George Bartenieff
George Bartenieff (born January 24, 1933 in Berlin, Germany) is a German-American stage and film actor. He is noted both for his character roles[1] in commercial and non-commercial films and on television, and for his work in the avant-garde theatre and performance world of downtown Manhattan, New York City in the 1960s-1970s. He is a co-founder of the Theatre for the New City, and of the Greenwich Village Halloween Parade.[1]
George Bartenieff | |
---|---|
Born | |
Citizenship | United States |
Occupation | stage and film actor |
Years active | 1964–present |
Spouse(s) | Karen Malpede |
Bartenieff appeared in nine shows on Broadway, in 19 productions Off-Broadway, in 18 films and in 21 television episodes for 14 different programs.[2][3][4] He is the recipient of two Obie Awards[5] and a Drama Desk Award.
As of 2003, Bartenieff was also teaching at the City University of New York, and in a high school in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn.[5]
Life and career
Bartenieff made his stage debut at the age of 14 in the 1947 Broadway theatre production The Whole World Over, directed by Harold Clurman.[5] After appearing in a few shows on Broadway, Bartenieff went to London for training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts, where he "fell in love" with the works of Shakespeare.[5] His intention at the time was to be a classical actor, and his hero was Laurence Olivier.[5]
When Bartenieff returned to the United States, he worked with Andre Gregory's Theatre for the Living Arts in Philadelphia. For a number of years in the 1960s, Bartenieff worked with Gregory in Philadelphia, on Broadway, for Joe Papp's New York Shakespeare Festival, and in "cross-disciplinary" showcases at the Judson Poets Theatre at the Judson Church in Greenwich Village.[5]
Bartenieff also began to do "street theatre" at this time. One production, with writer/carpenter/landscape artist Bib Nichols, protested against the Lower Manhattan Expressway which Robert Moses wanted to build across the island. Their production played in the street in the neighborhoods which would be affected by the highway, Little Italy and the West Village; the set was constructed in such a way that if a car came by, it would break apart to allow the vehicle to proceed.[5]
In 1970, feeling that the Judson Poets Theatre had passed its peak, four artists involved in it – Bartenieff, his wife at the time, dancer Crystal Field, director Larry Kornfield and Theo Barnes – wanted to start their own "cross-disciplinary theater which emphasized poetic language", according to Bartenieff. The Westbeth Artists Community had just started at the time, and a large space appropriate for performance became available in the complex. This was the beginning of Theatre for the New City, which still exists, albeit in other quarters.[5] TNC not only did their own work, they invited other companies, such as Mabou Mines, the Talking Band, and Richard Foreman's company, to perform there. They also mounted street theatre productions, with the purpose of making "the theater part of the community, and the community part of the theater."[5]
Bartenieff stayed with Theatre for the New City for 24 years – performing, directing or producing more than 900 new American plays[1] – but left when he began to feel he was spending more time on the financial problems of the company than he was on his craft. "I had to return," said Bartenieff, "to my own work, from being the Cecil B. DeMille of off-off-Broadway to the idea that small is more." To this end, he collaborated with his wife, playwright and director Karen Malpede, to create a one-man show, I Will Bear Witness, an adaptation of the memoirs of Victor Klemperer, which documented daily life as a Jewish professor in Nazi Germany.[5] This production was the beginning of Bartenieff and Malpede's Theater Three Collaborative, which as of 2012 was 17 years old.[1]
Stage productions
Broadway
- The Whole World Over (1947, Biltmore Theatre, 0 previews, 100 performances) – featuring Uta Hagen and Sanford Meisner, directed by Harold Clurman
- Montserrat (1949, Fulton Theatre, 0 prev. 65 perfs.) – by Lillian Hellman
- The Moon Besieged (1962, Lyceum Theatre, 2 prev., 1 perf.)
- The Changeling (1964, understudy, ANTA Washington Square Theatre, 0 prev., 32 perfs.) – directed by Elia Kazan
- Venus Is (1966, Billy Rose Theatre, 7 prev., 0 perfs.)
