Jean Hersholt facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Jean Hersholt
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Hersholt in 1929
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Born |
Jean Pierre Carl Buron
12 July 1886 Copenhagen, Denmark
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Died | 2 June 1956 Los Angeles, California, U.S.
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(aged 69)
Resting place | Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, California |
Other names | Jean Pierre Hersholt Jean Buron Hersholt |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1906–1955 |
Spouse(s) |
Via Hersholt
(m. 1914) |
Children | 2 sons |
Jean Pierre Carl Buron (12 July 1886 – 2 June 1956), known professionally as Jean Hersholt, was a Danish-American actor. He is best known for starring on the radio series Dr. Christian (1937–1954) and in the film Heidi (1937). Asked how to pronounce his name, he told The Literary Digest, "In English, her'sholt; in Danish, hairs'hult." Of his total credits, 75 were silent films and 65 were sound films (140 total); he directed four.
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Early life
Hersholt was born Jean Pierre Carl Buron in Copenhagen, Denmark. Hersholt claimed to be born into a family of actors, but in reality, both of his parents Henri Pierre Buron, the son of a French Catholic father and a Danish Protestant mother, and Clara (née Petersen), the daughter of a Danish Protestant father and a Danish Jewish mother, were hairdressers, though the father later was a cigar and wine retailer/vendor. Hersholt appeared in two of the first short films of Danish film studio Nordisk Film in 1906, but did not find much success in his early years in Denmark.
Hersholt emigrated to the United States in 1913, and spent the remainder of his acting career in America.
Career
Hersholt's best-remembered film roles include Marcus Schouler in Erich von Stroheim's 1924 Greed and Shirley Temple's beloved grandfather in the 1937 film version of the 1880 children's book, Heidi, written by Swiss author Johanna Spyri. During his long career in the movies, his roles ran the gamut from early silent villains to secondary parts in which his mild Danish accent and pleasant voice suited him to depict a succession of benevolent fathers, doctors, professors, and European noblemen. Hersholt's last role was in the 1955 movie Run for Cover.
In The Country Doctor (1936), a movie starring the Dionne quintuplets, Hersholt portrayed Dr. John Luke, a character based on Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe, the Canadian obstetrician who delivered and cared for the Dionne quintuplets. Two sequels followed. Hersholt wanted to do the role on radio, but could not get the rights. He decided to create his own doctor character for radio, and since he was a Hans Christian Andersen enthusiast, he borrowed that name for his character of the philosophical Dr. Paul Christian who practiced in the Midwest town of River's End with the assistance of Nurse Judy Price. With the opening theme music of "Rainbow on the River", Dr. Christian was introduced on CBS on 7 November 1937 on The Vaseline Program, or Dr. Christian's Office and later Dr. Christian.
The small-town physician's good humor, innate common sense, and scientific training helped drive off a series of villainous types who tried to interfere with the peaceful lifestyle of River's End. Produced by Dorothy McCann, the radio series became a popular long-running hit, continuing on CBS until 6 January 1954, with Hersholt so strongly identified with the role that he received mail asking for medical advice. Various spin-offs were produced, as Hersholt co-wrote a Dr. Christian novel and made a series of six family films as Christian from 1939 to 1941, for instance Dr. Christian Meets the Women in 1940. In 1956, his Dr. Christian character made the transition to television, scripted by Gene Roddenberry, with Macdonald Carey as his nephew Dr. Mark Christian. From the '30s through the '50s, Neil Reagan, brother of Ronald Reagan, directed the radio series Dr. Christian, starring Jean Hersholt.
In 1939, Hersholt helped form the Motion Picture Relief Fund to support industry employees with medical care when they were down on their luck. The fund was used to create the Motion Picture Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, California, and it led to the creation in 1956 of the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, an honorary Academy Award given to an "individual in the motion picture industry whose humanitarian efforts have brought credit to the industry".
As president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Hersholt presented American film industry founders Colonel William N. Selig, Albert E. Smith, George K. Spoor, and Thomas Armat with special awards on the 20th anniversary of the academy's founding on March 20, 1948.
Hersholt's large collection of Hans Christian Andersen books is now in the Library of Congress. He translated over 160 of Andersen's fairy tales into the English language. These were published in 1949 in six volumes as The Complete Andersen, this work is "... rated as the standard translation, being one of the best" in English. Hersholt was appointed a knight of the Order of the Dannebrog in 1948, partly due to this endeavor.
Hersholt appeared as the mystery guest on the popular CBS panel/quiz show What's My Line? on August 31, 1952.
Family
Hersholt married Via Andersen on 11 April 1914. They had one son: Allan Hersholt.
He was the paternal half-uncle (by marriage) of actor Leslie Nielsen and former Canadian Deputy Prime Minister Erik Nielsen.
Death
Hersholt died of cancer in Hollywood in 1956, and is interred in Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California. His grave is marked with a statue of Klods-Hans (English: Clumsy Hans), a Hans Christian Andersen character who left home to find his way in the world — much as Hersholt himself had done.
