Martin Held(1908-1992)
- Actor
Martin Held was a leading German film actor of the 1950's and 60's. He
attended school in Berlin and then worked for a while as a technician
at Siemens. In 1929, he received a stipend to train for acting at the
Berlin University of the Arts, graduating in 1931. He then performed at
most of the leading theatres in Germany, often in classical roles. In
1951, he was discovered by the director
Alfred Weidenmann for the screen.
Critical success in Deadly Decision (1954) (as
Heydrich) led to further starring roles. An incisive, dominant
personality with a somewhat brooding, mysterious air, he was frequently
cast as anti-heroes, schemers and swindlers, men with a dark past or
shallow bon vivants. He could also personify integrity (his mayor in
The Captain from Köpenick (1956)),
but was not generally called upon to play romantic leads. Perhaps
against type, he starred in the military comedy
Fast ein Held (1967), as a German
NCO in a fictitious village in occupied France, who unwittingly becomes
town commandant (ironically, to the betterment of the locals). His
performance won him the Ernst Lubitsch
Preis for best comedy performance. Held also had a powerful baritone
voice which he used to good effect on radio and for dubbing such
Hollywood tough guys as E.G. Marshall,
George Macready and
Neville Brand.