请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Sig Arno
释义

  1. Biography

  2. Personal life

  3. Death

  4. Partial filmography

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Infobox person
| name = Sig Arno
| image = Sig Arno.jpg
| caption = publicity photo (1931)
| birth_name = Siegfried Arno
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1895|12|27}}
| birth_place = Hamburg, Germany
| death_date = {{death date and age|mf=yes|1975|8|17|1895|12|27}}
| death_place = Woodland Hills, California, U.S.
| othername =
| occupation = German-Jewish stage and film actor
| years_active = ca. 1915–1961
| spouse = Caroline Dahms
1922–1932 (divorce)
Barbara Kiranoff
1934–1953 (divorce)
Kitty Mattern
1953–1975 (his death)}}

Sig Arno (born Siegfried Aron, 27 December 1895 – 17 August 1975) was a German-Jewish film actor who appeared in such films as Pardon My Sarong and The Mummy's Hand. He may be best remembered from The Palm Beach Story (1942) as Toto, the nonsense-talking mustachioed man who hopelessly pursues Mary Astor's "Princess Centimillia".

Biography

Arno was born in Hamburg, Germany. Before beginning to make films in 1920 he was well known in Germany as a stage comedian.[1] He acted in ninety films in Germany – including G.W. Pabst's Pandora's Box with Louise Brooks – playing primarily comic roles, before leaving the country in 1933, due to the rise of Hitler. He worked in Europe until 1939, when he moved to Hollywood.[1]

During the next twenty years he appeared in over fifty films,[2] often playing waiters, maitre d's and "funny Europeans".[1] Arno also appeared three times on Broadway,[3] notably in the musical Song of Norway and the play Time Remembered by Jean Anouilh,[4] for which he was nominated for a Tony Award as "Best Featured Actor in a Play" in 1958.[5] In 1966, Arno won an honorary award at the German Film Awards "for his continued outstanding individual contributions to the German film over the years."[6]

Personal life

Arno was also a successful portrait painter.[1] He was married three times:

  • Caroline Dahms (1922–1932, ended in divorce, 1 child)
  • Barbara Kiranoff (1934–1953, ended in divorce)
  • Kitty Mattern (1953–1975, ended with his death)[7]

Death

He died from Parkinson's disease in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California on August 17, 1975, aged 79.

Partial filmography

{{Div col}}
  • The Wife of Forty Years (1925)
  • Cock of the Roost (1925)
  • Upstairs and Downstairs (1925)
  • A Woman for 24 Hours (1925)
  • Manon Lescaut (1926)
  • The Third Squadron (1926)
  • The Pride of the Company (1926)
  • Circus Romanelli (1926)
  • Annemarie and Her Cavalryman (1926)
  • We'll Meet Again in the Heimat (1926)
  • The Armoured Vault (1926)
  • Darling, Count the Cash (1926)
  • Nanette Makes Everything (1926)
  • The Son of Hannibal (1926)
  • The Love of Jeanne Ney (1927)
  • The Man with the Counterfeit Money (1927)
  • The Transformation of Dr. Bessel (1927)
  • The Eighteen Year Old (1927)
  • When the Young Wine Blossoms (1927)
  • Family Gathering in the House of Prellstein (1927)
  • Lützow's Wild Hunt (1927)
  • A Serious Case (1927)
  • The Villa in Tiergarten Park (1927)
  • Marie's Soldier (1927)
  • Always Be True and Faithful (1927)
  • Serenissimus and the Last Virgin (1928)
  • One Plus One Equals Three (1927)
  • Der Ladenprinz (1928)
  • Immorality (1928)
  • Prince or Clown (1928)
  • Tragedy at the Royal Circus (1928)
  • The Orchid Dancer (1928)
  • Tales from the Vienna Woods (1928)
  • The Lady and the Chauffeur (1928)
  • Looping the Loop (1928)
  • Modern Pirates (1928)
  • Her Dark Secret (1929)
  • Beyond the Street (1929)
  • The Girl with the Whip (1929)
  • Revolt in the Batchelor's House (1929)
  • We Stick Together Through Thick and Thin (1929)
  • Vienna, City of Song (1930)
  • Retreat on the Rhine (1930)
  • The Caviar Princess (1930)
  • Fairground People (1930)
  • The Widow's Ball (1930)
  • Schubert's Dream of Spring (1931)
  • Moritz Makes His Fortune (1931)
  • The Night Without Pause (1931)
  • Checkmate (1931)
  • The Big Attraction (1931)
  • Without Meyer, No Celebration is Complete (1931)
  • Wild Cattle (1934)
  • The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939) as Tailor
  • The Mummy's Hand (1940)
  • Dark Streets of Cairo (1940)
  • A Little Bit of Heaven (1940)
  • This Thing Called Love (1940)
  • The Great Awakening (1941)
  • Gambling Daughters (1941)
  • Two Latins from Manhattan (1941)
  • Two Yanks in Trinidad (1942)
  • Tales of Manhattan (1942)
  • The Devil with Hitler (1942 short)
  • The Palm Beach Story (1942)
  • Juke Box Jenny (1942)
  • His Butler's Sister (1943)
  • Song of the Open Road (1944)
  • The Captain from Köpenick (completed in 1941, released in 1945)
  • Duchess of Idaho (1950)
{{Div col end}}

References

1. ^Erickson, Hal Biography (Allmovie)
2. ^{{IMDb name|0036324}}
3. ^{{IBDB name|101040}}
4. ^{{ibdb title|2656|Time Remembered}}
5. ^IBDB Awards
6. ^IMDB [https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0036324/awards IMDb awards section]
7. ^IMDB [https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0036324/awards Biography]

External links

{{commons category|Siegfried Arno}}
  • {{IMDb name|0036324}}
  • {{IBDB name}}
  • {{Amg name|2344}}
  • Sig Arno @ Virtual History Film (photos)
  • {{Find a Grave|13276132}}
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Arno, Sig}}

13 : German expatriate male actors in the United States|German male stage actors|German male film actors|German male silent film actors|Deaths from Parkinson's disease|Jewish emigrants from Nazi Germany to the United States|Jewish American male actors|Male actors from Hamburg|Male actors from Los Angeles County, California|1895 births|1975 deaths|20th-century German male actors|20th-century American male actors

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/11/12 6:00:02