Gustav Carl Viktor Bodo Maria von Seyffertitz

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Gustav Carl Viktor Bodo Maria von Seyffertitz

Also Known As: "C Butler Clonblough"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Haimhausen, Oberbayern, Bavaria, Germany
Death: December 25, 1943 (81)
at his residence, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of GUIDO Joseph Karl Maria Viktor Freiherr von Seyffertitz, Dr. jur. and Anna Scharoch
Husband of Frieda von Seyffertitz and Nelly von Seyffertitz
Ex-husband of Katharina von Seyffertitz; Toni Freifrau von Seyffertitz and Eugenie Freifrau von Seyffertitz
Father of Wilhelm's Twin Brother von Seyffertitz; Wilhelm Reichsfreiherr von Seyffertitz; Adolar Reichsfreiherr von Seyffertitz; Gretel Freiin von Seyffertitz and Joan Goodridge
Brother of THEOBALD Guido Georg Haubold Johann Maria Freiherr von Seyffertitz and Moritz Reichsfreiherr von Seyffertitz

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About Gustav Carl Viktor Bodo Maria von Seyffertitz

Hollywood Actor and Director of the SIlent Era and early Talkies, Gustav von Seyffertitz (aka C Butler Clonblough during WWI) appearing in 118 films, he retired at 77 years of age, in 1939.

http://silenthollywood.com/gustavvonseyffertitz.html

"~Silent Filmography~ ~Director~

Peggy Puts It Over (1921) (as G.v. Seyffertitz) Closed Doors (1921) (as G. v. Seyffertitz) Princess Jones (1921) (as G.V. Seyffertitz) The Secret Garden (1919) (as G. Butler Clonebaugh)

~Actor~

Come Across (1929) .... Pop Hanson The Case of Lena Smith (1929) .... Herr Hofrat Me, Gangster (1928) .... Factory owner The Woman Disputed (1928) .... Otto Krueger The Docks of New York (1928) .... Hymn Book Harry The Red Mark (1928) .... De Nou The Mysterious Lady (1928) .... Gen. Boris Alexandroff Yellow Lily (1928) .... Kinkelin Vamping Venus (1928) .... Jupiter The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come (1928) .... Nathan Cherry The Wizard (1927) .... Prof. Paul Coriolos The Gaucho (1927) .... Ruiz, The Usurper ... aka "Douglas Fairbanks as The Gaucho" - USA (copyright title) Rose of the Golden West (1927) .... Gómez The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg (1927) .... King Karl VII The Magic Flame (1927) .... The Chancellor Barbed Wire (1927) .... Pierre Corlet Birds of Prey (1927) .... Foxy The Price of Honor (1927) .... Peter Fielding Anything Once! (1927) .... Chancellor Gherkin Going Crooked (1926) .... Mordaunt Private Izzy Murphy (1926) .... Cohannigan My Official Wife (1926) .... Grand Duke Diplomacy (1926) .... Baron Ballin Unknown Treasures (1926) .... Simmons The Lone Wolf Returns (1926) .... Morphew Don Juan (1926) (uncredited) .... Neri - the Alchemist The Bells (1926) .... Jerome Frantz The Dice Woman (1926) .... Datto of Mandat Sparrows (1926) .... Mr. Grimes Red Dice (1926) .... Andrew North The Danger Girl (1926) .... James (the butler) The Eagle (1925) (uncredited) .... Court Servant at Dinner Flower of Night (1925) .... Vigilante Leader A Regular Fellow (1925) .... Prime Minister The Goose Woman (1925) .... Mr. Vogel Grounds for Divorce (1925) .... Labell The Bandolero (1924) .... Marques de Bazan The Lone Wolf (1924) .... Wetheimer Yolanda (1924) .... Oliver de Daim Under the Red Robe (1923) .... Clom Unseeing Eyes (1923) .... Father Paquette Mark of the Beast (1923) .... John Hunter The Inner Man (1922) .... Jud Benson The Face in the Fog (1922) .... Michael When Knighthood Was in Flower (1922) .... Grammont Sherlock Holmes (1922) .... Professor Moriarty Dead Men Tell No Tales (1920) (as George von Seyffertitz) .... Señor Joaquin Madonnas and Men (1920) .... Grimaldo/John Grimm The Sporting Duchess (1920) .... Major Roland Mostyn Slaves of Pride (1920) .... John Reynolds Even as Eve (1920) .... Amasu Munn The Vengeance of Durand (1919) .... Henri Durand ... aka "The Two Portraits" - USA (alternative title) The Dark Star (1919) (as G. Butler Clonbough) .... German Spy The Roaring Road (1919) (uncredited) (unconfirmed) .... Undetermined Role Sic 'Em, Sam (1918) (as G. Butler Clonebaugh) The Source (1918) (as G. Butler Clonblough) .... Ekstrom Till I Come Back to You (1918) (as G. Butler Clonbough) .... Karl Von Drutz Less Than Kin (1918) .... Endicott Lee To Hell with the Kaiser! (1918) Old Wives for New (1918) .... Melville Bladen His Majesty, Bunker Bean (1918) .... Professor Balthasar The Whispering Chorus (1918) .... Mocking Face Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley (1918) (uncredited) .... Surgeon The Hidden Pearls (1918) .... Senator Joseph Benton The Widow's Might (1918) .... Horace Hammer Rimrock Jones (1918) .... Stoddard Stella Maris (1918) (uncredited) .... The Surgeon Swat the Kaiser (1918) .... The Kaiser The Devil-Stone (1917) .... Stephen Densmore The Little Princess (1917) .... Mr. Carrisford The Countess Charming (1917) .... Jacob Vandergraft Down to Earth (1917) .... Dr. Jollyem ... aka "The Optimist" - USA (alternative title)"

