David Hurst
David Hurst | |
---|---|
Born |
Heinrich Theodor Hirsch May 8, 1926 Berlin, Germany |
Occupation | actor, theatre producer |
Years active | 1948–2000 |
David Hurst (born Heinrich Theodor Hirsch on 6 May 1926) is a British-German actor. He is best known for Hello, Dolly as Rudolph the headwaiter.
Biography
Early life and career
Hurst grew up in a family of actors. As a Jewish child living in Nazi Germany, he faced persecution from the Nazi regime. After the pogroms of Kristallnacht, British-Jewish citizens offered to bear the government expenses for the rescue of Jewish children from Germany and Austria. He was one of the thousands of children in 1938 relocated with the Kindertransport in the United Kingdom. At the time of leaving his mother, he was 12 years old. He never saw her again.
Relocated to a manor in Northern Ireland, he lived with other young emigrants in the care of a family of an estate manager. His first stage experience was gained in Belfast at a repertory theatre, where he also changed his name from Heinrich Hirsch to David Hurst. During World War II he joined the army, but because of his German background he was assigned to ENSA where he performed as an actor and a comedian.
His first film role was in 1949 as "Wolfgang Winkel" in The Perfect Woman, a role Hurst had previously played in the West End to critical praise. He went on to appear in many British films of the 1950s.
United States
In 1957, Hurst moved the United States. He spent most of his time in California, but often performed on Broadway.He created the role of Merlin in the original Broadway production of Camelot opposite Richard Burton .
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s he played in film, television, and theatre. In 1959 he received the Clarence Derwent Award and in 1964, he was awarded the Obie Award for his off-Broadway performance in A Month in the Country from The Village Voice.[1]
In 1969, he performed in the film version of Hello, Dolly as Rudolph the headwaiter alongside Barbra Streisand and Walter Matthau. This has been his biggest role to date, and his most recognizable in America. He also had roles in the films The Boys From Brazil (1978) and Kelly's Heroes (1970). Hurst also appeared in numerous TV series including Mission: Impossible, Serpico and Star Trek.
Throughout his career he worked as a visiting professor at Yale, Boston University and Carnegie Mellon.
Return to Germany
In the 1980s he appeared in several German-American co-productions, and visited his half-brother Wolfgang Heinz in East Berlin. Hurst decided to remain in Germany, and worked in Vienna and Berlin with fellow erstwhile emigrant (and Actors Studio compadre), theatre director George Tabori.[2] From 1991 Hurst worked at the Burgtheater, Vienna, eventually returning to live in Berlin in 2000, when he retired from acting.
Appearances
Theatre
Play | Role | Theatre | Dates[3] |
---|---|---|---|
The Faithful Brethren of Pitt Street | Joseph Knaitsch | Orpheum Theatre | 5 – 20 November 1988 20 performances |
Dracula | Abraham Van Helsing | Broadway | 20 October 1977 – 6 January 1980 |
Henry IV | Dr. Dionysius Genoni | Broadway | 28 April – 28 May 1973 |
Electra | Paedagogus | Delacorte Theater | 5 – 29 August 1964 22 performances (New York Shakespeare Festival) |
A Month in the Country | Ignaty Ilyitch Shpigelsky | Maidman Playhouse | 1963 – 1964 48 performances |
Camelot | Merlin | Broadway | 3 December 1960 – 5 January 1963 |
The Lunatic View | Young Man | Lucille Lortel Theatre | November 1962 |
Under The Sycamore Tree | The Scientist | Cricket Theatre | 7 March – 10 April 1960 41 performances |
Look After Lulu! | The Policeman | Broadway | 3 March – 4 April 1959 |
A Midsummer Night's Dream | Ensemble | Broadway | 21 September – 17 October 1954 |
Films
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
1978 | The Boys from Brazil | Strasser |
1978 | Child of Glass | Jacques Dumaine |
1970 | Kelly's Heroes | Col. Dankhopf |
1969 | The Maltese Bippy | Dr. Charles Strauss |
