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Klaus Kinski Biography |
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Occupation: "The Ultimate Actor"
Birth Name: Nikolaus Günther Nakszynski
Born: October 18, 1926, Sopot, Poland
One of the most eccentric and colourful personalities in the entire film history,
in a way the last real German "Star", Klaus Kinski´s life was
as strange as his films.
As he once said himself, the roles he played were actually part of his real
life. Kinski was a fanatic in everything he did. His biography is not that far
from a script:
Born the youngest of four children, Kinski grew up in poverty.
Forced into theft in order to feed himself and his family, Kinski was in constant
trouble with the law.
World War II only brought more pain for the Kinski family with Klaus being
forced into the Polish army and subsequently being captured and serving under
the German army. Kinski spent his short term in the military flagging down American
planes and begging them to shoot him. Losing a close friend, Klaus went AWOL.
Dressed in children clothes, Kinski fed on rotten apples for days until his
capture by the English army and a stint in POW camp, where he soon started to
play for his fellow prisoners.With the war over, and his release from the POW
camp, Kinski went in search of his family. However, soon enough he discovered
that most of them had passed away during his time away. The biggest blow was
the loss of his mother, whom Kinski loved dearly.
Kinski spent the following years with a traveling drama troupe. His fevered
and emotional portrayals on the stage foreshadowed his success to come. However,
his lack of understanding to authority created great tension with his bosses
and Kinski constantly found himself without a job and homeless.
By the late
forties, Kinski jumped into film. With 1948's "Morituri", Kinski's
life as an established actor was about to begin.
Kinski's physical appearance: bulging eyes and creepy smirk, helped him take a niche as the perennial villain. The Edgar Wallace films made in Germany was where Kinski was found in the early sixties. Though they were supporting roles, Kinski was stealing the pictures away from the handsome leads and starlets.
Kinski's personal life was also changing. He was married and with child: Biggi, his wife, and Natassja, his daughter. However, Kinski's excesses with other women did not cease. In his autobiography, "Kinski Uncut", his affairs are constant and never ending. Biggi and Klaus divorce early on with Kinski leaving Natassja with her mother.
The 1960's represented a decade of things to come for Kinski. His life is a never-ending ride from one film to another and one woman to another. Kinski's choice of movies, at first which are thought out, soon become just opportunities for money. Great films, like "Dr. Zhivago" and "For a Few Dollars More" are mixed in with flops and horrible cinema. Klaus Kinski does over 60 films, alone, in the 1960's, and never looks back once.
The 1970's continued as a decade of extravagance for Kinski. He spent money furiously forcing him to continue taking on horrible films. "I am a whore" he explained, "I´m doing this crap for money, for nothing else."
However, the decade also spawned the creative partnership between him and Werner Herzog. Herzog invited Kinski on the project of "Aguirre, the Wrath of God", which turned out to be one of the highlights of Kinski's long career. Kinski conclude the decade with two other projects under Herzog: "Nosferatu" and "Woyzeck".
Kinski's final decade of film making was the 1980's. The highlight of the decade was 1982's "Fitzcarraldo", which was another collaboration with Herzog. However, by this time the relationship was so strained that Kinski pledged never to work with the director again. This turned out not to be the case. They teamed up once more for "Cobra Verde" in 1988, one of Kinski's last films. The set turned violent when Kinski attacked Herzog and left the set leaving the film unfinished. The film has been released but the story, the result of missing footage, does not stand up to the Kinski-Herzog collaborated films.
Kinski concluded the 1980's with his directorial debut and the last film he completed: "Paganini". "Paganini", however, was a commercial and critical flop. Kinski planned on making it a 16 hour series for Italian television, but when the producers got hold of what was filmed so far, it was taken away from him.
Kinski spent the last years of his life in Lagunitas, California working on his auto-biography "Kinski Uncut", chronicling his chaotic life.
Klaus Kinski passed away on November 23, 1991 from a massive heart attack.
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