Carl Esmond
About
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Also Known As
Charles Esmond,
Willy Eichberger
Birth Place
Austria
Born
June 14, 1902
Died
December 04, 2004
Biography
Filmography
Cast (Feature Film)
My Wicked, Wicked Ways... The Legend of Errol Flynn
(1985)
Agent for H. A. R. M.
(1966)
Prof. Janos Steffanic
Morituri
(1965)
Busch
Brushfire!
(1962)
Martin
Hitler
(1962)
Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel
Thunder in the Sun
(1959)
Andre Dauphin
From the Earth to the Moon
(1958)
Jules Verne
The World in His Arms
(1952)
Prince Semyon
The Desert Hawk
(1950)
Kibar
Mystery Submarine
(1950)
[Lieut.] Heldman
Walk a Crooked Mile
(1948)
Dr. Ritter Van Stolb
Slave Girl
(1947)
El Hamid
Smash Up--The Story of a Woman
(1947)
Dr. Lorenz
The Catman of Paris
(1946)
Charles Regnier
Lover Come Back
(1946)
Paul Millard
Resisting Enemy Interrogation
(1945)
Nazi commander
This Love of Ours
(1945)
Uncle Robert
Her Highness and the Bellboy
(1945)
Baron Zoltan Faludi
Without Love
(1945)
Paul Carrell
The Story of Dr. Wassell
(1944)
Lieutenant Dirk van Daal
Experiment Perilous
(1944)
[John] Maitland
Address Unknown
(1944)
Baron von Friesche
Ministry of Fear
(1944)
Willi Hilfe
The Master Race
(1944)
Andrei
First Comes Courage
(1943)
Major Paul Dichter
Margin for Error
(1943)
Max von Alvenstor
Seven Sweethearts
(1942)
Jan Randall
Panama Hattie
(1942)
Lucas Kefler
Pacific Rendezvous
(1942)
Andre Leemuth
The Navy Comes Through
(1942)
Richard "Dutch" Kroner
Sundown
(1941)
[Jan] Kuypens
Sergeant York
(1941)
German major
Little Men
(1941)
Professor
Thunder Afloat
(1939)
U-Boat captain
The Dawn Patrol
(1938)
Von Meuller
Evensong
(1934)
Archduke Theodore
Life Events
1933
London film acting debut
1938
First Hollywood film as actor
Photo Collections
20 Photos
Sundown - Scene Stills
Here are several scene stills from Walter Wanger's Sundown (1941), starring Gene Tierney, Bruce Cabot, and George Sanders.
7 Photos
Sundown - Lobby Cards
Here are some Lobby Cards from Walter Wanger's Sundown (1941), from the original 1941 release as well as a 1948 reissue. Lobby Cards were 11" x 14" posters that came in sets of 8. As the name implies, they were most often displayed in movie theater lobbies, to advertise current or coming attractions.