Early life and career Hurst was born Heinrich Theodor Hirsch and grew up in a family of actors. As a Jewish child living in 1930s Germany, he faced persecution from the
Nazi regime. After the
pogroms of
Kristallnacht, the British government allowed for the rescue of Jewish children from Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland and the
Free City of Danzig. He was one of the nearly 10,000 children in 1938–1939 moved with the
Kindertransport to the United Kingdom. He was separated from his mother at 12 years old, and never saw her again. Housed in a manor in Northern Ireland, he lived with other young emigrants in the care of the family of an estate manager. His first stage experience was in
Belfast at a repertory theatre, where he also changed his name from Heinrich Hirsch to David Hurst. During the
Second World War he joined the British army, but because of his German background he was assigned to
Entertainments National Service Association, where he performed as an actor and a comedian. His first film role was as Wolfgang Winkel in
The Perfect Woman (1949), a role Hurst had previously played in the
West End to critical praise. He went on to appear in many British films of the 1950s.
United States In 1957, Hurst moved to the United States. He spent most of his time in California, but often performed on
Broadway. In 1960, he created the role of
Merlyn in the original Broadway production of
Camelot opposite
Richard Burton. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s he played in film, television and theatre. In 1959 he received the
Clarence Derwent Award, and in 1964 he was awarded the
Obie Award from
The Village Voice for his
off-Broadway performance in
A Month in the Country. He performed in the film version of
Hello, Dolly (1969) as Rudolph the headwaiter alongside
Barbra Streisand and
Walter Matthau. This was his most notable role in America. He also had roles in the films ''
Kelly's Heroes (1970) and The Boys From Brazil (1978). Hurst also appeared in numerous TV series including Mission: Impossible, Serpico and Star Trek''. Throughout his career he worked as a visiting professor at
Yale,
Boston University and
Carnegie Mellon.
Return to Germany In the 1980s he appeared in several German-American co-productions, and visited his half-brother
Wolfgang Heinz in East Berlin. Hurst decided to remain in Germany, and worked in Vienna and Berlin with a fellow erstwhile emigrant (and
Actors Studio colleague), theatre director
George Tabori. From 1991 Hurst worked at the
Burgtheater, Vienna, eventually returning to live in Berlin in 2000, when he retired from acting. He died there on 15 September 2019 after suffering a stroke and pneumonia. ==Appearances==