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Alexis Kanner est un Acteur et Réalisateur Français né le 2 mai 1942 à Bagnères-de-Luchon (France)

Alexis Kanner

Alexis Kanner
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Nom de naissance Henri Alex Kanner
Nationalité France
Naissance 2 mai 1942 à Bagnères-de-Luchon (France)
Mort 13 décembre 2003 (à 61 ans) à Londres (Royaume-uni)

Alexis Kanner est un acteur français né le 2 mai 1942 à Bagnères-de-Luchon (Haute-Garonne) et décédé le 13 décembre 2003 à Londres des suites d'une complication grippale.

Alexis Kanner a interprété 3 rôles dans la série télévisée Le Prisonnier :


le Kid dans l'épisode Musique douce
le photographe dans La mort en marche
le jeune rebelle dans Le dénouement.
Il avait commencé sa carrière au théâtre et avait joué dans plusieurs pièces de 1961 à 1970, dont La Tempête de William Shakespeare.


1965 : Les Aventures amoureuses de Moll Flanders
1967 : Ernie Game (The Ernie Game)
1969 : Double Jeu (Crossplot).
Il est également le réalisateur et acteur principal (en compagnie de McGoohan) du film Kings and desperate men (1977, inédit en France) sous le pseudonyme de Henri Lucas.

Biographie

Kanner attended the Montreal Children's Theatre under the tutelage of Dorothy Davis and Violet Walters.

Kanner made his first impression as an actor in the role of Alex, among a French Canadian cast, in the television drama series Beau Temps, Mauvais Temps (1955–1958).

He moved to England in the late 50s to join the Birmingham Repertory Theatre to further his acting career. This led to the Royal Court and the Royal Shakespeare Company where he played in The Tempest in 1961 and the lead role in Hamlet under the direction of Peter Brook in 1965. His earliest UK television appearance appears to have been as Peter in the Sunday Night Theatre play Echo From Afar in 1959.

He appeared as Stephen in the film Reach for Glory (1962) about the brutal war games of evacuated teenage boys during the Second World War. This led to him first meeting the film's assistant director David Tomblin, who would a few years later be the producer of The Prisoner series.

He had a small role in the comedy film We Joined the Navy (1962) playing Gerrett. The only real notable thing about the film was the number of future British small screen comedy stalwarts who were acting in either similar small roles or uncredited cameos.

Other plays in which he performed were:


ITV Play of the Week: Birds in the Wilderness as Peter (1962) and The Facing Chair (1963) as Clem Goodwin
Television Playhouse: The Interview as The Young Man (1962) and Along Came A Spider as Brian (1963)
Drama '63: The Freewheelers as Jeremy (1963)
Armchair Theatre: Living Image (1963) as John Manders playing a son who wonders if he can love his father even though he violently disapproves of everything he stands for
He appeared on British television in an episode of The Saint, "The Ever Loving Spouse" (1964) as Alec Misner and in the first of three episodes in ATV's Love Story, A Future Holiday as Frank Watkins. His other appearances in that series were in the following year in Briefly Kiss The Loser as Big Silver Gardner and in 1967 as Colin Turner in Cinéma Vérité. He appeared as Detective Constable Matt Stone in 9 episodes of Softly, Softly (BBC, 1966), a spin-off series from Z-Cars. He claimed in interviews later that he left not wanting to be typecast. Only one complete Softly, Softly episode featuring Kanner survives in the BBC archives, 'A-Z' (broadcast 30 March 1966), and another partially.

His film career continued with an appearance in The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders (1965) as part of a Mohocks gang.

In 1967 he went back to Montreal to star as the lead character Ernie Turner in the film The Ernie Game which was written and directed by Don Owen for the National Film Board of Canada.


The Prisoner
Kanner's performances in the 1967–1968 British television series The Prisoner brought lasting recognition for his acting. When he was first enrolled, Patrick McGoohan, the star and co-creator of the series, was planning the final four episodes. There was some opposition to the choice, but McGoohan was looking to cast the rebellious and maverick qualities that Kanner displayed. His first guest-star role was in the mock Wild West, episode "Living in Harmony", in which he portrayed the "Kid" (the alter-ego of Number Eight), a violent mute dressed in circus pants and a top hat, who is eventually shot in a duel by McGoohan's character, Number Six. McGoohan was impressed by his acting skills and perfectionism (to prepare the duel scene, both actors practised quick-draw assiduously). As a result, McGoohan wrote for Kanner the role of Number Forty-eight, who is made to stand trial as the representative of rebellious youth in "Fall Out", the final episode of the series. Additionally, Kanner gave an uncredited performance as the photographer in the comic-book episode "The Girl Who Was Death", in which he performed a number of stunts on a roller coaster.


Later career
In 1969 he starred as Graham Baird in the little-known short feature film Twenty Nine, a story of a promiscuous young husband's night out in swinging London. It was only 26 minutes long and co-starred Yootha Joyce. This was shown as the B film in Britain with the feature film If..... The band Tuesday's Children, who had a cameo role in a nightclub scene, released the song "She" that they played in it as a single soon afterwards.

He starred in a number of feature films soon after, including Crossplot (1969) with Roger Moore, Connecting Rooms (1970) with Bette Davis and Michael Redgrave, and Goodbye Gemini (also 1970).

He is wrongly credited with appearing in Invasion:UFO in 1972, a compilation film made up of the episodes from the TV series UFO made in 1970. He had appeared in an episode called The Cat With 10 Lives but no footage of this was used in the "feature film".

He moved back to Canada and his next film was Mahoney's Last Stand (released in the US as Mahoney's Estate, 1972) with Sam Waterston and Maud Adams, which he also co-wrote and co-directed. The original motion picture soundtrack of the same name was recorded by Ronnie Lane (who was a friend of Kanner) and Ron Wood, then of The Faces. Other famous names who worked on the album included Pete Townshend and Kenney Jones.

He worked again with Patrick McGoohan on the Canadian hostage drama film Kings and Desperate Men, in which he starred as well as writing, producing and directing. He apparently spent two years editing the film which, although filmed in December 1977, did not premiere until the 1981 Montreal World Film Festival. During the late 80s Kanner sued the producers of the film Die Hard claiming that they stole the idea for that movie from this film (he lost).

His final known acting role was in Nightfall (released in 1988), a science-fiction film based on the Isaac Asimov story of the same name.

He settled back in London in 1996 and was working on a new film project called J R Profitt that never came to fruition.


Death
He died of a heart attack at his London home on 13 December 2003. He had requested that his body be flown to and buried in Israel.

Le plus souvent avec

Kay Walsh
Kay Walsh
(3 films)
Robin Spry
Robin Spry
(2 films)
Source : Wikidata

Filmographie de Alexis Kanner (9 films)

Afficher la filmographie sous forme détaillée
AnnéeNomMétierRôle
1988La mort des trois soleilsActeur
1981Kings and Desperate MenActeur, Réalisateur
1970Chambres communicantesActeur
1970Chambres communicantesActeurMickey Hollister
1970Goodbye GeminiActeurClive Landseer
1969Double JeuActeur
1968The Ernie GameActeur
1965Les aventures amoureuses de Moll FlandersActeurLe quatrième Mohock
1962Reach for GloryActeur