Harry Baur
(Paris, 1880-1943) French actor.After studying drama, his acting skills earned him the first prize for drama and tragedy at the Conservatoire de Marseille, which confirmed him as one of the most versatile and capable actors on the French scene.Dumped into the theater, he came to the cinema casually and without showing any interest in 1910.He participated in various silent productions such as Stass et compagnie (1916), by Abel Gance.
He broke through with the introduction of talkies, especially with the help of Julien Duvivier, who directed him in films such as David Golder (1930), The Five Cursed Knights (1931 ) or Golgotha (1935), among others.He took part in some of the versions that were made in Parisian studios by Paramount such as Le cap perdu (1931), by Ewald André Dupont.
Although French viewers easily discovered his His interpretive style, often repetitive, did not stop admiring him in his work, especially in the version of Les miserables (1934), directed by Raymond Bernard.Throughout these years he starred in Tragic attraction (1935), by Anatole Litvak, and in several films by Maurice Tourneur such as Samson (1936), The zar loco (1938) and Volpone (1940), among others.The end of his life was marked by the warlike environment in Europe; He was tortured by the Gestapo to death.
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