http://www.classichorror.free-online.co.uk/gustav.htm

"Perhaps it is only Gustav von Seyffertitz's name that has saved him from complete obscurity. In addition the general proportion of his films, particularly those in which he featured strongly, have failed to survive. However, Gustav von Seyffertitz has left us enough clues for us to form some expectation if ever any more of his films are rediscovered.

"The Missing Link Proudly Presents Gustav Von Seyffertitz The True Hollywood Aristocrat

"Certain individuals in the early days of Hollywood had the gall to give themselves a name that would imply a noble European background. This air of grand mystique would give many of those struggling to be noticed in the industry the edge over the numerous number of foreigners arriving in the sunny state of California at this time. Out of this identity crisis only a few could lay rightful claim to a double-barrelled title. The megalomaniac Erich Oswald Hans Carl Marie Stroheim von Nordenwald, known simply as Erich von Stroheim, is one person who used his name to good effect and cloaked his past with an air of ambiguity that could suggest royalty. Besides being a consummate actor, Gustav von Seyffertitz also exploited his Thirteenth Century name for his own benefit.

"He was born Gustav Carl Viktor Bodo Maria von Seyffertitz in Haimhausen, Bavaria on August 4th 1862, (other sources mistakenly list his birthdate as August 15th 1863), to a family who all held high ranks in the Austrian Army. Although Gustav's elder brother Theobald (1856-1926) upheld this family tradition, Gustav's path took a different road, and we can only surmise that this must have met with a considerable degree of disapproval from his proud, militaristic family. His father Guido von Seyffertitz, born in Innsbruck, was a well respected politician whose family lineage impressed his wife-to-be Anna Butler Clonblough, a native of Haimhausen, but whose own family descended from a good name in Ireland. Gustav's father died when he was only three years old, and his mother remarried in Vienna after her husband's death. Gustav first married at the tender age of 24 in Strasbourg to a theatrical actress named Katharina Hoffmann, suggesting that he had already toured throughout Europe with perhaps a succession of performing troupes by this time. Katharina gave birth to two sons, Wilhelm who was born in Copenhagen in 1882 became a professional juggler in Berlin and Adolar. Gustav's granddaughter is presently 89 years of age and sadly only recalls one meeting with Gustav when he was living in a rather palatial apartment in Berlin, before he emigrated to the east coast of America in 1912. It has also been suggested that he worked on the English stage during the 1880's, but although there is no evidence to refute this claim, the reality is more likely to have been an extensive number of tours throughout Europe including Britain and never dwelling for long in any one country. Gustav later married another actress named Toni Creutzburg in Koburg during 1894, a union that gave birth to one daughter who sadly died at the age of fifteen. After marrying Frieda and Eugenie von Mink, two other actresses who provided him with no offspring, Gustav's fifth and final marriage took place sometime during the Great War to an American actress named Nelly Thorne. Their only daughter Joan Goodridge may still be alive today.

