The blond, steely-eyed bad guy of European westerns and potboilers was
born in Lübeck, Germany, the son of a porcelain painter. Horst Frank
financed his acting studies by working part-time as a babysitter and
night watchman. He actually failed his final exams at the
Musikhochschule Hamburg, but nonetheless managed to secure an acting
position in his home town. For some time after, his work was primarily
confined to small parts on stage and in radio. His first screen role
saw him as a cowardly pilot in
Der Stern von Afrika (1957).
Frank then won a critic's award for his next role as member of a U-Boat
crew in the war drama
Haie und kleine Fische (1957).
Of athletic, lithe build and owner of a somewhat cold, hypnotic gaze
(with a voice to match), Frank soon found himself typecast to
disturbingly good effect as psychotic murderers in German and
international productions
(
The Black Panther of Ratana (1963),
Das Mädchen vom Moorhof (1958),
Der Greifer (1958)). Alternatively,
he proved an ideal henchman for spaghetti westerns
(
Bullets Don't Argue (1964),
Johnny Hamlet (1968)
and
Django, Prepare a Coffin (1968)).
Frank didn't seem to mind turning out copies of the same negative in a
seemingly endless gallery of ruthless killers and impassive assassins.
He did so with relish well into the 1980's and 90's, enjoying guest
spots on popular TV crime time shows like
Tatort (1970) and
Derrick (1974). If Horst Frank was in
the cast, you knew pretty much from the start 'whodunnit'.
Behind the menacing heavy, there was a family man and author of poems
and chansons. In addition to his screen acting, Frank lent his voice to
dubbing work (for the likes of fellow tough guys
Jack Palance,
Ernest Borgnine and
Chuck Connors); and to radio,
where he voiced Captain Nemo in "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" and "The
Mysterious Island".
Likely because of his lack of work in major American or British
productions, Frank never quite achieved the international recognition
he undoubtedly deserved. He died quite suddenly in May 1999 of a brain
hemorrhage, just short of his 70th birthday.