Goetz was born Karl Perl on 18 April 1862 in Vienna, Austria. He was of a
Jewish background. He initially trained as a violinist. However, he opted for a stage career and made his debut in 1892 at the Stadttheater in
St. Pölten. Following negative reviews, he emigrated to the USA in 1893 and worked in
New York City as a newspaper cartoonist and book illustrator. He also performed as an occasional actor at the
Germania Theatre, a German-language theatre. Before 1900, he performed on stage in
Colmar and
Landshut. He then appeared in
Munich cabarets and achieved his first successes as an actor in plays by
August Strindberg,
John Galsworthy, and
Georg Kaiser. Despite his small stature and speech impediment, he was still able to perform in Vienna,
Berlin, and at the
Munich Kammerspiele. In 1913, he began his film career with the role of a tramp in 's film ''
(The Country Road
). Goetz soon specialised in playing old men and unsightly characters. He was the village idiot in Bogdan Stimoff (1916), the repulsive husband in (Light and Darkness
) (1917), and the title character in (Tragedy of an Ugly Man
) (1921). In the films Der Mandarin (1919) and Die gelbe Gefahr
(The Yellow Peril
) (1922), he portrayed Asian characters. He was the court jester in the Munich grand production Der Favorit der Königin
(The Favourite of the Queen) (1922). In other films, he played landowners, professors, or lords of the castle. In Die Mühle von Sanssouci
(The Mill at Sanssouci) (1926), he appeared as the philosopher Voltaire. One of his best film roles, that of Schigolch, was secured for him by Georg Wilhelm Pabst to star opposite Louise Brooks as Lulu in Die Büchse der Pandora
(Pandora's Box'') (1928). Goetz died on 15 August 1932 in Vienna. He was buried in an honorary grave in
Vienna Central Cemetery (11-2-4). (Adapted from the Austrian Biographical Lexicon.) ==Selected filmography==