Cult Actor Udo Kier Dies at 81

Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images
Udo Kier, the German actor who worked with everyone from Andy Warhol to Gus Van Sant to Madonna, has died. He was 81. His partner, artist Delbert McBride, confirmed the news to Variety on November 23. Kier worked extensively with Danish director Lars Von Trier. Kier starred in Trier’s Breaking the Waves, Dancer int he Dark, Dogville, Melancholia, and Nymphomaniac: Vol. II.
In the 70’s Kier starred in two Andy Warhol/Paul Morrissey films, Flesh for Frankenstein and Blood for Dracula. “I met Paul Morrissey in an airplane and he asked me what I did and I said, ‘I’m an actor,’” Kier said in the Bay Area Reporter. “A few weeks later he offered me the part of Frankenstein in Andy Warhol’s Frankenstein.” His work in these film brought him to the art world’s attention. Through the 70’s and 80s, Kier kept working in European film, with parts in such cult films as Suspiria, Docteur Jekyll et les femmes, and several films by his ex-lover Rainer Werner Fassbinder. “While in London I picked up a magazine and saw an article on Fassbinder as both a genius and an alcoholic,” Keir told the Reporter. “I said, ‘That is Rainer from the bar,’ but I hadn’t seen him in four years.”
At the Berlin Film Festival, he met director Gus Van Sant, who got him a SAG card so that he could work in America. Kier played Keanu Reeves and River Phoenix’s benefactor Hans in 1991’s My Own Private Idaho. The following year, Kier played a Warhol-like Svengali in Madonna’s music video for “Deeper and Deeper,” also starring Debi Mazar and Sofia Coppola. He also appeared in her Sex book.
Around this time, Kier began his ongoing collaboration with Von Trier, guesting on his TV show The Kingdom. From there, the two worked on some of his most famous films like Melancholia and Dogville.
Kier’s American career centered around playing heavies. He was an elder statesman vampire in Blade, a duplicitous handler in Johnny Mnemonic, billionaire/Joe Exotic-type Ronald Camp in Ace Ventura: Pet Detective. “I like horror films,” he said, “because if you play small or guest parts in movies, it is better to be evil and scare people, then be the guy who works in the post office and goes home to his wife and children. Audiences will remember you more.”




