Josef Peterhans | |
Birth Name: | Josef Thomas Peterhans |
Birth Date: | 4 December 1882 |
Birth Place: | Cologne, German Empire |
Death Place: | Berlin, West Germany |
Nationality: | German |
Occupation: | Actor |
Years Active: | 1902–1942 |
Josef Thomas Peterhans (4 December 1882 – 3 February 1960) was a German stage and film actor.
Peterhans began his stage career in 1902, aged twenty. He began his film acting career with the film German: Der Todessprung in 1916. Before acting in films he played at theaters in the province and in Berlin. He served in the military from 1914 to 1917. He continued his career by playing supporting roles in films like German: Und wenn ich lieb', nimm Dich in acht (1917), (1918), German: Das Lied des Narren (1919). In German: Um Krone und Peitsche he had starred alongside the famous actress Fern Andra. In 1920 he starred in 9 films including German: Salome, German: Auri sacra fames - Der verfluchte Hunger nach Gold, German: Christian Wahnschaffe: Weltbrand and The Women House of Brescia. The last one was rejected by the British Board of Film Classification on grounds of prostitution depicted in the film.[1]
Peterhans played a supporting character in the 1925 -directed Chronicles of the Gray House.[2] From 1926 to 1931 he appeared in only two films Night of Mystery (1927) and Panic (1928). After the advent of talkies he again became active in the film industry and starred in several films including The Pride of Company Three (1931) and The Mad Bomberg (1932). He played a pastor in William Tell (1933), a marshal in (1934), a forester in Victoria (1935), a deputy in Pour le Mérite (1938), a policeman in (1941) and a general in Fridericus (1937) and The Great King (1941). He also played the role of an Indian in Indian Revenge (1920) and in the double roles in The Tiger of Eschnapur and The Indian Tomb (both 1938).[3] His last film was Die Entlassung (1942). He spent his life in Berlin-Steglitz. He ended his career with the second World War.