suggest
Akim Tamiroff
Now, put vTap to work for you!
Let us keep you up to date with new videos related to:
Akim Tamiroff
Go to Feed to see what's new!
+Feed
 
Wikipedia.org
Akim Tamiroff (Wikipedia.org)

Akim Tamiroff (October 29, 1899, Tiflis (now Tbilisi), Georgia - September 17, 1972, Palm Springs, California) was the first Golden Globe Award-winning actor for Best Supporting Actor. He was born of Armenian ethnicity, trained at the Moscow Art Theatre drama school. He arrived in the US in 1923 on a tour with a troupe of actors and decided to stay. by_actor_index_2.php?actor_first=Akim&actor_last=Tamiroff" target="_blank">http://www.dougmacaulay.com/kingspud/sel_by_actor_index_2.php?actor_first=Akim&actor_last=Tamiroffhttp://theoscarsite.com/whoswho/tamiroff_a.htm Tamiroff managed to develop a career in _Hollywood despite his thick Russian accent.

Tamiroff's film debut came in 1932 in an uncredited role in Okay, America!. He performed in several more uncredited roles until 1935, when he co-starred in The Lives of a Bengal Lancer. The following year, he was cast in the title role in The General Died at Dawn, for which he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. He appeared in the 1937 musical High, Wide, and Handsome and the 1938 proto-noir Dangerous to Know opposite Anna May Wong, frequently singled out as his best role.

In the following decade, he appeared in such films as The Buccaneer (1938), The Great McGinty (1940), The Corsican Brothers (1941), Tortilla Flat (1942), Five Graves to Cairo (1943), For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943), for which he received another Oscar nomination, and The Miracle of Morgan's Creek (1944). In later years, Tamiroff appeared in Touch of Evil, Ocean's Eleven (1960) and Topkapi (1964).

While Tamiroff may not be a household name in the present day, his malapropistic performance as the boss in The Great McGinty inspired the cartoon character Boris Badenov, the male half of the villainous husband-and-wife team Boris and Natasha on The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show.

Tamiroff died on September 17 1972 from cancer.

imdb.com
Akim Tamiroff (imdb.com)

Though born in Russian territory, Akim Tamiroff was of Armenian extraction. At 19 he finally decided to pursue acting and was chosen from among 500 applicants to the Moscow Art Theater School. He studied under the great Konstantin Sergeyevich Alexeyev Stanislavsky (who developed the systematic acting technique known as Method Acting) at the School and launched into a stage career. This included road company productions, and as part of one in 1923 Tamiroff came to New York and decided to stay. Broadway well suited him, and he worked steadily with the Theatre Guild from the mid 1920s to early 1930s. He was a short, stout man with a guttural baritone voice and a thick but rather generic Russian accent that with his skill in characterizations seemed to mesh with any role calling for any foreign type - whether European Middle eastern, or Asian. His voice became his principal asset. He came west to Hollywood in 1932 to break into the movie business. In that year he had his first bit part in Okay, America! (1932). Until 1934 his pieces were usually uncredited, but he managed to standout, one of his best being the servant Pedro of 'John Gilbert' in Queen Christina (1933). By early 1934 he was in demand-twelve movies that year. Into 1935 - with a busy fifteen film roles in total - he was getting more feature supporting roles, as varied as, Gopal the emir in Lives of a Bengal Lancer (1935) to the comic puppet master Rudolpho in the adapted operetta Naughty Marietta (1935). He signed with Paramount in 1936 but was a poplar loan-out to other studios. He went to Warner Bros. for one of his earliest big supporting characters: the sly Cuban mercantile agent, Carlo Cibo, in Anthony Adverse (1936). For Paramount, his General Yang in The General Died at Dawn (1936) brought him his first of two nominations as Best Supporting Actor. Along with substantial supporting roles in top movies, Tamiroff was staring in B vehicles, allowing him to feature as a whole range of amiable rogues and threatening heavies. Two supporting roles were apt examples of his range. As the French trapper and scout Dan Duroc of North West Mounted Police (1940), he was something of a scoundrel but emanating a sense of fair play and dignity. As the vile Colonna in The Corsican Brothers (1941), he is irredeemably wicked-and deservedly dies in the longest sword duel on film. For his role as the self-serving guerrilla Pablo in For Whom the Bells Tolls (1943), Tamiroff received his second Oscar nomination. He continued through the decade with more fine work, and in 1949 he joined the cast of Black Magic (1949) and met Orson Welles, who played late 18th century charlatan Cagliostro. The two became friends and associates in Welles' later film projects. Through the 1950s Tamiroff's time was fairly divided between the opportunities for TV playhouse productions and film earlier in the decade and a surprising range of episodic TV and more films later. His three films with Welles, as director and sometime actor, were: Mr. Arkadin (1955) with its Wellesian maze of flashbacks; the over-the-top Touch of Evil (1958) with its gritty surrealism and incredible cast; and Procès, Le (1962) (The Trial), Welles' stylistic spin on the Kafka story. Certainly, it was in 'Evil' (the best of the lot) that Tamiroff's Tijuana boss Uncle Joe Grandi-outlandishly bugged-eyed alternately with fear or mercurial anger intensified by Welles' wild camera angles-stood out as a most intriguing character. He took a last fling at Broadway in 1959. For the 1960s Tamiroff continued to sample American TV but was still very active in American, French, and Italian movies. His voice and talent were still a draw in films like: Topkapi (1964) and Alphaville, une étrange aventure de Lemmy Caution (1965). And he remained on call for Welles' meandering/unfinished Don Quijote de Orson Welles (1992) as Sancho Panza for nearly twenty years. One of the great character actors of film history, Akim Tamiroff appeared in over 150 screen projects.

