Charles Korvin

Charles Korvin

actor, director, cinematographer

Charles Korvin was born on Nov 21, 1907 in Slovakia]. Charles Korvin's big-screen debut came with Enter Arsene Lupin directed by Ford Beebe in 1944, strarring Arsene Lupin. Charles Korvin is known for Holocaust directed by Marvin J. Chomsky, Joseph Bottoms stars as Rudi Weiss and Tovah Feldshuh as Helena Slomova. The most recent award Charles Korvin achieved is Photoplay Awards. The upcoming new tvshow Charles Korvin plays is Holocaust - Season 1 which will be released on Apr 16, 1978.

He was born in Piestany, Hungary, going to the United States in 1940 having studied at the Sorbonne and working in still and motion picture photography. After studying acting at the Barter Theatre in Abingdon Virginia, he made his 1943 debut on Broadway in "Dark Eyes" under the name Geza Korvin. It was then than movie producer Charles K. Feldman signed him to a contract with Universal Studios. There, with the new stage name Charles Korvin, he played the title role, a French thief, in "Enter Arsene Lupin" (1944). His next three movies paired him romantically with Merle Oberon. After a contract dispute with Universal, and though blacklisted by the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1951, he played a number of villain, thief and philanderer roles for different studios, including the part of the evil Russian agent Rokov in Lex Barker's "Tarzan's Savage Fury" (1952). He also appeared in many TV episodes, notably as The Eagle in the "Zorro" series (1957) and as the Latin dance instructor Carlos in "The Honeymooners". He returned to Hollywood in Stanley Kramer's "Ship of Fools" (1965). He had homes in Manhattan, USA and Klosters, Switzerland, and died, aged 90, at the Lenox Hill Hospital in Manhattan, survived by his wife, Natasha; a daughter, Katherine Pers of Budapest; a son, Edward Danziger Dorvin of Santa Monica, California; and three grandchildren.

  • Birthday

    Nov 21, 1907
  • Place of Birth

    Piestany, Austria-Hungary [now Piestany, Slovakia]

Known For

Awards

1 wins & 0 nominations

Photoplay Awards
1946
Best Performances of the Month (January)
Winner - Photoplay Award
This Love of Ours (1945)

Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies
TV Shows