Jan Hendriks
Known for: Acting
Born: December 5, 1928 in Berlin, Germany - Died: December 12, 1991
Jan Hendriks (born Heinz Joachim Hinz, December 6, 1928, Berlin – died likely December 13, 1991, Berlin) was a German actor and voice actor. After studying acting at the Hebbel Theatre school in Berlin, he began his career on stage before making his film debut in Robert A. Stemmle’s Sündige Grenze (1951), for which he became the first winner of the German Film Award for Best New Actor. He went on to appear in more than 90 film and television productions, including several Edgar Wallace films. Hendriks was widely known to television audiences for his role as Inspector Martin Brenner in the crime series Der Alte (1977–1986). He also worked as a voice actor, dubbing performers such as Humphrey Bogart and Anthony Quinn. He died in Berlin in December 1991.
Known for
Showing 24 of 71 titles
The Squeaker
Mr. Leslie
She Walks by Night
Heinz Pohlmann, ein Freund
The Inn on the River
Roger Lane
Appointment in Beirut
direttore Play Boy
Castle of the Creeping Flesh
Georg v. Kassell
Mark of the Tortoise
Carlos
Isle of Sin
Mario Bertelli
Non sta bene rubare il tesoro
Da Costa
Arms and the Man
Leutnant Sergius Slivitzna
Heintje - Einmal wird die Sonne wieder scheinen
Willi
Königin der Arena
Tonio
Dark Eyes
Laszlo
The Door with Seven Locks
Tom Cawler
Alibi
Berthold
Forbidden Paradise
Theo Krailing
Bobby Dodd intervenes
Sydows Geschäftsfreund
Duel at Sundown
Lord
The Devil's Daffodil
Charles
Der große Zapfenstreich
Leutnant Christian von Lauffen
The Green Devils of Monte Cassino
Fausto
The Man with the Glass Eye
Rubiro
The Farmer from Brucknerhof
Hans Donath
Oh My God, Willi!
Kellner im 'Blauen Falter
Hotel Royal
Legrand