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  1. Exhaustively researched and objectively told, The Lost One: A Life of Peter Lorre looks behind-the-scenes at a multi-dimensional life triumphant and yet tragically tangled with failed possibilities. Winner of the Rondo Award – “Best Book of 2005”. Finalist for the Theatre Librarian Association Award – 2005.

  2. June 1–13, 2004. Peter Lorre. A Sinister Centennial. One of the great character actors of Hollywood cinema, Hungarian-born Peter Lorre (born in June 1904 as Ladislav Loewenstein) left his family home at the age of seventeen and traveled through Switzerland and Austria before settling in Germany, where he became a favorite of playwright ...

  3. Peter Lorre (1904-1964) was born Laszlo (Ladislav) Löwenstein in Rosenberg, a small town in Austria-Hungary about 150 miles northeast of Vienna. He grew up and was educated in Vienna.*. To satisfy his father, he became an unhappy bank clerk before starting his acting career. Despite his father’s disapproval, Lorre was drawn to the German ...

  4. Signed to a 20th Century Fox contract in 1936, Lorre asked for and received a chance to play a good guy for a change. He starred in eight installments of the Mr. Moto series, playing an ever-polite (albeit well versed in karate) Japanese detective. When the series folded in 1939, Lorre freelanced in villainous roles at several studios.

  5. 12 de sept. de 2014 · Fifty years after Peter Lorre's death, a season at the BFI celebrates an actor who flourished in the uneasy territory between the silly and the sinister. By Michael Newton

  6. HOLLYWOOD, March 23 (UPI) —Peter Lorre, whose mild manner and sinister voice sent shivers up the spines of moviegoers for three decades, died of a stroke today. His age was 59.

  7. 彼得·洛(Peter Lorre,1904年6月26日—1964年3月23日),原名拉迪斯洛·罗温斯泰(László Lowenstein),出生于斯洛伐克。在银幕上,彼得·洛习惯以反面杀手形象亮相,但在现实中,他的经历远比一个杀手复杂曲折得多,不一样的只是,他的运气总比自己的角色好上许多。