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Wilhelm von Homburg

German boxer and actor (1940–2004)


German boxer and actor (1940–2004)

FieldValue
nameWilhelm von Homburg
imageWilhelm_Von_Homburg.jpg
captionWilhelm von Homburg as Vigo the Carpathian in Ghostbusters 2 (1989)
birth_date
birth_placeBerlin, Germany
death_date
death_placePuerto Vallarta, Mexico
birth_nameNorbert Grupe
module{{Infobox boxer
embedyes
height6 ft 1 in
weightHeavyweight
Light heavyweight
styleOrthodox
total47
wins30
KO24
losses11
draws6
occupationBoxer, actor, professional wrestler
years active1960−2000

Light heavyweight Norbert Grupe (August 25, 1940 – March 10, 2004), better known outside Germany by his stage name Wilhelm von Homburg, was a German boxer, actor, and professional wrestler known for his villainous supporting roles in various high-profile films of the 1980s and 1990s, including Vigo the Carpathian in Ghostbusters II (1989), the henchman James in Die Hard (1988), and Souteneur in Werner Herzog's Stroszek (1977).

Early life

Norbert Grupe was born in Berlin on August 25, 1940. He was the son of Richard Grupe (1915 – August 5, 1988), who worked as a baker in Nazi Germany, and later become both a championship-winning boxer and a local policeman who worked at the Buchenwald concentration camp. Richard would later say of this period, "I was never a Nazi. I never joined the party. I was not in the Hitler Youth...I was a pastryman...I have not much luck with the Jewish people. But I never hated them. Never hated them. I'm very sorry for what Hitler did to the Jewish people." After the war, Richard boxed professionally from 1946 to 1952, earning a record of 26 wins (20 by knockout), 8 losses, and 6 draws. He then toured Europe as a wrestler. Norbert was born to a girlfriend of Richard's, while Richard's first wife gave birth to Grupe's brother Winfried. Richard's second wife Ursula, much younger and closer in age to Norbert Grupe himself, gave birth to Grupe's sister, Rona. Ursula left the family five years later. According to Rona, Grupe exhibited a bitter jealousy toward Winfried, because Winfried's mother was a daily presence for him, whereas Grupe's absent mother would not even speak to him. Years later, when Rona was in her mid-teens, Richard informed her that at some point in 1959, the year prior to Rona's birth, Richard was away from home, most likely on a wrestling trip, and Ursula was home alone. Grupe climbed the fire escape into the house and raped her. Richard said it was possible that Grupe was Rona's biological father. Decades later, however, when Richard was in a coma near his death, Rona had a blood test, which proved that Richard was her father.

Career

Early work and professional wrestling

In his youth, Grupe worked as a meatpacker, butcher, longshoreman, and a waiter. By the time he finished school, Grupe, who had begun training in boxing at age 10, had won several amateur boxing matches. Around 1960, Richard emigrated to the United States to further his wrestling career, and Grupe, who stood at 6'3" and 227 pounds by this time, would soon follow, spending time at California's notable Venice weight pen, where he became acquainted with future film star Arnold Schwarzenegger. The father and son duo would don Viking costumes, with which they were billed as the tag-team by the name of The Vikings, wrestling at the Los Angeles Coliseum and Madison Square Garden. They subsequently changed their name to the Von Homburg Brothers, under which they performed as heels for less than a hundred dollars a night in total. Grupe thought his last name sounded too much like the word groupie, and changed it to Prince Wilhelm von Homburg. He sometimes wore a monocle and German eagle. He would later regret using it in Hollywood, saying, "In an industry that was ruled by the Jews, it was really dumb to call myself 'von Homburg.' Who do they think that is? A Nazi nobleman." After their wrestling partnership ended, the father and son grew estranged.

Boxing career and early acting roles

Von Homburg switched careers to boxing in 1962, employing the showmanship and the boastful, cocky persona he had developed as a wrestler. He won 16 of 21 professional fights in the U.S., fighting throughout California as a light heavyweight before traveling across the U.S. and then his native Germany where he wore fur coats, smoked cigars, and taunted referees and crowds in a way that stunned the normally sedate German boxing world. One reporter for Der Spiegel ranked Von Homburg as seventh in the world. He grew his blonde hair over his ears, for which he was nicknamed the "Beatle Boxer."

Von Homburg got his first championship match in 1966 against Piero del Papa for the EBU Regional Light Heavyweight title in Berlin. Homburg was disqualified in the eleventh round, after having knocked out Del Papa, because the referee declared a subtle head movement by Von Homburg to have been an illegal headbutt. The match would haunt Von Homburg for the rest of his life, and he would blame it on bias on the part of the referee, saying, "I was the best thing German boxing had back then, and then I had a 70-year-old Frenchman as the referee. We all know what the Germans did to his parents and his sister."

Throughout his boxing career, von Homburg appeared in bit roles in various films and television shows, usually billed as Wilhelm von Homburg. In "The Promoter", the April 25, 1964, episode of Gunsmoke for example, he played a boxer named Otto who is offered a large bribe to throw a fight.

After losing his next three fights, von Homburg retired from boxing in 1970 at age 30, and went to live in St. Pauli Kiez, a red-light district of Hamburg, developing a reputation in that area's underground, where he associated with pimps and Hells Angels, and engaged in a number of affairs with both men and women. He also used drugs and alcohol to excess.