Honors and awards
Hersholt was honored for his services to the industry twice with an honorary Academy Award, first in 1940 and the second time in 1950, and in his honor the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award was named by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. He is one of only 11 people with two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame with one at 6501 Hollywood Boulevard for his work in motion pictures and another one at 6701 Hollywood Boulevard for his work in radio.
Selected filmography
Year | Film | Role | Director | Notes |
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1915 | The Disciple | Mob Member | uncredited | |
1916 | Bullets and Brown Eyes | |||
1916 | Hell's Hinges | Bartender | uncredited | |
1916 | The Aryan | Reginald BarkerClifford Smith | ||
1916 | Kinkaid, Gambler | |||
1916 | The Desert | |||
1917 | Black Orchids | Rex Ingram | ||
1917 | Fighting for Love | Ferdinand | Raymond Wells | |
1917 | Love Aflame | Reginald | Raymond Wells | |
1917 | The Saintly Sinner | |||
1917 | Perils of the Secret Service | Prince Feodor | serial; episode #2 | |
1917 | Southern Justice | Caleb Talbot | Lynn Reynolds | |
1917 | The Greater Law | Lynn Reynolds | ||
1917 | The Soul Herder | The Parson | John Ford | Short |
1917 | The Show Down | Parkes | Lynn Reynolds | |
1917 | A Stormy Knight | Dr. Fraser | Elmer Clifton | |
1917 | '49-'17 | 'Gentleman Jim' Raynor | ||
1917 | Princess Virtue | Emile Carre | Robert Z. Leonard | |
1918 | Madame Spy | Count Von Ornstorff | Douglas Gerrard | |
1918 | The Answer | Shepard | ||
1918 | Little Red Decides | Jack Conway | ||
1919 | Whom the Gods Would Destroy | |||
1919 | Love's Prisoner | Party Guest | John Francis Dillion | uncredited |
1920 | The Red Lane | Vetal Beaulieu | ||
1920 | Merely Mary Ann | Stranger | Edward J. Le Saint | |
1920 | The Golden Trail | Harry Teal | Lewis H. Moomaw | |
1920 | The Deceiver | |||
1921 | The Servant in the House | Manson, The Servant in the House | Jack Conway | |
1920 | The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse | Professor von Hartrott | Rex Ingram | uncredited |
1921 | A Certain Rich Man | Adrian Brownwell | Howard Hickman | |
1921 | The Man of the Forest | Lem Beasley | Howard Hickman | |
1922 | When Romance Rides | Joel Creech | Jean Hersholt | |
1922 | Heart's Haven | Henry Bird | Benjamin B. Hampton | |
1922 | Tess of the Storm Country | Ben Letts | John S. Robertson | |
1922 | The Strangers' Banquet | Fiend | Marshall Neilan | |
1923 | Jazzmania | Prince Otto of Como | Robert Z. Leonard | |
1923 | Quicksands | Ring Member | Jack Conway | |
1923 | Red Lights | Ezra Carson | Clarence G. Badger | |
1923 | Souls for Sale | Himself | Rupert Hughes | |
1924 | Torment | Boris | Scott R. Beal (assistant director) | |
1924 | The Goldfish | Herman Krauss | Jerome Storm | |
1924 | The Woman on the Jury | Jury Foreman | Harry O. Hoyt | |
1924 | Sinners in Silk | Dr. Eustace | Hobart Henley | |
1924 | Her Night of Romance | Joe Diamond | Sidney Franklin | |
1924 | Greed | Marcus | Erich von Stroheim | |
1924 | Cheap Kisses | Gustaf Borgstrom | Cullen Tate | |
1924 | So Big | Aug Hempel | Charles Brabin | |
1925 | Dangerous Innocence | Gilchrist | William A. Seiter | |
1925 | Fifth Avenue Models | a Crook | Svend Gade | |
1925 | If Marriage Fails | Dr. Mallini | John Ince | |
1925 | Don Q Son of Zorro | Don Fabrique | Donald Crisp | |
1925 | A Woman's Faith | Jules Cluny | Edward Laemmle | |
1925 | Stella Dallas | Ed Munn | Henry King | |
1926 | The Greater Glory | Gustav Schmidt | Curt Rehfeld | |
1926 | My Old Dutch | 'Erb 'Uggins | Laurence Trimble | |
1926 | It Must Be Love | Pop Schmidt | Alfred E. Green | |
1926 | Flames | Ole Bergson | Lewis H. Moomaw | |
1926 | The Old Soak | Clement Hawley, Sr. | Edward Sloman | |
1927 | The Wrong Mr. Wright | Seymour White | Scott Sidney | |
1927 | Alias the Deacon | George Caswell aka The Deacon | Edward Sloman | |
1927 | The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg | Dr. Jüttner | Ernst Lubitsch | |
1928 | 13 Washington Square | 'Deacon' Pyecroft | Melville W. Brown | |
1928 | The Secret Hour | Tony | Rowland V. Lee | |
