Jan Niklas | |
Birth Date: | 1947 10, df=y |
Birth Place: | Munich, Bavaria, Germany |
Othername: | Yan Nicklas |
Occupation: | Film and television actor |
Yearsactive: | 1974–present |
Awards: | Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor 1987 |
Jan Niklas (born 15 October 1947) is a German film and television actor. He is best known for appearing in TV films such as Peter The Great, and . He won a Golden Globe Award for his appearance in the TV miniseries Anastasia: The Mystery of Anna. He also played in the Hungarian film Colonel Redl which was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
Jan Niklas was born on 15 October 1947 in Pottenstein, near Nuremberg, Germany. After attending boarding school in Britain, he took acting classes in London, then he completed three years of acting classes at the Max Reinhardt Academy in Berlin.[1]
Niklas made his first television appearance on an episode of the German TV series Sonderdezernat K1 as Juniorchef. After playing in a couple of TV films and miniseries he slowly gained popularity. His breakthrough came in 1985, when he was cast in supporting role in István Szabó's war film Oberst Redl.
In 1986 he was cast to portray a young Peter the Great in the miniseries Peter the Great. A lot of newspapers and magazines stated that it was Niklas' performance that made the miniseries so believable, and the Miami Herald stated: "It’s Niklas’ vigorously effective portrayal of the younger Peter that hooks a viewer into caring about this legendary figure. Due to his energetic performance the first two parts of “Peter the Great” are the most absorbing".[2] TV Guide stated that Niklas was the Discovery of the year in 1986.
Niklas received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Performance by an Actor in a Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for Television, but lost to James Woods (Promise).
However, later that same year, his "style and flair" was recognized throughout the industry, and brought him to the historical drama Anastasia: The Mystery of Anna in which he portrayed Prince Erich. The Boston Globe called it "a performance worth remembering". Niklas won the Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for Television for his performance.
After this, he appeared in films such as: The Rose Garden, Dr. M, Red Hot and The House of the Spirits. He stayed unnoticed for a while, until in 2001 he was cast as Fritz Pfeffer in the Emmy Award-winning miniseries . This was, according to The Detroit News, "completely believable". His latest appearance was in the German film Die Zeit, die man Leben nennt.
Title | Year | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Clown | 1976 | Leo Schnier | ||
The Formula | 1980 | Gestapo Captain | ||
Night Crossing | 1982 | Lt. Fehler | ||
Loose Connections | 1983 | Axel Hoffman | ||
Colonel Redl | 1985 | Kubinyi Kristof | ||
Peter the Great | 1986 | 4 episodes | ||
1986 | Prince Erich | 2 episodes | ||
The Rose Garden | 1989 | Paessler | ||
Dr. M | 1990 | Le lieutenant Claus Hartman | ||
Red Hot | 1993 | Yorgi | ||
The House of the Spirits | 1993 | Count de Satigny | ||
Tafelspitz | 1994 | Thomas Jefferson | ||
Blutige Spur | 1995 | Dr. Alexander West | TV film | |
Jezerní královna | 1998 | King Richard | ||
1998 | Hans Osler | |||
Tödliche Diamanten | 1998 | Pallavicini | TV film | |
Die Gottesanbeterin | 2001 | Ulrich Stein | ||
2001 | TV film | |||
Plain Truth | 2004 | Aaron Fitch | TV film | |
Summer Solstice | 2005 | Oscar | TV film | |
Die Zeit, die man Leben nennt | 2008 | Jargonov | TV film, (final film role) |