Daniel Bruhl

Movie Actor

Daniel Bruhl was born in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on June 16th, 1978 and is the Movie Actor. At the age of 45, Daniel Bruhl biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, TV shows, and networth are available.

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Other Names / Nick Names
Daniel César Martin Brühl González Domingo, Daniel Brühl
Date of Birth
June 16, 1978
Nationality
Spain, Germany
Place of Birth
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Age
45 years old
Zodiac Sign
Gemini
Networth
$4 Million
Profession
Actor, Film Actor, Non-fiction Writer, Voice Actor, Writer
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Daniel Bruhl Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 45 years old, Daniel Bruhl has this physical status:

Height
175cm
Weight
74kg
Hair Color
Dark Brown
Eye Color
Hazel
Build
Slim
Measurements
Not Available
Daniel Bruhl Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Dreikönigsgymnasium
Daniel Bruhl Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Felicitas Rombold
Children
2
Dating / Affair
Reena Hammer, Jessica Schwarz (2001, Felicitas Rombold (2010-Present)
Parents
Hanno Brühl, Marisa Gonzáles Domingo
Siblings
Oliver Brühl (Brother), Miriam Brühl (Sister)
Daniel Bruhl Life

Daniel César Martn Brühl Domingo (German: d'niel -ni l) (listen); born 16 June 1978) is a Spanish-German actor and filmmaker. He received his first German Film Award for his role in Das Weisse Rauschen (The White Sound) (2001), Nichts Bereuen (2001), and Vaya con Dios (2002). In the German film Good Bye, Lenin, he appeared. (2003) earned him the European Film Award for Best Actor and another German Film Award for Best Actor, earning him widespread praise and critical acclaim.

With his breakthrough role as Fredrick Zoller, a German war hero in Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds (2009), The Fifth Estate (2013), and A Most Wanted Man (2014), he was introduced to mainstream audiences in the United States. Brühl's portrayal of former Formula One driver Niki Lauda in the biographical film Rush (2013), for which he received several accolades, including the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor, Critics' Choice Award for Best Supporting Actor, and the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role.

Brühl portrays Helmut Zemo in Captain America: Civil War (2016) and the Disney+ film The Winter Soldier (2021) in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. In addition, he appeared in the Emmy and Golden Globe-nominated period drama television series The Alienist (2018–2020), for which he received a nomination for Best Actor in a Television Motion Picture.

Brühl has worked in both European and American languages (English, Catalan, Spanish, German, French, Polish, and Chinese), as well as German (Inglourious Basterds, Entebbe, and most German productions), including Polish (Ladies in Lavender), French (Burnt), Austrian (Rebellion), and Sokovian (Burnt), a fictional Eastern European country in Captain America (the Civil War).

Early life

Daniel César Martn Brühl González was born in Barcelona on June 16th, 1978. Hanno Brühl, a German television director and documentalist who was born in So Paulo, Brazil, was his father. Marisa González Domingo, a Spanish teacher, is his mother. He was born in Spain because his mother did not trust German doctors. The family lived in Cologne, Germany, where he grew up. Oliver Oliver, Oliver's brother, and Miriam's sister, Miriam. They were raised in Spain, Germany, Catalan, and French. He attended secondary school at Dreikönigsgymnasium, the oldest school in Cologne.

Personal life

Brühl divorced his longtime wife and then fiancée Jessica Schwarz, whom he had met on the set of the 2001 film No Regrets, in 2006. Since 2010, he has been in a relationship with practising psychotherapist, academic, and actress Felicitas Rombold, a New York narrator. They first married shortly after the child's birth but early 2018. In 2020, the couple had their second child.

He likes running and hiking, as well as watching tennis, quoting Rafael Nadal (who is left-handed like him) as his favorite player. He uses a sauna in his Berlin flat to get to a meditative state every day.

