Thomas Kretschmann Biography
Date of Birth
8 September 1962, Dessau, German Democratic Republic [now Saxony-Anhalt, Federal Republic of Germany]
Height
5' 9¼" (1.76 m)
Mini Biography
Thomas Kretschmann was born in East Germany. Before becoming an actor, he was a swimmer. He has acted in several popular American movies, such as Resident Evil: Apocalypse (2004), The Pianist (2002), U-571 (2000), In Enemy Hands (2004), etc. He has three children, Nicolas, Stella and Sascha with his ex-girlfriend Lena.
IMDb Mini Biography By: Juliana Motte Tamayose <juliana_2016@hotmail.com>
Trivia
Received the Max Ophüls Prize for best young actor in 1991.
Started working as an actor at the age of 25, after being trained to be an Olympic swimmer.
Has played a Nazi officer in 10 different, completely unrelated films: Krigerens hjerte (1992), Stalingrad (1993), U-571 (2000), The Pianist (2002), In Enemy Hands (2004), Downfall (2004), Head in the Clouds (2004), Eichmann (2007), Valkyrie (2008) and "The Sinking of the Laconia" (2010).
Collaborated again with his The Pianist (2002) co-star Adrien Brody in King Kong (2005). Incidentally, both of Kretschmann's roles with Brody are as captains, albeit of a very different type. In The Pianist (2002), he played a Nazi officer with a conscience; in King Kong (2005) he plays a tough boat captain guiding a film crew.
He has three children: one son, Nicolas, one daughter, Stella and another child, with his ex-girlfriend Lena.
Aged 19, he began a month-long trek from East to West Germany to escape Communism, during which he lost part of his finger to frostbite. He crossed 4 borders with nothing other than a passport and the equivalent of $100 in his possession.
He has played a Nazi officer in 10 movies so far and, in Have No Fear: The Life of Pope John Paul II (2005) (TV), he played Pope John Paul II, who (as the movie shows) fought against and tried to protect people from the Nazis.
Made his stage debut in "Macbeth," directed by Katharina Thalbach.
Modeled in Hugo Boss perfume advertisement.
Considered buying a house in the Bahamas while filming The Sea Wolf (2008) (TV) (aka The Sea Wolf).
Personal Quotes
Leaving [home] is kind of a strange thing - the world opens up but, at the same time, it gets smaller. The more you see of the world, the smaller it seems. After I did the film Stalingrad (1993), I left Germany, and I did a couple of films in France and lived there for about three years, and a couple of films in Italy, and lived there for two years. Then I came over here. The more you get familiar with different countries, the more you think, "Where am I going to live for the rest of my life?" You think, "OK, Germany sucks - don't want to live there; France, no; Italy - the food is nice, but I don't want to live there". In the end, you have nowhere to go anymore.
{Referring to his title role in Eichmann (2007)] I was born long after the war but I still carry this collective guilt around. It's not as much fun for a German to play a part like this than it would be for, say, Ralph Fiennes. It's a very juicy part, but I couldn't get myself excited to go and play Eichmann. Strangely, I have lots of Jewish friends in LA. My wife is Jewish. They were all excited that I play him, so I wanted to do it for them.
Where Are They Now
(2000) Now living and working in Los Angeles
Thomas Kretschmann
Thomas Kretschmann
Thomas Kretschmann
Thomas Kretschmann
Thomas Kretschmann
Thomas Kretschmann
Thomas Kretschmann
Thomas Kretschmann
Thomas Kretschmann
Thomas Kretschmann
Thomas Kretschmann
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