Curd Jürgens

Film

Birthday December 13, 1915

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Solln, Kingdom of Bavaria, German Empire

DEATH DATE 1982-6-18, Vienna, Austria (66 years old)

Nationality Austria

Height 1.92 m

#21056 Most Popular

1915

Curd Gustav Andreas Gottlieb Franz Jürgens (13 December 1915 – 18 June 1982) was a German-Austrian stage and film actor.

He was usually billed in English-speaking films as Curt Jurgens.

He was well known for playing Ernst Udet in Des Teufels General.

Jürgens was born on 13 December 1915 in the Munich borough of Solln, Kingdom of Bavaria, German Empire.

His father, Kurt, was a trader from Hamburg, and his mother, Marie-Albertine, was a French teacher.

He had two elder twin sisters, Jeanette and Marguerite.

He began his working career as a journalist before becoming an actor at the urging of his actress wife, Louise Basler.

He spent much of his early acting career on the stage in Vienna.

1933

Due to serious injuries that he sustained in a car accident in the summer of 1933, he was unable to have children.

1935

Jurgens made his film debut in The Royal Waltz (1935) playing Franz Joseph I of Austria.

He was in the comedy Family Parade (1935) and had a small part in The Unknown (1936), Love Can Lie (1937) and Tango Notturno (1937).

1940

During the war, Jurgens appeared in Operetta (1940) (playing Carl Millöcker), Whom the Gods Love (1942) (as Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor), and Women Are No Angels (1943).

Jürgens was critical of Nazism in his native Germany.

1944

In 1944, after filming Wiener Mädeln, he got into an argument with Robert Kaltenbrunner (brother of high-ranking Austrian SS official Ernst Kaltenbrunner), SS-Obersturmbannführer Otto Skorzeny and a member of Baldur von Schirach's staff in a Viennese bar without knowing who they were.

After this event, Jürgens was sent to a labor camp for the "politically unreliable" in Hungary.

After a few weeks he managed to escape and went into hiding.

Jürgens became an Austrian citizen after the war.

1948

After the war Jurgens appeared in The Singing House (1948) and The Angel with the Trumpet (1948).

He had a romantic lead in On Resonant Shores (1948) and was in The Heavenly Waltz (1948), Lambert Feels Threatened (1949), and Bonus on Death (1950).

1950

Jurgens was now regularly in starring roles: Der Schuß durchs Fenster (1950), Kissing Is No Sin (1950), The Disturbed Wedding Night (1950), and A Rare Lover (1950).

1952

He had a support role in House of Life (1952), 1. April 2000 (1952), Rose of the Mountain (1952), They Call It Love (1953), and Music by Night (1953).

1953

Jurgens was in an operetta, The Last Waltz (1953) with Eva Bartok, whom he married.

1954

He starred in Everything for Father (1954), and A Woman of Today (1954).

Another movie with Bartok, Circus of Love (1954) was a co production with a US company.

After Prisoners of Love (1954) he did another co production, Orient Express (1954) and then was in The Confession of Ina Kahr (1955).

1955

Jurgens' breakthrough screen role was in Des Teufels General (1955, The Devil's General) a fictional portrayal of World War I flying ace and World War II Luftwaffe general Ernst Udet.

He was then in Love Without Illusions (1955) and Die Ratten (1955), directed by Robert Siodmak and starring Maria Schell.

The Heroes Are Tired (1955) was a co production with France co starring Yves Montand.

1956

Devil in Silk (1956) co starred Lili Palmer.

Jurgens made The Golden Bridge (1956) then Without You All Is Darkness (1956) with Bartok.

He had a lead part Roger Vadim's film Et Dieu... créa la femme (And God Created Woman) starring Brigitte Bardot, which was a huge box office success internationally.

After an Italian movie The House of Intrigue (1956) Jurgens played the title role in Michel Strogoff (1956) which was another big hit, the most popular film of the year in France.

Jurgens was now an international film star.

1957

He did Bitter Victory (1957) with Richard Burton and director Nicholas Ray, Les Espions (1957) for Henri-Georges Clouzot then appeared in his first Hollywood film, The Enemy Below (1957), in which he portrayed a German U-boat commander.

Michael Powell wanted Jurgens to play Heinrich Kreipe in Ill Met By Moonlight (1957) but the Rank Organisation would not pay his fee.

In 1957 he starred in seven films, four made in France in English, French and German versions and three produced on the coast."

1958

Jurgens starred in a French film, Tamango (1958), opposite Dorothy Dandridge with whom he had an affair.

Jurgens went to Hollywood to appear in This Happy Feeling (1958) for Blake Edwards, Me and the Colonel (1958) with Danny Kaye and The Inn of the Sixth Happiness (1958) with Ingrid Bergman, which was very popular.

An item in Variety in April 1958 said he was "well on the way to becoming another middleaged matinee idol in the Ezio Pinza tradition saying he'd "appeared in 89 pictures and an equal number of plays.

1977

His English-language roles include James Bond villain Karl Stromberg in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), Éric Carradine in And God Created Woman (1956), and Professor Immanuel Rath in The Blue Angel (1959).