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Klaus Dieter Laser (17 February 1942 – 29 February 2020) was a German actor.[1] Laser's career spanned over five decades, appearing in both German and English-language productions. He achieved recognition for his lead role in the 2009 film The Human Centipede (First Sequence) and also starred in the third entry in 2015. On television, he had a recurring role on Lexx from 1998 to 2000.
Biography
Laser was born in 1942 as the second child of his parents Oskar and Lore Laser. His older sister Heidi was also born in Kiel in 1939; she died on November 3, 1987.[2] Dieter Laser spent his first year of life in Laboe near Kiel. When he was born, his father was an officer in the German Wehrmacht in France.[3] In recognition of the invention of a new type of anchor that would enable landing craft to land even in high waves, he was transferred, at his request, to a unit that was building bunkers for U-boats in the port of Kiel after a visit to the Führer's headquarters in Berlin.[4] This meant that he could spend almost a year with his wife and two children. Afterwards, Oskar Laser was ordered to the Eastern Front and was killed on 16 June 1943 near Orel, Soviet Union, during a "suicide mission", to which he had been assigned because of his Christian beliefs.[5] At this time, Dieter Laser was barely 18 months old.
Dieter Laser was meanwhile evacuated from Laboe with his mother and sister due to constant air raids on Kiel.[6] After several stops, the family came to Rothenburg ob der Tauber, where they experienced the end of the war in April 1945 under dramatic circumstances.[5] Dieter Laser was rescued with his mother and sister by American soldiers from a burning air raid shelter.[7] The three-year-old had been lying there next to a TB patient and also fell ill. The illness worsened so much that Dieter Laser had to be admitted to a hospital in Konstanz.[8] After some time, with the support of a Christian community in Hamburg, his mother was able to take him to a home for children suffering from tuberculosis in Beatenberg in Switzerland.[9] After he had recovered there, the family moved back to Rothenburg and from there to Hamburg via an apartment swap.[10]
Dieter Laser grew up in Hamburg. His family belonged to a Christian community in which the only reading material permitted was the Luther Bible.[11] He rejected the Christian faith and made a "contract with the devil" at the age of 14: "You will pay - but you will pay later."[12] After he had to leave the Gymnasium shortly before his Abitur at the instigation of his mother, "because studying spoils faith", he left his parents' home and went into hiding in Hamburg. During his acting training he worked as an extra at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus Hamburg and as a hotel servant, but dropped out of his studies in 1960 after one year and despite passing the state intermediate examination.[11]
In 1961, Laser, who continued to secretly attend rehearsals at the Hamburger Schauspielhaus, was "discovered" by Gustaf Gründgens when the latter wanted to throw him out of the auditorium. Laser was initially entrusted with small, then larger roles by Gründgens. "That's how I got into acting, because the god of theater was kind to me," Laser said looking back.[13] From 1967 to 1974 he devoted himself to the theater. In 1967 he began working with Peter Stein. In 1970 he moved with Stein to the Berlin Schaubühne am Halleschen Ufer, where he was a member of the board of directors from 1971 to 1973. From 1974 Laser worked as a freelancer and with guest engagements at the Staatliche Schauspielbühnen Berlin and the Wiener Burgtheater, among others.
In 2009, Laser played the surgeon Dr. Josef Heiter in the Dutch horror film Human Centipede by Tom Six, and became an international star. Roger Ebert praised his performance, although it was his 63rd role, as the one he was "born for."[15] In order to make his portrayal as a bizarre parody close to the notorious Nazi doctor Josef Mengele, Laser specially obtained a "Eppendorfer doctor's coat"[16] and suggested to the director that he should also give the character the first name Josef.[17] For his acting performance, he received the acting award at the Fantastic Fest in Austin, Texas that same year.
Laser would appear again in the third and final part of the Human Centipede trilogy.[18] On March 29, 2012, he announced his departure from the project due to profound creative differences.[19] Shortly afterwards, Six Entertainment announced in an official press release that it would take legal action against Laser.[20] At the beginning of 2013, both sides announced that they would now make the film together.[21] Filming was completed in the middle of the same year. The German version was released in 2017.[22] In an interview, Laser spoke about massive problems with the dubbed version.[23]
In November 2015, Laser was in front of the camera in Estonia for the fantasy filmJesus’ Blood and Red Currants based on a novel by Andrus Kivirähk.[24] The film had its international premiere under the title November at the Tribeca Film Festival in April 2017.[25] Under the title Total Eclipse Laser announced his feature film directorial debut based on his own screenplay.[26] In the summer of 2019, he played the role of the lawyer Huld in the production of Kafka's play The Trial at the Bad Hersfeld Festival.[27]
Dieter Laser was married to Inge and lived with her in Berlin. He died twelve days after his 78th birthday on 29 February 2020.[28] His death was not announced until a message to his official Facebook page was posted on 9 April 2020.[29][30]
^Peter Andersen: In dein Erbarmen hülle ...: Erinnerungen eines ehemalige Kanaan-Franziskus-Broders. Wallmerod, 2nd edition, 2002, DNB-IDN1088443524, p. 97.
^Peter Andersen: In dein Erbarmen hülle ... p. 75.
^Peter Andersen: In dein Erbarmen hülle ... p. 76.
^ abPeter Andersen: In dein Erbarmen hülle ... p. 78.
^Peter Andersen: In dein Erbarmen hülle ... p. 77.
^Peter Andersen: In dein Erbarmen hülle ... p. 80–83.
^Peter Andersen: In dein Erbarmen hülle ... p. 84.
^Peter Andersen: In dein Erbarmen hülle ... p. 85.
^Peter Andersen: In dein Erbarmen hülle ... p. 85–87.