more...
Videos
Refine
941
Touch of Evil (1958) is a blacko&owhite American film, written & directed by Orson Welles, who also acts in the film. Paul Monash & Franklin Coen also...
2m 7s |
a year ago
wildscreen.tv
Keep this video in the "Saved" list
Now, put vTap to work for you!
Let us keep you up to date with new videos related to:
Janet Leigh
Charlton Heston
Orson Welles
Joseph Calleia
Akim Tamiroff
Touch of Evil (movie)
Go to Feed to see what's new!
share
keep
 
 
Opening credits followed by Yankee Spencer Tracy and Russian Akim Tamiroff in their first scene as Mexican peasants Pilon and Pablo, in Tortilla Flat , 1942, from the John Steinbeck novel.
7 months ago
Turner Classic Movies
Keep this video in the "Saved" list
Now, put vTap to work for you!
Let us keep you up to date with new videos related to:
Tortilla Flat
John Steinbeck
Akim Tamiroff
Spencer Tracy
American literature
Tortilla Flat (movie)
Go to Feed to see what's new!
share
keep
 
 
John Garfield (as "Danny"), Spencer Tracy (as "Pilon"), Akim Tamiroff (as "Pablo") and Sheldon Leonard (as "Tito") sing "Ay, Paisano!" by Frank Loesser and Franz Waxman, followed by chatter, in ...
7 months ago
Turner Classic Movies
Keep this video in the "Saved" list
Now, put vTap to work for you!
Let us keep you up to date with new videos related to:
Tortilla Flat
John Garfield
Akim Tamiroff
Spencer Tracy
Sheldon Leonard
Frank Loesser
Franz Waxman
Tortilla Flat (movie)
Go to Feed to see what's new!
share
keep
 
 
494
Akim Tamiroff (1899-1972) was a great master of his profession who contributed with his skills to the success of many pictures in and out of Hollywood. In Topkapi (1964), dir. Jules Dassin, he played ...
2m 18s |
a year ago
YouTube
Keep this video in the "Saved" list
Now, put vTap to work for you!
Let us keep you up to date with new videos related to:
Akim Tamiroff
Jules Dassin
Peter Ustinov
manupeSUI (YouTube)
Go to Feed to see what's new!
share
my users
keep
 
 
252
Gary Cooper stars in this rousing adventure saga of three British officers of the 41st Regiment of Bengal Lancers of India. The story begins as Lt. McGregor (Gary Cooper) accepts two new officers to ...
1m 50s |
2 months ago
YouTube
Keep this video in the "Saved" list
Now, put vTap to work for you!
Let us keep you up to date with new videos related to:
Aubrey Smith
Douglass Dumbrille
Gary Cooper
Guy Standing
Franchot Tone
J. Carrol Naish
Akim Tamiroff
Richard Cromwell
Grover Jones
The Lives of a Bengal Lancer (movie)
foxter65 (YouTube)
Go to Feed to see what's new!
share
my users
keep
 
 
442
A scene from The Great McGinty, Paramount, 1940.
1m 10s |
2 years ago
YouTube
Keep this video in the "Saved" list
Now, put vTap to work for you!
Let us keep you up to date with new videos related to:
Brian Donlevy
Preston Sturges
The Great McGinty (movie)
Akim Tamiroff
SigPoliakoff (YouTube)
Go to Feed to see what's new!
share
my users
keep
 
 
284
Comedy
a year ago
YouTube
Keep this video in the "Saved" list
Now, put vTap to work for you!
Let us keep you up to date with new videos related to:
Akim Tamiroff
Curd Jürgens
Me and the Colonel (movie)
Huilifoj (YouTube)
Go to Feed to see what's new!
share
my users
keep
 
 
George Raft, Marie Windsor, Akim Tamiroff (1949) Guerra, Acción B&N USA Director: Robert Florey. Las aventuras de La Legión Extranjera en el desierto del Sahara.
a year ago
CinemaniaTV
Keep this video in the "Saved" list
Now, put vTap to work for you!
Let us keep you up to date with new videos related to:
Marie Windsor
George Raft
Robert Florey
Outpost in Morocco (movie)
Akim Tamiroff
Go to Feed to see what's new!
share
keep