Maximilian Schell was an Austrian and Swiss actor director, producer and writer of several of his own films
@Film & Theater Personalities, Birthday and Childhood
Maximilian Schell was an Austrian and Swiss actor director, producer and writer of several of his own films
Maximilian Schell born at
For three years in the 1960s he was romantically involved with Soraya Esfandiary-Bakhtiari, ex-wife of the last Shah of Iran Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
In June 1986, he married Russian actress Natalya Andrejchenko. The couple had a daughter Nastassja, who was born in 1989. They divorced in 2005.
After 2002, while in separation from his wife Natalya, he was romantically involved with Elisabeth Michitsch, an Austrian art historian.
He was born on December 8, 1930, in Vienna, Austria, in a Roman Catholic family of Hermann Ferdinand Schell and Margarethe (née Noe von Nordberg).
His father was a Swiss poet, playwright and novelist, who also owned a pharmacy and his mother, was an actress, who also used to run an acting school. Schell was raised in an atmosphere of art, culture and theatre, which were all pervasive in his life since childhood and thus became ingrained in him from an early stage.
His debut in theatre happened in Vienna when he was three years old.
The anti-Nazi Schell family escaped from Vienna in 1938 after Austria was annexed by Nazi Germany. They settled in Zurich, Switzerland.
Schell used to read lot of classics in Zurich and wrote his first play at ten. Initially he was not interested in acting and aspired to become a playwright like his father or a musician.
He made his film debut in 1955 with the West German war film, ‘Kinder, Mütter und ein General’ (‘Children, Mothers, and a General’) directed by László Benedek. For the next couple of years he worked in seven more films that were made in Europe, which include ‘The Plot to Assassinate Hitler’ (1955), ‘Jackboot Mutiny’ (1955) and ‘The Last Ones Shall Be First’ (1957).
In 1958 upon invitation to perform in ‘Interlock’, a Broadway play by Ira Levin, Schell moved to the US. He essayed the part of an aspiring concert pianist. The same year he made his Hollywood film debut with the war drama film, ‘The Young Lions’ directed by Edward Dmytryk starring along with Marlon Brando and Montgomery Clift. He impressed all with his characterisation of Captain Hardenberg, a commanding German officer.
He went to Germany again in 1960 and essayed the title role of ‘Hamlet’, a tragedy written by William Shakespeare, in a German TV film of the same name. The film was featured in 1999 in an episode of ‘Mystery Science Theater 3000’, an American comedy series.
Throughout his career, he played the role of Hamlet in two stage productions and his performance of the character is considered by many as "one of the greatest Hamlets ever".
He worked in many other television films like ‘Heidi’ (1968), ‘The Diary of Anne Frank’ (1980), ‘Miss Rose White’ (1992) and ‘Stalin’ (1992).
He acted as Hans Rolfe, a defense attorney, in the TV production of ‘Judgment at Nuremberg’, a fictional version of the ‘Nuremberg War Trials’ written by Abby Mann. It was featured in 1959 in an edition of the American television anthology drama series, ‘Playhouse 90’. His excellent portrayal of the character saw him reprising the role in the film version of the story, having the same title, in 1961, which was directed and produced by Stanley Kramer. His remarkable performance in the film fetched him the ‘Academy Award for Best Actor’, making him the first German-speaking actor to win the award post the ‘Second World War’.