Helmut Dantine(1918-1982)
- Actor
- Producer
- Director
Actor/director/producer Helmut Dantine was born in Vienna, Austria on
October 7, 1917. He made a name for himself as an actor during World
War Two playing German soldiers and Nazi villains in Hollywood films,
most notably in Mrs. Miniver (1942).
The young Dantine was a fervent anti-fascist/anti-Nazi activist in
Vienna. As a leader in the anti-Nazi youth movement the 19-year old was
summarily rounded up and imprisoned at the Rosserlaende concentration
camp. Family influence persuaded a physician to grant him a medical
release that June and he was immediately sent to Los Angeles to stay
with the only friend they had in America. Dantine joined the Pasadena
Playhouse, where he was spotted by a Warner Bros. talent scout who was
struck by Dantine's dark good looks. Signed to a Warner's contract, he
appeared in a variety of films after making his debut as a Nazi in
International Squadron (1941)
starring Ronald Reagan. He played
supporting, second lead and eventually, lead roles in such films as
Chuyện Tình Thế Chiến (1942) (where he was the
newlywed who gambles away his visa money),
Edge of Darkness (1943) (his
first lead), the infamous
Mission to Moscow (1943) and
Passage to Marseille (1944).
Two of his best films came on loan-out from Warners in 1942:
Ernst Lubitsch's comic masterpiece
Tồn Tại Hay Không Tồn Tại (1942) and
William Wyler's Oscar-winning
Mrs. Miniver (1942). Dantine
directed the the unsuccessful
Thundering Jets (1958). His wife,
Niki Dantine, was the daughter of Loew's
president Nicholas Schenck, the overall boss of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer --
ostensibly the most powerful man in Hollywood since 1927. After Schenck
was forced out of Loew's, the wily old movie veteran formed his own
production and distribution company. In 1959, Dantine's acting career
was on the wane and his attempt to become a director a relative
failure, he became a producer. He was appointed vice-president of his
father-in-law's Schenck Enterprises, eventually becoming president of
the company in 1970. Dantine produced three minor
Sam Peckinpah films in the mid-1970s,
including
Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1974)
and The Killer Elite (1975) in
both of which,he had small supporting roles. Helmut Dantine died on May
2, 1982, at age 63, in Beverly Hills after suffering a massive heart
attack. His body was interred at Westwood Memorial Park in Los Angeles,
California.