"On the strange new continent of America, Gustav continued his theatrical activities including four plays listed in "The History of the American Theatre" that he directed soon after his arrival. The Argyle Case was produced at the Criterion Theatre from a story by Harriet Ford and Harvey O'Higgins on Christmas Eve in 1912. Warner Brothers would later adapt the same story for the screen in 1929 starring Thomas Meighan, H.B. Warner and Lila Lee. Elevating a Husband appeared at the Liberty Theatre in 1912 with Louis Mann, Conway Tearle and Edgar Everett Horton, Polygamy in December 1914 at the Playhouse Theatre with Ramsay Wallace, Chrystal Herne and Katherine Emmett in the cast, and Mister Antonio produced at the Lyceum Theatre in September 1916, a play by Booth Tarkinton that was also adapted for the screen by Tiffany Studios in 1929 starring Leo Carillo.

"As the horrors of the First World War were still being fought in the trenches, there was a reluctance on the part of theatre and film producers to employ anyone from Eastern Europe. For this reason Gustav temporarily changed his distinctly Teutonic name to his mother's maiden name and became C. Butler Clonblough. Under this moniker he continued to work and used it as late as 1919 when he directed an early screen version of Francis Hodgson Burnett's story THE SECRET GARDEN for Famous Players/Lasky Studios. Gustav's screen credits began in 1917 when he appeared as Stephen Densmore in Cecil B. DeMille's The Devil Stone with Wallace Reid, Geraldine Farrar, Raymond Hatton and Tully Marshall who also carved himself a niche playing a succession of devious villains during the Twenties. That same year Gustav appeared in Mary Pickford's LITTLE PRINCESS for Paramount Pictures; HIS MAJESTY, BUNKER BEAN with Jack Pickford, Mary's younger brother; OLD WIVES FOR NEW for Cecil B. DeMille. In 1919 he appeared in THE DARK STAR with Marion Davies and LESS THAN KIN with Wallace Reid and Annie Little. In 1921, following a role in Vitagraph's THE SPORTING DUCHESS with Percy Marmont and Alice Joyce, he remained at the studio to direct three other properties starring the now forgotten actress Alice Calhoun in PRINCESS JONES, CLOSED DOORS and PEGGY PUTS IT OVER. Gustav's roles continued with the Marion Davies vehicle WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER as a Soothsayer, but in 1922 he was afforded his biggest assignment as the miscreant Professor Moriarty in Goldwyn's SHERLOCK HOLMES directed by Albert Parker and partially shot in England and Switzerland. Gustav shined as Sherlock Holmes' nemesis opposite John Barrymore who had established his reputation a couple of years earlier with his success in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920). For this reason Barrymore was also attributed for portraying Moriarty because the character has more than a passing resemblance to his Hyde portrayal of the previous film. Barrymore again played on this fact by masquerading as Gustav in DON JUAN (1926) for his brief role as Nehri the Torturer. Despite a deviation from the original Sherlock Holmes story by having the celebrated sleuth fall in love with the heroine played by Carol Dempster, Conan Doyle fully endorsed the film upon its release.

