Otto Kruger
Otto Kruger was born September 6, 1885, in Toledo, Ohio. This prominent matinee idol of the 1920s theater never attained the same stature in Hollywood, but he certainly contributed many superb performances in movies of the 30s, 40s, 50s, and 60s. Kruger, a slightly built man with a smooth manner and cruel smile, specialized in urbane heavies (he played crooked lawyers and businessmen with particular gusto, and even protrayed Nazis in several films).
He made one silent, 1923's Under the Red Robe, but didn't take up movie work in earnest until 1933. In one of his first films, Ever in My Heart (1933), he co-starred with Barbara Stanwyck and was tagged a "comer," but he settled into character work shortly thereafter (although he was acceptable as the nominal hero of 1936's Dracula's Daughter opposite Gloria Holden). A series of minor strokes finally forced Kruger to retire in the mid 1960s, and he died on his 89th birthday.
His other films include Turn Back the Clock (1933), Gallant Lady, Crime Doctor and Treasure Island (1934), Living Dangerously (1936), Another Thin Man (1939), Dr. Ehrlich's Magic Bullet (1940), Saboteur (1942), Hitler's Children (1943), Murder, My Sweet (1944), High Noon (as the judge who leaves town, 1952), Magnificent Obsession and Black Widow (1954).
--LEONARD MALTIN, from
Leonard Maltin's Movie Encyclopedia.
A selection of Otto Kruger films.
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Find Otto Kruger on eBay.com
A selection of Otto Kruger in books.
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