Paul Wegener (
11 December 1874 –
13 September 1948) was a
German actor,
writer and
film director known for his pioneering role in German
expressionist cinema.
Biography
Stage and early film career
At the age of 20 Wegener decided to end his law studies and concentrate on acting, touring the provinces before joining
Max Reinhardt's acting troupe in 1906. In 1912, he turned to the new medium of motion pictures and appeared in the 1913 version of
The Student of Prague. It was while making this film that he first heard the old
Jewish legend of the
Golem and proceeded to adapt the story to film, co-directing and co-writing the script with
Henrik Galeen. His first version of the tale
The Golem (1915, now lost) was a success and firmly established Wegener's reputation. In 1917, he made a parody of the story called
Der Golem und die Tänzerin, but it was his reworking of the tale,
The Golem: How He Came into the World (1920) which stands as one of the classics of German cinema and helped to cement Wegener's place in cinematic history.
Another of his early films was
Der Yoghi (1916), in which he played the role of a
yogi and young inventor, and which provided him with the opportunity to accommodate three of his interests, trick photography (it was one of the first films to feature invisibility), the supernatural and
Eastern mysticism.