Brühl has been campaigning for the United Nations World Food Programme, the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate. He endorsed the phrase "Do something for Europe" in 2019. An initiative to foster cooperation in Europe and the Global Fund's Step Up To Fight campaign to eliminate AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. He raised the Emergency Amazon Forest Fund for Earth Alliance partners to protect the Amazon Basin this year. In 2020, he was one of the 25 celebrities to donate a personal item for the Los Angeles Lesbos campaign in support of refugees, as well as donating his vintage walking stick from The Alienist's set.

On a one-day ride through Barcelona, Brühl's book Ein Tag in Barcelona (Ullstein Verlag) follows him. Tapas!, co-authored with Atilano González, recreates Berlin's best dishes.

Brühl has been the joint operator of a tapas bar in Berlin's Kreuzberg district, Bar Raval, since 2011. It began during the 2011 Berlinale's first weekend. He was joint operator of a similar bar in Prenzlauer Berg, named Bar Gracia after Barcelona's nightlife district Gràcia's closing due to a lack of funding.

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Daniel Bruhl Career

Career

Despite not having any formal training as an actor, Brühl began acting at a young age. He appeared in children's theater at school and first earned money at age 8 doing radio plays, followed by work in a dubbing studio, causing one of the dubbing actors to recommend the adolescent to a talent agency. Brühl played Benji, the street kid in the soap opera Verbotene Liebe (Forbidden Love) (1995), and went on to star in a television series in the years after. In 1999, he appeared in his film debut as Checo in Paradise Mall (Schlaraffenland) and in the German version of Le château des singes. He appeared in No More School as Markus Baasweiler in 2000 and was portrayed as Jay in Deeply.

In Hans Weingartner's critically acclaimed debut film Das Weisse Rauschen (The White Sound), as Daniel in Nichts Bereuen (No Regrets) and Marek in Honolulu, he continued to appear in major roles. He appeared in Vaya con Dios and as boxer Marko Stemper in Elefantenherz (Elephant Heart) in 2002. He was named for Best Actor, Bavarian Film Award (2001) for Best New Actor, and Vaya Con Dios. In 2003, he received the German Film Critics Award for his films Das Weisse Rauschen and Vaya con Dios. Brühl argued against meeting someone with a nebulous schizophrenia to avoid the possibility of making the character appear cliche. "It was important for me to investigate my own madness," he says, "It was important for me to investigate my own madness," he continued to do, and to remind myself that I was suffering from the disease two decades ago." Due to the film's realistic representation, the academic community has often cited it in discussing and explaining schizophrenia.

Alex Kerner, the star of Wolfgang Becker's German tragicomedy Good Bye, Lenin in 2003, was Brühl's international breakthrough role. The book tells the tale of a German family that lived during Germany's unification. Among other things, the film was one of the best German films to date, winning at the Golden Globe Awards and the BAFTA Awards, German Film Awards, Cesar Awards, and London Film Critics' Circle. It was exported to more than 65 countries, earning an estimated six million cinemagoers around the world. Brühl also received awards, including the European Film Award for Best European Actor and the European Film Award for Best Actor for the role this year. He received his second German Film Award for both his appearance in the film and in Elefantenherz. Kenai appeared in Brother Bear's German version.

Brühl earned more attention in 2004 when reuniting with filmmaker Hans Weingartner and starring as the anti-capitalist activist Jan in the internationally successful film The Edukators (Die Fetten Jahren sind vorbei). As part of the "German New Wave" film, the film received a 10-minute standing ovation at its premiere at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival, where it had been nominated for the Palme d'Or. Brühl was nominated for Best Actor for his work in the European Film Award for Best Actor. In the midst of winning the European Film Awards for Best European Actor for his role as Paul in Love, the Steglitz student tragedy involving two teenagers who formed a suicide club is also based on the Steglitz student tragedy.

Brühl made his English-speaking film debut in Ladies in Lavender this year, starring English actress Judi Dench and Maggie Smith, as Andrea Marowski, and Queen Elizabeth II, who attended its premiere. In Farland, he appeared in Frank Frank. Brühl appeared in the 2005 film Joyeux No.l, a trilingual World War I film based on French, German, and Scottish soldiers during the 1914 Christmas truce. Brühl's linguistic skills are demonstrated in the film as he ably communicates in German, French, and English throughout.