- "Box" / "Quotations From Chairman Mao Tse-Tung" (1968, Billy Rose Theatre, 4 prev., 12 perf., in rep with production below) – two one-act plays by Edward Albee
- "The Death of Bessie Smith" / "The American Dream" (1968, Billy Rose Theatre, 0 prev., 12 perf.) – two one-act plays by Edward Albee
- Cop-Out (1969, Cort Theatre, 12 prev., 8 perfs.) – by John Guare
- Unlikely Heroes: "Defender of the Faith" / "Epstein" / "Eli, the Fanatic" (1971, Plymouth Theatre, 9 prev., 23 perfs.) – three one-act plays based on stories by Philip Roth
Source:[2]
Off-Broadway
- The Brig – The Living Theatre (1963)
- "Home Movies" / "Softly Consider the Nearness" – Provincetown Playhouse (1964) – two one-act plays by Rosalyn Drexler and Al Carmines
- "Krapp's Last Tape" / "The Zoo Story" – Cherry Lane Theatre (1965) – by Samuel Beckett ("Krapp") and Edward Albee ("Zoo"), directed by Alan Schneider
- "Walking to Waldheim" / "Happiness" – Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater at Lincoln Center (1967) – two one-act plays by Mayo Simon
- The Memorandum – Joseph Papp Public Theater - Anspacher Theater (1968) – by Vaclav Havel
- The Increased Difficulty of Concentration – Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater at Lincoln Center (1969) – by Václav Havel
- Room Service – Edison Theatre (1970)
- Trelawny of the "Wells" – Joseph Papp Public Theater - Anspacher Theater (1970–71) – by Arthur Wing Pinero
- Dead End Kids – Joseph Papp Public Theater - Susan Stein Shiva Theater (1980–81) – by JoAnne Akalaitis, a Mabou Mines production
- American Notes – Joseph Papp Public Theater - Susan Stein Shiva Theater (1988) – directed by JoAnne Akalaitis
- Cymbeline – Joseph Papp Public Theater - Newman Theater (1989) – by William Shakespeare, directed by JoAnne Akalaitis, music by Philip Glass
- Sabina – Primary Stages (1996) – by Willy Holtzman
- Misalliance – Roundabout Theatre Company - Laura Pels Theatre (1997) – by George Bernard Shaw
- World of Mirth – Theatre Four (2001)
- Stuff Happens – Joseph Papp Public Theater - Newman Theater (2006) – by David Hare
- Prometheus Bound – East 13th Street/CSC Theatre (2007)
- Romeo and Juliet – Delacorte Theater at Lincoln Center (2007) – by William Shakespeare, directed by Michael Greif
- Edward Albee's The American Dream and The Sandbox – Cherry Lane Theatre (2008) – two one-act plays by Edward Albee
- The Bacchae – Delacorte Theater at Lincoln Center (2009) – by Euripides, music by Philip Glass
Source:[3]
Filmography
Film
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1964 | The Brig | Prisoner | |
1965 | The Double Barreled Detective Story | Undetermined role | |
1966 | Zero in the Universe | Steinmetz | |
1970 | Hercules in New York | Nitro | |
1972 | The Hot Rock | Museum Guard #2 | |
1977 | Big Thumbs | Undetermined role | |
1981 | Strong Medicine | Undetermined role | |
1986 | Dead End Kids | Undetermined role | |
1988 | The Laser Man | Haven | |
1989 | American Stories: Food, Family and Philosophy | Undetermined role | |
See No Evil, Hear No Evil | Huddelston | ||
Cookie | Andy O'Brien | ||
1993 | Joey Breaker | Dean Milford | |
1996 | On Seventh Avenue | Moe Bick | TV film |
1997 | Anima | Sam | |
2009 | Julie & Julia | Chef Max Bugnard | |
2012 | The Dictator | Romanian Accountant | |
2018 | A Scientist's Guide to Living and Dying | Watts |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1971 | Great Performances | Episode: "Paradise Lost" | |
1987 | At Mother's Request | Mr. Coles | Mini-series |
Crime Story | Dr. Friedrich Gantman | Episode: "Atomic Fallout" | |
1994 | Law & Order | Jerome | Episode: "Mayhem" |
1995 | Judge Shawn MacNamara | 3 episodes | |
New York Undercover | Mr. Leferts | Episode: "Student Affairs" | |
1998 | From the Earth to the Moon | Hugh Dryden | Episode: "Can We Do This?" |
1999 | Law & Order | Presiding Judge | Episode: "Gunshow" |
2002 | Law & Order: Criminal Intent | John Nemetz | Episode: "Maledictus" |
2003 | American Masters | Danforth | Episode: "None Without Sin" |
2004 | Law & Order | Stefan Anders | Episode: "Evil Breeds" |
Rescue Me | Mel | Episode: "Leaving" | |
2006 | Conviction | Judge Nelson Beckman | Episode: "Indiscretion" |
2007 | American Masters | Dr. Adler | Episode: "Novel Reflections: The American Dream" |
2009 | 30 Rock | Douglas Templeton | Episode: "Flu Shot" |
2011 | Curb Your Enthusiasm | Judge Horn | Episode: "Car Periscope" |
2013 | Elementary | Jurgi | Episode: "Possibility Two" |
Zero Hour | Old Man Kipske | Episode: "Chain" | |
2016 | The Blacklist | Man on the Beach | Episode: "Cape May" |
2019 | Ray Donovan | Gerald Moskovitz | Episode: "The Transfer Agent" |
Awards and honors
In 1977, Theatre for the New City, of which Bartenieff was then co-director, won a Special Citation Obie Award for Sustained Excellence.[6] Personally, Bartenieff won a 2001 Obie for his performance in his one-act play, I Will Bear Witness[7] and a 2006 Drama Desk Award for his performance in Stuff Happens[8]
References
Notes
- Fitch, Clyde. "5 Questions I’ve Never Been Asked: George Bartenieff" The Clyde Fitch Report (October 7, 2012)
- George Bartenieff at the Internet Broadway Database
- George Bartenieff Archived February 19, 2015, at the Wayback Machine on the Internet Off-Broadway Database
- George Bartenieff at IMDb
- "The Long Run: A Performer's Life" Archived October 7, 2013, at the Wayback Machine New York Foundation for the Arts Quarterly (Summer 2003)
- "1977 Obie Award Winners"
- "2001 Obie Award Winners"
- "Awards" on the Internet Broadway Database