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John Steiner

John Steiner

Ngày sinh:
Quốc tịch: UK
Đia chỉ:
This tall, blond, thin British character actor portrayed some of the
most memorable villains of Italian cinema during the 1970s and 1980s.
Born in Cheshire, England in 1941, Steiner got his start in films
after school with small parts in British productions. Among them was
'The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by
the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the
Marquis de Sade' (1966),
Bedazzled (1967), and Work is a
4-Letter Word (1968).His big break came in portraying the sly-eyed, manipulative property
tycoon Beauty Smith in Lucio Fulci's White Fang
in 1973, a role he reprised in the sequel,
Challenge to White Fang (1974) in 1974. Steiner worked for Fulci again in
playing the comical vampire Count Dragalescu in
Dracula in the Provinces (1975),
in which he was both horrifying and hilarious as a homosexual Count
Dracula vamp.Steiner continued working in Italy through the 1970s, dabbling in some
of the country's most controversial entertainment. He demonstrated an
entirely un-British willingness to embrace the wild side of acting life
by accepting a role as a Nazi officer in Rino Di Silvestro's
Deported Women of the SS Special Section (1976).
This set the sage for a series of roles as Nazi prison camp officers
filmed in West Germany. Steiner made a similar themed role in Tinto
Brass's Madam Kitty (1976) and later
signed up for a role in Caligula (1979),
in which he was a standout, playing the balding, gauntly
hideous-looking treasurer and financial advisor, Longinus, to the mad
Roman Emperor Caligula (Malcom McDowell). After a
commendable performance in Paolo Cavara's 1976 thriller 'Plot of Fear',
came Shock (1977), the last theatrical film directed by Mario Bava.
Steiner's rare starring role in
Shock was a nice change of pace
for him as he played a sympathetic airline pilot and family man
appearing alongside Daria Nicolodi. After that, he went back to tall
and menacing looking villainous roles one of which occurred when Dario
Argento hired him to appear as the eccentric Italian film journalist
Cristiano Berti in Tenebrae (1982) which
remains Steiner's most celebrated film credit in which he meets with a
most memorable end with an ax to his head midway through.As the business of Italian cinema diminished during the 1980s,
Steiner's roles in Italian and West German productions were nothing
more than brief cameos. One notable role was playing Simon the Magnes
in the TV mini-series
A.D. (1985). By the early
1990s Steiner had quit the acting industry and moved to Los Angeles,
California, USA with his wife and teenage son where he became a
successful real estate agent working out of Beverly Hills.
  • Cha mẹ: Ernest Rudolf SteinerJoan Winifred Steiner (née Dutton)