He was invited to attend the Cannes Film Festival's short film and Cinéfondation juries in 2006. In the German version of Brother Bear 2, he appeared as Chris in Cargo and Karl as Lightning McQueen. Salvador Puig Antich, a Spanish anarchist executed during the Franco period, appeared in his first language in Cannes-nominated film Salvador (Puig Antich). Brühl made a cameo appearance in 2 Days in Paris, a French actress Julie Delpy's romantic comedy film. In the film The Bourne Ultimatum, he appeared in a small role as Martin Kreutz. In 2008, he appeared in In Transit, a British-Russian film in which he played Klaus opposite John Malkovich as a young Nazi soldier. In A Bit of Chocolate, he also played Tonda in Krabat, which was based on a famous German children's tale, and Marcos in A Bit of Chocolate.

In the German-Chinese-French biographical film John Rabe, Brühl starred Dr. Georg Rosen, a key member of the International Safety Zone Committee in Nanking, China. In Julie Delpy's third directorial film The Countes de Elna, István Thurzó, and David Kern in Lila, Lila, he appeared in Amaro. Fredrick Zoller, a German war hero in Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds, starring Brad Pitt, premiered at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival to brisk praise. Several awards and nominations were given to the film, including Best Picture, in eight Academy Award categories, including Best Picture. The Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture was won by he and his co-stars. Brühl decided to work in a new field of filmmaking in May by establishing the production company Fouronfilm along with Film1.

In 2010, he appeared in King's Road (Kóngavegur 7) and as Hans Krämer in The Coming Days. In Eva, a science fiction film set in the year 2041, he appeared as cybernetics engineer Lex Garel, who was hired by his former university to program robot software. In Lessons of a Dream, Konrad Koch, a German instructor, introduced Britain's football to his pupils in late 19th century Germany (Der ganz Traum). In 2 Days in New York, he appeared in All Together as ethnology scholar Dirk whose paper focuses on the aging population. (Et si on vivre tout ensemble?) Jane Fonda and Geraldine Chaplin appear alongside Jane Fonda and Geraldine Chaplin. In the horror thriller Intruders, he co-starred Father Antonio with Clive Owen. In 2012, he appeared in Winning Streak (The Pelayos) and as Leonardo in 7 Days in Havana.

He co-starred in The Fifth Estate, a film based on WikiLeaks' founding in which Brühl played co-founder Daniel Domscheit-Berg alongside Benedict Cumberbatch as Julian Assange. In the Ron Howard biographical film Rush opposite Chris Hemsworth, Brühl portrayed former Formula One racer Niki Lauda in the same year. He was cast and took Formula Three lessons with Hemsworth later in life. He traveled to Vienna to visit Lauda, who also travelled to the Brazilian Grand Prix to experience the racing atmosphere in which he stood in the pit with the Mercedes team, wearing an earpiece to listen in conversations, and talked to Formula 1 drivers. When taping was revived, he had to endure seven hours of prosthetics daily, in imitation of Lauda's features. Brühl tried to find the right balance of not only imitating the individual but also being creative. The film was a commercial and critical hit. He received numerous accolade awards, including the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor, the Critic's Choice Award for Best Supporting Actor, and the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role.

In 2014, he appeared in A Most Wanted Man as Maximilian alongside Philip Seymour Hoffman and Rachel McAdams, as Thomas, and in the film The Trip as a patron at Terrace Bar. Brühl, along with Darren Aronofsky, Audrey Tautou, and Bong Joon-ho were among others among the Berlinerale jury in 2015. In Me and Kaminski, he reunited with writer Sebastian Zöllner and played Austrian investigative journalist Hubertus Czernin, alongside Helen Mirren and Ryan Reynolds. In Colonia, he co-starred Emma Watson and Michael Nyqvist. In Burnt, he appeared as maître d'hôtel Tony Balerdi as well as Bradley Cooper. He was trained as a maître d' in Marcus Wareing's Michelin-star restaurant in London, preparing for the role. Brühl said that since he has seen the film, he has a lot more respect and admiration for food, taking his time while eating and tasting, imagining the incredible effort behind it. Brühl, a Berlin- and Hamburg-based production company, became a producer for Amusement Park Film in the same year.

