back in Germany and and played at the Deutsches Theater in Göttingen. In the cinema, he co-starred with Edith Mill in the romantic drama Zwei Menschen/Two People (1952, Paul May). It made both stars of the heimat film. The following years he was the handsome hunter or forrester in several forgettable German rural romances, such as Der Fischer vom Heiligensee, Drei Birken auf der Heide (1956) and Jägerblut (1957). In 1959, he starred as Kara Ben Nemsi in the Karl May adventure Der Löwe von Babylon/The Lion of Babylon (1959, Johannes Kai, Ramón Torrado) with Georg Thomalla and Theo Lingen.

 

In the 1960’s, when the German film industry experienced a downturn, Helmuth Schneider worked for television, such as for the crime series Stahlnetz (1960-1963), the German version of Dragnet. He moved to Rome, which was the new centre of the European cinema. He had a supporting part in the adventure film Captain Sindbad (1963, Byron Haskin) starring Guy Williams and Heidi Brühl, and the war film The Secret Invasion (1964, Roger Corman) with Stewart Granger and Raf Vallone. In France he appeared as an unsympathetic Nazi officer in war dramas like Le facteur s'en va-t-en guerre/The Postman Goes to War (1966, Claude Bernard-Aubert) starring Charles Aznavour, and Paris brûle-t-il?/Is Paris Burning? (1966, René Clément) starring Jean-Paul Belmondo and Charles Boyer. He played such a role also in the war comedy La grande vadrouille/Don't Look Now, We've Been Shot At (1966, Gérard Oury) with Bourvil and Louis de Funès. He also had a part in the fifth and final episode of the Angélique series with Michèle Mercier, Angélique et le sultan/Angélique and the Sultan (1967, Bernard Borderie). In Italy he made a spaghetti western, Ciakmull - L'uomo della vendetta/The Unholy Four (1970, Enzo Barboni) Hal Erickson at AllMovie: “It's one of those spaghetti westerns in which the heroes and heavies are virtually indistinguishable. Though the outlaw leader (played by George Eastman credited by his birth name Luigi Montefiore) is evil incarnate, he isn't much worse than the four mercenaries hunting him down. Stalwart John Ford-regular Woody Strode is given plenty of screen time, and he makes the most of it. Director Enzo Barboni was billed as E. B. Clucher in the American prints.”Schneider also played in another war film Gott mit uns/The Fifth Day of Peace (1970, Giuliano Montaldo) starring Franco Nero. His final film was À la guerre comme à la guerre/War is war (1972, Bernard Borderie), a historical war comedy starring Leonard Whiting and Curd Jürgens. Helmuth Schneider died in a traffic accident in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1972. He was 51.

 

Sources: Hal Erickson (AllMovie), Peter Hoffmann (Biografie.de) (German), Tom B. (Westerns…all Italiana). Wikipedia (German) and IMDb.

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Uploaded on March 20, 2013
Taken on March 20, 2013