Klaus Kinski (born October 18, 1926, Zoppot, Germany [now Sopot, Poland]—died November 23, 1991, Lagunitas, California, U.S.) was an intense, eccentric German actor of Polish descent who had a stage and film career of more than 40 years and who was best known for his riveting performances in the films of Werner Herzog.
Kinski’s family moved from Poland to Germany during the Great Depression of the 1930s. During World War II, at age 16, he enlisted in the German army and was captured by British forces on his second day of combat. For the remainder of the war he was a prisoner in a British camp, where he gained his first acting experience in shows staged by fellow prisoners.
After the war Kinski acted on the stage and in minor roles in numerous low-budget German films. He slowly built a reputation as an effective screen villain and gained notoriety for offscreen eccentricity. He attracted some international attention with small roles in Doctor Zhivago (1965) and in spaghetti westerns, including Sergio Leone’s Per qualche dollaro in più (1965; For a Few Dollars More). Not until his appearance in Werner Herzog’s Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes (1972; Aguirre, the Wrath of God), however, did he achieve wide recognition. In that movie, filmed under arduous conditions in South American rainforests, Kinski delivered a bravura performance that typified his screen image: that of an obsessive, terrifying, and emotionally unpredictable antihero. Other Herzog films in which he starred included Woyzeck (1979), Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht (1979; Nosferatu the Vampyre), and Fitzcarraldo (1982). He also appeared prominently in The Little Drummer Girl (1984).
Kinski had a self-cultivated image of hedonism and excess, which was reflected in his autobiography Ich bin so wild nach deinem Erdbeermund (1975; “I Am So Wild About Your Strawberry Mouth”; rereleased in 1988 as Kinski Uncut). He disdained his chosen profession, once saying, “I wish I’d never been an actor. I’d rather have been a streetwalker, selling my body, than selling my tears and my laughter, my grief and my joy.” Numerous offers from prestigious directors—whom Kinski categorized as “cretins” or “scum”—were refused; he worked only when the money suited him.