"The Twenties proved to be Gustav's busiest period with a quick succession of parts all varying in size and content including a walk on part in THE EAGLE (1925), as a butler in THE GOOSE WOMAN (1925) and DIPLOMACY (1926). In 1926 Mary Pickford lured Gustav back to her studio to feature as the evil Mr. Grimes, resident of the swamps in Sparrows. At 32, Mary Pickford was unsuitable to play girls half her age, so this was her last attempt at the pretence. The film opens poignantly with "The Devil's share in the world's creation was a certain Southern swampland...a masterpiece of horror. And the Lord, appreciating a good job, let it stand. And then the Devil went one better and had Mr. Grimes live in the swamps!" Mary Pickford's little friends are a motley collection of urchins whose parents were either too poor or ill to care for them, naively entrusting the parenting to Mr. Grimes. In the swampland, the children labour under terrible conditions in the surrounding potato fields in return for a meagre meal and the shelter of a dilapidated barnhouse. Overseen by Mr. Grimes and his bullying son Ambrose ("Spec" O'Donnell, so named for possessing an inordinate amount of freckles), the life for these children is a living nightmare. Their only defence against their guardian is Mollie, (Mary Pickford), whose plucky spirit and strong faith finally gives them the upper hand. As the children attempt their escape through the swampland they encounter ravenous reptiles and the ever threat of being sucked down into the mire, but this fate is reserved for the pursuing Mr. Grimes who dies in the gurgling bog. Director William Beaudine created a fine film, but unfortunately his good work of the Twenties has been overshadowed by his plethora of weak Hollywood "B" Features of the late Thirties and Forties. Monogram Pictures frequently relied on him to quickly churn out cheap films and come in under budget. These included the Bela Lugosi vehicles The Ape Man (1943), Ghosts on the Loose (1943), Voodoo Man (1944) and the lamentable Bela Lugosi Meets the Brooklyn Gorilla. The only comment that has been recorded on Beaudine's involvement in these dismal films was when Monogram asked him to rush the completion of a film to which the director dryly responded "You mean someone out there is actually waiting to see this?" His later offerings were even worse including Billy the Kid Versus Dracula (1966) and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter (1966) made four years before his death at 78 years of age. Under the right conditions, Sparrows exemplifies what Beaudine was capable of. His technical colleagues on the film were some of the best in the business including cameramen Karl Struss, Charles Rosher and Hal Mohr who skilfully framed each shot with the detail of Harry Oliver's superb sets that added to the foreboding morass and emphasised the squalid conditions of mud, storms, hunger and lightening. Gustav's portrayal of the skeletal Mr. Grimes is undeniably the high point of the production and knowing of his thick German accent it is peculiar to see him attributed with dialogue cards that read "Them veg-tables is wuth money. Quit a-tramplin'em or I'll run the lot of yer in the swamp!" In a tremendous establishing scene Mr. Grimes is shown reading a note from a concerned parent who has left her offspring under his care with a little money and her favourite doll. "I read of a baby farm where they was mean to children, but I know you treat my Amy good". An evil smile spreads across Grimes' face as he pockets the cash, crushes the doll's head and watches as the mutilated effigy slowly sinks into the swamp. One can only imagine the nervous bewilderment on the faces of the parents who had dragged their children out to see a wholesome Mary Pickford movie...

"Gustav next appeared in a screen adaptation of Erkman and Chatrian's The Bells (1926), a popular play that had seen many stage presentations, including several performances by Sir Henry Irving. This story of a guilty conscience involves Mathias, (Lionel Barrymore), an opportunist who kills a travelling merchant for his gold and is tormented by visitations of his victim's ghost announced by the ringing of the man's sleigh bells. Gustav portrays sneering moneylender Jerome Krantz, a figment of the guilty man's mind who threatens to kick Mathias into the gutter until he comes up with the repayment of 6,000 francs. Gustav also appears as the judge at a trial in Mathias' mind, all of which forces the murderer to confess his heinous crime. This lavishly mounted film is capably directed by James Young with the aid of Perry Harris' lighting effects. The cast also includes a young Boris Karloff in his first large role as a carnival mesmerist.

"In 1927 Gustav appeared in a succession of roles specifically tailored to his talents. In Ernst Lubitsch's THE STUDENT PRINCE he portrays the King of Karlsburg in a tale from 1902 involving love versus duty among a high-born Ruritanian family, however, it is for his role in The Wizard that he should be best remembered by horror fans. Unfortunately the film is lost and is second only to Chaney's London After Midnight as the most sought after horror film from the silent era. Like the popular old-dark-house thrillers of the '20's and '30's, the injection of comedy elements into the plot were relied on to soften any shocks to the viewing audience. Only the film's original shooting script has survived that contains no comic relief, suggesting that these were added during production.

