
Felix Bressart
Acting · Born 1892-03-02 · age 57 at death · Eydtkuhnen, East Prussia, Germany [now Chernyshevskoe, Russia]
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Felix Bressart (March 2, 1892 – March 17, 1949) was a German-American actor of stage and screen. Felix Bressart (pronounced "BRESS-ert") was born in East Prussia, Germany (now part of Russia) and was already a very experienced stage actor when he had his film debut in 1928. He started off as a supporting actor, e.g. as the Bailiff in the box-office hit Die Drei von der Tankstelle (1930), but had soon established himself in leading roles of minor movies. After the Nazis seized power in 1933, Jewish-born Bressart had to leave Germany and continued his career in German-speaking movies in Austria, where Jewish artists were still relatively safe. After no fewer than 30 films in eight years, he emigrated to the United States. One of Bressart's former European colleagues was Joe Pasternak, now a successful Hollywood producer. Bressart's first American film was Three Smart Girls Grow Up (1939), a vehicle for Universal Pictures' top attraction, Deanna Durbin. Pasternak also selected the reliable Bressart to perform in a screen test opposite Pasternak's newest discovery, Gloria Jean. The influential German community in Hollywood helped to establish Bressart in America, as his earliest American movies were directed by Ernst Lubitsch, Henry Koster, and Wilhelm Thiele (director of Die Drei von der Tankstelle). Bressart scored a great success in Lubitsch's Ninotchka, produced at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. MGM signed Bressart to a studio contract in 1939. Most of his MGM work consisted of featured roles in major films like Edison, the Man. He combined his mildly inflected East European accent with a soft-spoken delivery to create kindly, friendly characters, as in Lubitsch's To Be or Not to Be, in which he sensitively recites Shylock's famous "Hath not a Jew eyes?" speech from The Merchant of Venice. Lubitsch also directed Bressart to similar effect in The Shop Around the Corner. Bressart soon became a popular character actor in films like Blossoms in the Dust (1941), The Seventh Cross (1944), and Without Love (1945). Perhaps his largest role was in RKO Radio Pictures' "B" musical comedy Ding Dong Williams, filmed in 1945. Bressart, billed third, played the bemused supervisor of a movie studio's music department, and appeared in formal wear to conduct Chopin's "Fantasie Impromptu." After almost 40 Hollywood pictures, Felix Bressart suddenly died of leukemia at the age of 57. His last film was My Friend Irma (1949), the movie version of a popular radio show. Bressart died during production, forcing the producers to finish the film with Hans Conried. In the final film, Conried speaks throughout, but Bressart is still seen in the long shots. Description above from the Wikipedia article Felix Bressart, licensed under CC-BY-SA,full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Titles

The Shop Around the Corner

To Be or Not to Be

Ninotchka

Portrait of Jennie

A Song Is Born

The Seventh Cross

Comradeship

Above Suspicion

Ziegfeld Girl

Crossroads

Blossoms in the Dust

Without Love

Edison, the Man

Comrade X

It All Came True

The Three from the Filling Station

Take One False Step

Escape

Don't Be a Sucker!

Third Finger, Left Hand

Three Smart Girls Grow Up

Bitter Sweet

Mr. and Mrs. North

Blonde Fever

I've Always Loved You

Bridal Suite

Greenwich Village

Song of Russia

Her Sister's Secret

Dangerous Partners

No More Love

Swanee River

Iceland

Married Bachelor

The Thrill of Brazil

Kathleen

Excursion into Life

...und wer küßt mich?

Three Days in the Guardhouse

Ball at the Savoy

Ding Dong Williams

The Tender Relatives

The Private Secretary

True Jacob

Visul lui Tanase

Three Hearts for Julia

Heut' ist der schönste Tag in meinem Leben

Four and a Half Musketeers
The fight with the dragon or: The tragedy of the lodger

Terror of the Garrison

Salto in die Seligkeit

Holzapfel Knows Everything

Peter
Wie d'Warret würkt

The Lucky Top Hat

The Office Manager
Eine Freundin so goldig wie Du

Everything for the Company

Old Song
C'était un musicien