Ernö Verebes(1902-1971)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
First a star in Hungary, Ernö Verebes, born in 1902, achieved the same
status in Germany between 1925 and 1936. Now renamed Ernst Verebes, he
was one of those manly actors, both well-built and charming, at ease as
well in a military uniform as in a tuxedo and top hat, that German
ladies loved to see on a big screen. They acclaimed him, among many
other roles, as a count in
Frederic Zelnik's
Der Zigeunerbaron (1927) or as
a dashing hussar lieutenant in
Der Tanzhusar (1931).
Unfortunately, the Nazis liked him much less and in 1936 Verebes
decided he had better flee and take refuge in the USA. His career
resumed there two years later but his matinée idol years were past.
Verebes, now named Ernö again, first found a few acceptable supporting
roles, mainly the German or SS officer in office. He is particularly
memorable though in a non military part ( the stage manager) in
Ernst Lubitsch's immortal
Tồn Tại Hay Không Tồn Tại (1942).
After World War Two was over, he was only given bits to play, a far cry
from the star status he benefited from only one or two decades earlier.
The strange thing is that, whatever the type a film he was in, he was
most of the time cast as a ... waiter! For years on, in at least
fifteen movies, he would serve drinks to actors and actresses lucky
enough to have something interesting to play. Sure there were variants,
Ernö Verebes could be a bartender, a head waiter, a wine steward or the
captain of waiters but the former popular and elegant star
understandably tired of unceasingly repeating the same ancillary
gestures, he who had been a count, a hussar and a Don Juan. This is the
reason why he decided to retire in 1953 whereas he was only 51. Sadly
enough, Ernö Verebes died in oblivion in Los Angeles, aged 68.