Bruno Ganz, who
played Hitler in the 2004 film Downfall, has died aged 77.
The Swiss actor died
at home in Zurich on Friday night, his management said.
Ganz was well-known
in German-language cinema and theatre and also had roles in English-language
films including The Reader and The Manchurian Candidate.
His most famous
role, however, was as Adolf Hitler in Downfall. One particular scene depicting
Hitler in apoplectic fury became a meme and spawned thousands of parodies
online.
The film, called Der
Untergang in German, told the story of Hitler's final days in his Berlin
bunker. It grossed $92m (£71.3m) at box offices around the world when it was
released.
Inside Hitler's WW2
bunker office
How the BBC told the
world Hitler was dead
Is this 1921 cartoon
the first ever meme?
It was named winner
of the BBC Four World Cinema Award and was nominated for an Academy Award for
Best Foreign Language Film, but since then it has become almost as famous for a
wave of internet parodies of its final scene, poking fun at numerous news
events.
In 2005 Ganz told
The Guardian newspaper that he spent four months preparing for the role,
studying historical records including a secretly-recorded tape of Hitler and
observing people with Parkinson's disease, which he came to believe the
dictator had.
Tributes were paid
to Ganz at the end of the Berlin film festival on Saturday, hosted by actress
Anke Engelke
But he said: "I
cannot claim to understand Hitler. Even the witnesses who had been in the
bunker with him were not really able to describe the essence of the man.
Tributes were paid to Ganz at the end of the Berlin film festival
on Saturday, hosted by actress Anke Engelke
"He had no
pity, no compassion, no understanding of what the victims of war
suffered."
Ganz, the most
famous Swiss actor, had a rich and varied career. He appeared in Werner
Herzog's Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979) and played an angel in Wim Wenders' Wings
of Desire (1987) and its sequel Faraway, So Close! (1993).
He appeared in
genres including noir - The American Friend (1977) - and science fiction - The
Boys from Brazil (1978), which starred Sir Laurence Olivier. In 2008 he had a
role in The Baader Meinhof Complex and his last role was in Lars von Trier's
2018 film The House that Jack Built.
At the time of his
death, Ganz was the holder of the Iffland-Ring, an accolade to the
German-speaking actor judged "most significant and worthy".
The ring is passed
from person to person, and it is not yet clear who Ganz had intended it to
transfer to on the occasion of his death.
It has been reported
that Ganz had been diagnosed with colon cancer.
https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-47264709
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