Acting

After spending some years in prison, von Homburg attempted to pursue an acting career in earnest. German director Werner Herzog, who had seen him box in his youth, cast him as a bullying pimp in his 1977 film Stroszek. Herzog commented, "The Prince was so clear and intelligent and radiated, at the same time, a feeling of danger that absolutely terrified me. He was almost like a German Mike Tyson." A decade later, Von Homburg was cast as James, one of Hans Gruber's henchmen in the 1988 action thriller Die Hard, who dies after Bruce Willis' character detonates plastic explosives down an elevator shaft. Von Homburg's biggest role came at age 50, when he was cast as the primary villain in the 1989 comedy sequel Ghostbusters II, playing Vigo the Carpathian, a 16th/17th century tyrant and sorcerer whose soul is released from an old painting. The character's full name was Vigo Von Homburg Deutschendorf, which paid homage to the name he had chosen as a performer. The film was released less than a year after Von Homburg's father Richard died, though he had not reconciled with his father or sister. His last major role was as Charles Macum Diggs, a vegetative ex-boxer in Diggstown, which was a commercial flop.

Later life

Von Homburg spent the last years of his life effectively homeless, alternating between sleeping at a YMCA, in the homes of friends, or in his van.

Death

He developed prostate cancer, and following its metastasis to his pelvis, spine, and brain, he went to the home of his friend Walter Staudinger, where he spent his final days.

Professional boxing record

-
-align=center
Loss
30–11–6
PTS
10
December 11, 1970
-
Loss
30–10–6
PTS
10
December 12, 1969
-
Loss
30–9–6
PTS
10
November 14, 1969
-
Loss
30–8–6
TKO
3
June 20, 1969
-
Win
30–7–6
TKO
7
April 2, 1969
-
Loss
29–7–6
PTS
10
February 14, 1969
-
Win
29–6–6
TKO
5
January 3, 1969
-
Win
28–6–6
PTS
10
November 8, 1968
-
Win
27–6–6
KO
3
September 18, 1968
-
Win
26–6–6
TKO
8
August 30, 1968
-
Loss
25–6–6
PTS
10
April 11, 1968
-
Win
25–5–6
KO
5
December 15, 1967
-
Draw
24–5–6
PTS
10
May 3, 1967
-
Win
24–5–5
KO
9
December 9, 1966
-
Loss
23–5–5
DQ
11
November 19, 1966
-
Draw
23–4–5
PTS
10
May 14, 1966
-
Draw
23–4–4
PTS
10
May 28, 1965
-
Win
23–4–3
KO
4
April 29, 1965
-
Win
22–4–3
TKO
8
April 2, 1965
-
Win
21–4–3
TKO
6
February 20, 1965
-
Loss
20–4–3
PTS
10
January 16, 1965
-
Win
20–3–3
TKO
10
December 5, 1964
-
Win
19–3–3
KO
3
November 27, 1964
-
Win
18–3–3
TKO
9
November 6, 1964
-
Win
17–3–3
KO
6
May 29, 1964
-
Draw
16–3–3
PTS
10
May 8, 1964
-
Win
16–3–2
KO
5
April 7, 1964
-
Win
15–3–2
TKO
9
January 6, 1964
-
Win
14–3–2
SD
10
November 18, 1963
-
Loss
13–3–2
PTS
10
September 19, 1963
-
Loss
13–2–2
PTS
10
July 23, 1963
-
Win
13–1–2
TKO
9
June 24, 1963
-
Draw
12–1–2
PTS
6
June 1, 1963
-
Win
12–1–1
TKO
9
May 20, 1963
-
Win
11–1–1
KO
3
March 25, 1963
-
Win
10–1–1
KO
6
February 25, 1963
-
Win
9–1–1
TKO
1
February 19, 1963
-
Win
8–1–1
KO
6
February 15, 1963
-
Win
7–1–1
UD
8
January 22, 1963
-
Win
6–1–1
PTS
8
January 15, 1963
-
Win
5–1–1
PTS
6
December 18, 1962
-
Win
4–1–1
PTS
6
December 14, 1962
-
Loss
3–1–1
KO
3
October 25, 1962
-
Win
3–0–1
KO
3
September 21, 1962
-
Win
2–0–1
KO
3
August 24, 1962
-
Win
1–0–1
KO
2
August 16, 1962
-
Draw
0–0–1
PTS
4
July 20, 1962
}

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1965MorituriCrew MemberUncredited
1966The Last of the Secret Agents?GGI Agent
Torn CurtainBlonde Twin in BusUncredited
1967Hotel ClausewitzThe American
1968The Devil's BrigadeFritz
The Hell with HeroesHans
The Wrecking CrewGregor
1970Gentlemen in White VestsMax Graf
1976The Swiss ConspiracyHitman in Santa Claus CostumeUncredited
1977StroszekSouteneur
1988Die HardJames
1989The PackageLt. Koch
Ghostbusters IIVigo the Carpathian
1990Midnight CabaretJuan Carlos
1991Night of the WarriorBike
Eye of the StormThe Killer
1992DiggstownCharles Macum Diggs
1994The Silence of the HamsMaitre D'
In the Mouth of MadnessSimon
2002Der BoxprinzHimselfdocumentary film
final on-screen appearance

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1964GunsmokeOttoEpisode: "The Promoter"
1966T.H.E. CatTonyEpisode: "To Kill a Priest"
JerichoGerman SergeantEpisode: "Panic in the Piazza"
1967The InvadersInjured AlienEpisode: "Labyrinth"
1967-1968The Wild Wild WestHerr Hess / Abel Garrison S3 E14/ Gunther PearseEpisodes: "The Night of the Tottering Tontine",
"The Night of the Iron Fist" & "The Night of the Big Blackmail"
2000Rosa RothSchorschEpisode: "Tod eines Bullen"

References

References

  1. {{BoxRec. 138321. Wilhelm Von Homburg.
  2. "Wilhelm Von Homburg". [[The New York Times]].
  3. Raviv, Shaun. (October 27, 2015). "The Hateful Life and Spiteful Death of the Man Who Was Vigo the Carpathian". [[Deadspin]].
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