"Gustav portrays Dr. Paul Coriolos, an insane scientist whose revenge for those he feels are responsible for his son's execution is all embracing. To this end he grafts a human head onto a giant ape, (George Kotsonaros), and orders it to kill both the judge and jury who convicted his son of murder. Based loosely on Gaston Leroux's serialised novel Balaoo ou des pas au Plasfond, the story had previously been adapted for the screen in 1913, promoted by the tag-line "This tragedy of footprints on the ceiling will jam any theatre!", however this popular theme was not remade until 1942 with a "B" Feature titled Dr. Renault's Secret and starring George Zucco who transforms a gorilla played by Ray "Crash" Corrigan into a sympathetic creature played by J. Carroll Naish. Reviews of The Wizard were generally favourable, praising the film's excellent eerie camerawork by Frank Good of the ape-creature's shadow, clutching hands and cobwebs. Frank Good was a skilled cinematographer who found his talents being used on a number of shabby second features during the Thirties. Writer Harry O. Hoyt deserves equal merit for his screen adaptation as does its director Richard Roosson who favoured a streamlined approach to filmmaking and condensed all the action into six reels of film. Unfortunately, not being able to see Gustav in one of his more full-bloodied performances is a tragedy that it seems will now never be remedied.

"1928 was another good year for Gustav von Seyffertitz beginning with a role in THE RED MARK, a largely forgotten film directed by James Cruze and based on a novel by John Russell. At a French penal colony in New Caledonia, Gustav portrays the island's sadistic executioner about to hang for the manslaughter of a young pickpocket, (Gaston Glass), who he regards as his rival for the affections of the heroine, (Nena Quartero). At the last possible moment, he discovers the young boy to be his own son. Described as a haunting study of the penal colony system, one reviewer reported "Remarkable, forceful appeal and the excellence of the various artists". Also featured in the cast is Rose Dione, memorable for her later role as Madame Tetralleni in Tod Browning's Freaks. MGM's THE MYSTERIOUS LADY directed by Fred Niblo sees Gustav as General Alexandroff, the head of a Russian spy network whose undercover agent Tania, (Greta Garbo), double crosses him to save her lover Karl, (Conrad Nagel), of the Austrian Army. Meanwhile Josef von Sternberg's celebrated DOCKS OF NEW YORK, a seedy waterfront drama has Gustav billed last as Hymn-Book Harry, a priest from a nearby harbour mission who is called to a tavern to perform the marriage ceremony between "A Girl", (Betty Compson), and "The Stoker", (George Bancoft). Amongst the drunken revellers is the ever flirtatious Olga Baclanova giving only her fourth film appearance since emigrating to America. The unwholesome scenes of decadence at the tavern filled with hard-nosed drunken hoodlums and salacious women, all resorting to fisticuffs at the slightest provocation is met with great disdain by the venerable man-of-the-cloth. One of Gustav's remaining silent films, von Sternberg's Esther Ralston vehicle THE CASE OF LENA SMITH (1929), is yet another lost film in which he plays Herr Hofrat. Ralston portrays a woman who desperately attempts to keep her child fathered by a young Hungarian officer, only later to watch her boy enlist for the battlefields of the Great War. The first screen adaptation of S.S. Van Dine's fictional hero Philo Vance appeared in 1929 with THE CANARY MURDER CASE and audiences were able to hear Gustav's deep resonant, almost rhythmic delivery, for the first time. As Dr. Ambrose Lindquist,Gustav is one of many people suspected of strangling a goldigging showgirl, (Louise Brooks). The socialite and amateur detective Philo Vance, (William Powell), is soon on the real culprit's trail. Originally made silent during the Autumn of 1928, the cast were recalled for sound retakes. Only Louise Brooks failed to return due to a strained relationship with director Malcolm St. Clair. Even Paramount's offer of $10,000 failed to entice her and the studio was forced to substitute her voice with actress Margaret Livingston.

