Monday, October 15, 2007


image:Moser.jpgHans Moser (actor) Hans Moser as a waiter in a café in Vienna in the movie Ober zahlen (1957)
Hans Moser (August 6, 1880June 19, 1964) was an Austrian actor who, during his long career (from the 1920s up to his death), mainly played in comedy films.
Born Johann Julier in Vienna, Moser very often portrayed the man in the street, typically someone else's subordinate (servant, waiter, porter, shopkeeper, coachman, petty bureaucrat, etc.). Practically always Moser played honest, moral and well-intentioned people who, unable to keep cool and think clearly in crucial situations, get themselves and everyone around them into all kinds of "trouble". As the (often widowed) father of a beautiful daughter he was the stubborn family bully who realizes only at the end of the movie, when all cases of mistaken identity have been cleared up and all secrets are revealed, that he has been terribly wrong all the time.
Strangely, Moser was particularly famous, and adored, for mumbling indistinctly (for comic effect) rather than pronouncing words and sentences clearly, and also for failing to finish his sentences -- facts which, combined with his (moderate) Viennese dialect, make it very hard for non-native speakers of German to understand what he is saying.
In Moser's comedy films, Paul Hörbiger, Theo Lingen, Oskar Sima, and Annie Rosar were some of his congenial partners. However, it should be noted that Moser was also a serious actor, especially on the stage and, towards the end of his life, on television. In many a musical film, Moser can also be heard interpreting a Wienerlied, more likely than not at a Heuriger.
In the period between 1938 and 1945 Moser had severe problems because of his wife Blanca Hirschler, who was Jewish, but he refused to separate from her and so she fled to Hungary to avoid further problems. After the war the couple lived together again.
Hans Moser died in Vienna in 1964, aged 84. His continuing popularity can perhaps be seen by the fact that his style of speaking is still being parodied, also by very young entertainers.

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