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  1. Peter Lorre (1904 - 1964) fue un actor y director de Eslovaquia conocido por Casablanca, El halcón maltés, Arsénico por compasión, M, el vampiro de Düsseldorf, 20.000 leguas de viaje submarino, El hombre que sabía demasiado, El agente secreto, Historias de terror, Crimen y castigo y La comedia de los horrores

  2. 2 de sept. de 2014 · Peter Lorre: 10 essential performances. From his astonishing debut as the child-killer in Fritz Lang’s M, Peter Lorre went on to become one of Hollywood’s best-recognised character actors. “You always remember the eyes,” notes a co-star in a 1996 episode of cheapjack TV documentary series Biography titled The Master of Menace.

  3. Actor Peter Lorre, the Carpathian mountain boy who became a professional ogre, sleepy-voiced comedian, and bon vivant, died Monday of an apparent stroke in his tiny Hollywood apartment.

  4. Lorre was born in Rózsahegy (Rosenberg) in a country called Austria-Hungary. Now the place where he was born is in the country Slovakia. He began acting in theaters in Vienna, Breslau, and Zürich. In the 1920s, he moved to Berlin to work as an actor. In 1931, the movie director Fritz Lang chose Lorre to act in a movie called "M".

  5. www.rottentomatoes.com › celebrity › peter_lorrePeter Lorre | Rotten Tomatoes

    Birthday: Jun 26, 1904. Birthplace: Rózsahegy, Austria-Hungary. A product of Berlin's post World War I experimental theatre scene, Peter Lorre honed his craft in plays by Shakespeare, Goethe and ...

  6. 7 de jul. de 2023 · 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.

  7. 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.