1928 | Abie's Irish Rose | Solomon Levy | Victor Fleming | |
1928 | Jazz Mad | Franz Hausmann | F. Harmon Weight | |
1928 | The Battle of the Sexes | William Judson | D. W. Griffith | |
1928 | Give and Take | Factory Owner | William Beaudine | |
1929 | Girl on the Barge | McCadden | Edward Sloman | |
1929 | The Younger Generation | Pa | Frank Capra | |
1929 | Modern Love | François Renault | Arch Heath | |
1930 | The Climax | Luigi Golfanti | Renaud Hoffman | |
1930 | The Case of Sergeant Grischa | Posnanski | Ray Lissner (assistant) | |
1930 | Mamba | August Bolte | Albert S. Rogell | Mamba |
1930 | Hell Harbor | Joseph Horngold | Henry King | |
1930 | East Is West | Man | Monta Bell | |
1930 | A Soldier's Plaything | Grandfather Rittner | Michael Curtiz | uncredited |
1930 | The Cat Creeps | Dr. Patterson | Rupert Julian | |
1930 | The Third Alarm | Frank 'Dad' Morton | Emory Johnson | |
1930 | Viennese Nights | Elsa's Father | Alan Crosland | |
1931 | Daybreak | Herr Schnabel | Jacques Feyder | |
1931 | Transatlantic | Rudolph aka Jed Kramer | William K. Howard | |
1931 | The Phantom of Paris | Herman | John S. Robertson | |
1931 | Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise) | Karl Ohlin | Robert Z. Leonard | |
1931 | The Sin of Madelon Claudet | Dr. Dulac | Edgar Selwyn | |
1931 | Private Lives | Oscar | Sidney Franklin | |
1932 | Emma | Mr. Frederick Smith | Clarence Brown | |
1932 | The Beast of the City | Sam Belmonte | Charles Brabin | |
1932 | Are You Listening? | George Wagner | ||
1932 | Grand Hotel | Senf, the Porter | Edmund Goulding | |
1932 | Night Court | the Janitor | W. S. Van Dyke | |
1932 | New Morals for Old | James Hallett | Charles Brabin | |
1932 | Unashamed | Heinrich Schmidt | Harry Beaumont | |
1932 | Skyscraper Souls | Jake Sorenson | Edgar Selwyn | |
1932 | Hearts of Humanity | Sol Bloom | Christy Cabanne | |
1932 | The Mask of Fu Manchu | Von Berg | Charles Vidor | |
1932 | Flesh | Mr. Herman | John Ford | |
1933 | The Crime of the Century | Dr. Emil Brandt | William Beaudine | |
1933 | Song of the Eagle | Otto Hoffman | Ralph Murphy | |
1933 | Dinner at Eight | Jo Stengel | George Cukor | |
1933 | Christopher Bean | Rosen | Sam Wood | |
1934 | The Cat and the Fiddle | Professor | Sam Wood (uncredited) | |
1934 | Men in White | Dr. 'Hockie' Hochberg | Ryszard Bolesławski | |
1934 | The Fountain | Baron Van Leyden | John Cromwell | |
1934 | The Painted Veil | Herr Koerber | Richard Boleslawski | |
1935 | Mark of the Vampire | Baron Otto | Tod Browning | |
1935 | Break of Hearts | Professor Thalma | Philip Moeller | |
1935 | Murder in the Fleet | Victor Hanson | Edward Sedgwick | |
1936 | Tough Guy | Veterinarian | Chester Franklin | |
1936 | The Country Doctor | Dr. John Luke | Henry King | |
1936 | Sins of Man | Christopher Freyman | Gregory Ratoff | |
1936 | His Brother's Wife | Professor Fahrenheim | W. S. Van Dyke | |
1936 | Reunion | Dr. John Luke | ||
1936 | One in a Million | Heinrich Muller | Sidney Lanfield | |
1937 | Seventh Heaven | Father Chevillon | Henry King | |
1937 | Heidi | Adolph Kramer / Grandfather | Allan Dwan | |
1938 | Happy Landing | Herr Lars Ericksen | Roy Del Ruth | |
1938 | Alexander's Ragtime Band | Professor Heinrich | Henry King | |
1938 | I'll Give a Million | Victor | Walter Lang | |
1938 | Five of a Kind | Dr. John Luke | Herbert I. Leeds | |
1939 | Mr. Moto in Danger Island | Sutter | Herbert I. Leeds | |
1939 | Meet Dr. Christian | Dr. Paul Christian | Bernard Vorhaus | |
1940 | The Courageous Dr. Christian | Dr. Paul Christian | Bernard Vorhaus | |
1940 | Dr. Christian Meets the Women | Dr. Paul Christian | William C. McGann | |
1940 | Remedy for Riches | Dr. Paul Christian | Erle C. Kenton | |
1941 | Melody for Three | Dr. Paul Christian | Erle C. Kenton | |
1941 | They Meet Again | Dr. Paul Christian | Erle C. Kenton | |
1943 | Stage Door Canteen | Himself | Frank Borzage | |
1949 | Dancing in the Dark | Jean Hersholt | Irving Reis | |
1955 | Run for Cover | Mr. Swenson | Nicholas Ray |
Radio appearances
Year | Program | Episode/source |
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1943 | Lady Esther Screen Guild Theatre | Men in White |
See also
In Spanish: Jean Hersholt para niños