1968 | Hello, Dolly! | Rudolph Reizenweber |
1964 | The Confession | Gustave |
1957 | After the Ball | Perelli |
1956 | The Intimate Stranger | Dave Pearson (uncredited) |
1955 | All for Mary | M. Victor |
As Long as They're Happy | Dr. Hermann Schneider | |
One Good Turn | Professor Dofee | |
1954 | Mad About Men | Signor Mantalini |
River Beat | Paddy McClure | |
1953 | Always A Bride | Beckstein |
Rough Shoot | Lex | |
1952 | Top Secret | Professor Deutsch (uncredited) |
Venetian Bird | Minelli | |
Old Mother Riley Meets the Vampire | Mugsy | |
So Little Time | Blumel/Baumann | |
1951 | The Smart Aleck | Poppi |
1950 | Tony Draws a Horse | Ivan |
1949 | The Perfect Woman | Wolfgang Winkel |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1981 | Skokie | Sol Goldstein | TV movie |
1980 | Charlie's Angels | Stovich | Episode: "Angel in Hiding" |
1979 | Nero Wolfe | Fritz | TV movie |
Ryan's Hope | Dr. Nelson (uncredited) | 1 episode | |
1978 | Quincy, M.E. | Dr. Fred Webber | Episode: "Dead and Alive" |
Eight Is Enough | Episode : "The Hipbone's Connected to the Thighbone" | ||
Child of Glass | Jacques Dumaine | TV movie | |
1977 | Insight | Episode: "Arnstein's Miracle" | |
McCloud | Colonel Andrei Krasnavian | Episode: "The Moscow Connection" | |
1976 | Serpico | Ducek | Episode: "The Indian" |
1971 | NET Playhouse | Chanute | Episode: "The Wright Brothers" |
Dark Shadows | Justin Collins | 3 episodes | |
1970 | The F.B.I. | Alex Keeler | Episode: "The Traitor" |
The Mod Squad | Consulate General Fohgib | Episode: "The Exile" | |
1969 | The Flying Nun | Benito Gomez | Episode: "The Lottery" |
Mission: Impossible | Dr. Oswald Beck | Episode: "The Test Case" | |
Star Trek | Hodin | Episode: "The Mark of Gideon" | |
1968 | Run for Your Life | Heinrich Kleist | Episode: "The Exchange" |
The Flying Nun | Gus Mendoza - Sister Sixto's Uncle | Episode: "A Fish Story" | |
The Monkees | The Baron | Episode: "Monkees Race Again" | |
It Takes a Thief | Captain Kovich | Episode: "When Boy Meets Girl" | |
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. | Dr. Jan Vanovech | Episode: "The Seven Wonders of the World Affair" | |
To Die in Paris | Pirot | TV movie | |
1967 | Mannix | Vladek | Episode: "The Many Deaths of Saint Christopher" |
Mission: Impossible | Victor Grigov | Episode: "The Astrologer" | |
Hallmark Hall of Fame | Petrovini | Episode: "Anastasia" | |
1966 | The Girl from U.N.C.L.E. | Matthew Brecker | Episode: "The Mata Hari Affair" |
Hawk | Louis Anselmi | Episode: "The Longleat Chronicles" | |
1965 | The Patty Duke Show | Dennis Latouche | Episode: "It Takes a Heap of Livin'" |
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. | Dr. Leland Mayes Elmont | Episode: "The Brain-Killer Affair" | |
Look Up and Live | 2 Episodes: "The Initiation" and "The Judgment" | ||
1964 | The Defenders | Dr. Schaeffer | Episode: "Drink Like a Lady" |
1962 | Car 54, Where Are You? | Robin Stuart, Playwright | Episode: "That's Show Business" |
1960 | Dow Hour of Great Mysteries | Baron | Episode: "The Dachet Diamonds" |
Play of the Week | 2 Episodes: "Tiger at the Gates" and "The Emperor's Clothes" | ||
1958 | Kraft Television Theatre | 2 Episodes: "Riddle of a Lady" and "Next Door to Death" | |
DuPont Show of the Month | Mr. Stryver | Episode: "A Tale of Two Cities" | |
1957 | Armstrong Circle Theatre | Government official | Episode: "The Shepherd of Paris" |
1956 | The Adventures of Aggie | Lazareff | Episode: "Snap Judgment" |
References
- ↑ "OBIES 1963-1964". blogs.villagevoice.com. May 28, 1964. Retrieved 31 January 2011.
- ↑ David Hurst & George Tabori at the University of Wisconsin's Actors Studio audio collection, 1956-1969
- ↑ "Lortel Archives - The Internet Off-Broadway Database". lortel.org. Retrieved 31 January 2011.
External links
- David Hurst at the Internet Movie Database
- David Hurst at the University of Wisconsin's Actors Studio audio collection
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