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Paul Henreid
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Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman Bergman turns up one evening with her husband (Paul Henreid) whom she thought was dead during the period of her romance with Bogart. Henreid is leader of the underground in Europe and it is vital that he get to America. Bogart has two visas that will do the trick and the choice is between going off himself with Bergman - their torch still aflame - or sending her off with Henreid, who can do so much for the United Nations cause.
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Born in Trieste, which was then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Henreid was the son of an aristocratic Viennese banker. He studied theatre in Vienna and debuted on the stage under the direction of Max Reinhardt. He began his film career acting in German films in the 1930s, but left Austria in 1935 for Britain. With the start of World War II, Henreid risked deportation or internment as an enemy alien, but Conrad Veidt spoke for him and he was allowed to remain free in England.[1] A small role in Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939) then led him to Hollywood.
The narrative centers on the notorious "Flying Dutchman," Vincent Van Der Lyn (Paul Henreid), a fugitive underground resistance leader from Holland who heads for a 36-hour stopover in neutral Lisbon before continuing on to his secret mission in England. Vincent was a teacher in Holland who was arrested by the Nazis for teaching subversive material about freedom. He escaped imprisonment and has been hooked up with the international underground anti-Nazi movement ever since.
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Henreid's star faded in the 1950s, a fact he would later attribute (in his 1984 autobiography Ladies Man) to the Hollywood Blacklist. He turned to directing, helming such inexpensive but worthwhile dramas as For Men Only (a 1951 indictment of the college hazing process) and A Woman's Devotion (1954). One of his best directorial efforts was the 1964 meller Dead Ringer, starring his former Warners co-star (and longtime personal friend) Bette Davis. In addition, Henreid directed dozens of 30- and 60-minute installments of such TV series as Alfred Hitchcock Presents and Maverick. His last on-camera appearance was as "The Cardinal" in Exorcist 2: The Heretic (1977).
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Henreid died of pneumonia at Santa Monica, California and was interred in Woodlawn Cemetery. He was buried with a fan letter from one Mildred Jacobs which he received in 1937, before he became famous, and which he said meant more to him than any award he had won.
Some sources list actor Paul Henreid's birthplace as Italy. In fact, at the time of his birth, Henreid's hometown of Trieste was still part of the Austro-Hungarian empire. Of aristocratic stock, Henreid felt drawn to theatrical activities while attending college. He briefly supported himself as a...Read More
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