Albert Conti
Born
28 January 1887 (139)
Place of Birth
Trieste, Austria-Hungary [now Trieste, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy]
Also known as
Albert De Conti Cadassamare
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Albert De Conti Cadassamare (29 January 1887 – 18 January 1967), professionally billed as Albert Conti, was an Austrian-Hungarian-born Italian-American film actor. Born in the village Gorizia (now part of Italy), Conti achieved moderate fame as an actor in American films, but first he specialized in law (high school and law college in Graz) and natural science, and married Patricia Cross. When World War I began, he became an officer. His father was Albert,...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Albert De Conti Cadassamare (29 January 1887 – 18 January 1967), professionally billed as Albert Conti, was an Austrian-Hungarian-born Italian-American film actor. Born in the village Gorizia (now part of Italy), Conti achieved moderate fame as an actor in American films, but first he specialized in law (high school and law college in Graz) and natural science, and married Patricia Cross. When World War I began, he became an officer. His father was Albert, Ritter Conti v. Cedassamare and his mother was Marie Bernhardine Anna (Countess Caboga) a member of an old Ragusan/Dubrovnik noble family. After his discharge from the Austrian army at the close of World War I, he came to America like many other now-impoverished postwar Europeans from both sides of the conflict. Conti emigrated to the United States via the Port of Philadelphia in 1919. After settling in the new country, Conti was obliged to take a series of manual labor jobs, his patrician background notwithstanding. While working in the California oil fields, he answered an open call placed by director Erich von Stroheim, who was in search of an Austrian military officer to act as technical advisor for his upcoming film Merry-Go-Round (1923). A better actor than most of his fellow Habsburg Empire expatriates, Conti was able to secure dignified character roles in several silent and sound films; his credits ranged from Josef von Sternberg's Morocco (1930) to the early Laurel and Hardy knockabout Slipping Wives (1927). He appeared in the 1928 silent film Dry Martini as a roué artist. Though he made his last film in 1942, Albert Conti remained in the industry as an employee of the MGM wardrobe department, where he worked until his retirement in 1962.
Filmography (40)
Everything Happens at Night
1939
City in Darkness
1939
Suez
1938
Gateway
1938
Always Goodbye
1938
I'll Take Romance
1937
Dangerously Yours
1937
Café Metropole
1937
One in a Million
1937
Hollywood Boulevard
1936
Fatal Lady
1936
Here's to Romance
1935
Page Miss Glory
1935
Diamond Jim
1935
The Crusades
1935
Shadow of Doubt
1935
Symphony of Living
1935
The Night Is Young
1935
Mills of the Gods
1934
Love Time
1934
Elmer and Elsie
1934
The Black Cat
1934
Fashions of 1934
1934
Beloved
1934
Gigolettes of Paris
1933
Torch Singer
1933
Shanghai Madness
1933
Topaze
1933
The Secret of Madame Blanche
1933
Men Are Such Fools
1932
The Giddy Age
1932
The Night Club Lady
1932
Red-Headed Woman
1932
As You Desire Me
1932
State's Attorney
1932
The Doomed Battalion
1932
Careless Lady
1932
Shopworn
1932
Lady with a Past
1932
The Greeks Had a Word for Them
1932