"Entering the new decade Gustav was 68 years old and there would be no more starring roles. He was largely reduced to playing character parts for the remainder of his career, but he was still a popular choice for these roles. After a brief stint at Paramount with DANGEROUS PARADISE and THE CASE OF SERGEANT GRISCHA starring Chester Morris, Gustav landed a substantial part in Roland West's delightful The Bat Whispers (1930). Gustav is Dr. Venrees, renamed from the original Dr. Wells of the play presumably to explain Gustav's enunciation. His slow emphatic delivery of such lines as "Because something is liable to happen...in this house...at any time" are tinged with a great sense of foreboding and dramatically adds weight to the film. A veritable flood of character parts came Gustav's way with DISHONOURED (1931), SHANGHAI EXPRESS (1932), Rasputin and the Empress (1932) starring the entire Barrymore family, DOOMED BATTALION (1932), QUEEN CHRISTINA (1933) and THE SILVER CORD (1933). Occasionally Gustav was lured to the smaller studios to appear in some of the mystery thrillers that were turned out twenty-to-the-dozen from the industry's assembly lines. For Monogram he appeared in Mystery Liner (1934) billed as von Kessling in a story based on The Ghost of John Holling by Edgar Wallace. The cast are an assortment of characters intent on obtaining the US. Government's new war invention. Monogram's low budget was unable to deliver more than an adequate thriller, but the company of skilled character actors play their parts well. Noah Beery, a distinguished actor of long standing takes the lead role of Captain Hollings with Astrid Allyn as the ship's nurse Lila and Cornelius Keefe as the hero, Second Officer Cliff Rogers. Another Monogram offering is an above average gothic mystery The Moonstone (1934) from Wilkie Collins' novel of 1868. Gustav is billed third as Septimus von Lucker, a nefarious moneylender who arrives at Verinder Manor in the dead of night to collect a debt of £5,000. At the same time Franklin Blake, (David Manners), returns from his trip in India with his servant Yandoo carrying the precious Moonstone Diamond, now the property of Anne Verinder. Soon enough the gem goes missing and Inspector Cuff, (Charles Irwin), begins his interrogations. Von Lucker is not surprisingly found to be the culprit and the Inspector intercepts Von Lucker's hasty getaway. The film benefits from a predominantly British cast including Dracula's David Manners, Olaf Hytten and Elspeth Dudgeon whose chief notoriety in the horror genre is appearing as Roderick Femm's sister in James Whale's Old Dark House (1932). Gustav appears with a close-cropped hairdo, and in many of his close-ups he is photographed with a bottom light to accentuate his bony features.

"In 1935 Gustav played a pivotal role in James Whale's REMEMBER LAST NIGHT? for Universal. This comedy mystery ranked as one of Whale's personal favourites with a plot that involves a wild party with the guests waking the next day to find a dead body and not remembering anything about the night before. Gustav portrays Professor Jones, a hypnotist summoned to help jog the memories of the potential witnesses. During a seance, the Professor is also murdered by the culprit. Gustav can also be seen as the High Priest in RKO's She (1935), a stylish adventure starring Randolph Scott as a handsome Englishman whose fascination for the legendary Eternal Flame of Life leads his intrepid expedition to the mysterious kingdom of Kor ruled by the beautiful Queen Ayesha, (Helen Gahagan), who although is 500 years old, is kept youthful by the magic flame.

"In the years that followed, Gustav continued to ply his trade in a wealth of assignments for all the major studios. He appeared with Gary Cooper in MR. DEEDS GOES TO TOWN (1936), in Twentieth Century Fox's IN OLD CHICAGO (1937), MGM's extravagant MARIE ANTOINETTE (1938) with his old friend John Barrymore, for Paramount's KING OF ALCATRAZ (1938) and Warner's JUAREZ (1939) starring Bette Davis and Paul Muni. Gustav also appears briefly in Son of Frankenstein (1939) as one of the council members in the town hall and is only afforded a few lines of dialogue. 1939 marked the end of Gustav's film career. At the ripe old age of 77 he retired from the screen. In the intervening years until his death we can only assume his retirement may have been more of a necessity than of choice. Four years later Gustav was pronounced dead on Christmas Day, 1943 at his Woodland Hills home in California.

"From doctors and generals, to lawyers and religious leaders, Gustav von Seyffertitz displayed a remarkable talent in his films for the major and minor studios of Hollywood, but let us not forget his memorable portrayals of menacing figures which he played with equal aplomb. Gustav's failure to follow in the lines of his noble family may have been met with family disapproval, but ironically he would frequently find himself in roles that both honoured his family tradition and provide us with a measure of his talent."

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Gustav Carl Viktor Bodo Maria von Seyffertitz's Timeline

1862
August 4, 1862
Haimhausen, Oberbayern, Bavaria, Germany
1882
1882
Copenhagen, København, Capital Region of Denmark, Denmark
1882
Copenhagen, København, Capital Region of Denmark, Denmark
1895
1895
1943
December 25, 1943
Age 81
at his residence, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States
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