Brühl played Escherich in Berlin in 2016, and Jens Söring in Killing for Love starred Jens Söring. In one of the most critically acclaimed films in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Brühl played the Marvel comics supervillain Helmut Zemo alongside Chris Evans and Robert Downey Jr. Brühl played Nazi zoologist Lutz Heck, who compelled Jan and Antonina abiski to leave the Warsaw Zoo in Niki Caro's World War II film The Zookeeper's Wife (2017) about a married couple who saved hundreds of Jews. In the action thriller Entebbe (7 Days in Entebbe), Ernst Schmidt appeared as Ernst Schmidt in The Cloverfield Paradox, a sequel to the Cloverfield franchise, and as Wilfried Böse, a founding member of the German organization Revolutionary Cells, which tells the tale of Operation Entebbe.

He appeared in The Alienist, an American period crime drama film based on Caleb Carr's 1994 book, from 2018 to 2020, alongside Luke Evans and Dakota Fanning. Brühl started reading about famous pioneering psychologists of the day (Sigmund Freud, Josef Breuer, and Carl Jung) and went to psychotherapy in Budapest to gain an appreciation of how they worked and thought. Felicitas, a practicing psychotherapist, put him in contact with criminal psychologists. He was nominated for Best Actor in a Television Motion Picture and the Satellite Award for Best Actor in a Miniseries or Television Film in 2019 for his role in the series's Outstanding Limited Series and Best Television Motion Picture in the Primetime Emmy Awards as Outstanding Limited Series and Best Television Motion Picture. He starred fertility specialist Thomas in My Zoe (2019), his first foray into executive production in the same year.

Brühl's debut at 2021 appeared in his dark comedy film Next Door (Nebenan), which premiered in the Berlin International Film Festival as a Golden Bear nominee, wherein he also appeared as Daniel, a vain and mean version of himself. The film was voted Best Film and Brühl received Best Actor in the Taormina Film Festival, and Best Actor was Bruton. In the Disney+ series The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, he reprised his role as Helmut Zemo. His dancing, which he improvised in The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, has gone viral and was also published in The Zemo Cut.

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Anthony Mackie disappointed Marvel didn't renew The Falcon and the Winter Soldier - saying working with Sebastian Stan and Daniel Bruhl was 'the perfect storm of happiness'

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 23, 2024
Anthony Mackie is looking forward to starring in his own Captain America movie, but revealed he's also experienced some disappointment in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The actor, 45, who was nervous to work with Harrison Ford in Captain America: Brave New World, said he was disheartened the powers that be didn't opt for a second season of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier in which his Sam Wilson takes on the mantle and shield of the superhero. 'The Falcon and [the] Winter Soldier, I really enjoyed doing that show. I was actually excited to do a second season, just so me and Sebastian [Stan] can get paid to hang out,' he told the Radio Times.  

Lesley Patterson, Hollywood's new rising star, was the toast of Tinseltown after writing Oscar-winning All Quiet on the Western Front, but her career has come to a halt

www.dailymail.co.uk, February 25, 2024
Lesley Paterson was the world's best-ranked actor eleven months ago. The five-time world champion triathlete starred in Hollywood as the film she fought for on the big screen,'All Quiet on the Western Front,' gained four Academy Award and Best Foreign Film. The first World War II film received seven BAFTA awards, including best film and best adapted screenplay. Ms Paterson's Hollywood aspirations came to a halt at the end of last year when her sports psychologist husband of 22 years, Dr. Simon Marshall, was diagnosed with Stage 4 pancreatic cancer.

In a recent Disney+ biopic, Daniel Bruhl is seen for the first time portraying fashion icon Karl Lagerfeld

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 19, 2023
In a recent Disney+ biopic, Daniel Bruhl turned into Karl Lagerfeld for the first time. When shooting new scenes on location in Rome, Italy on Thursday, the actor, 44, clearly embraced the role as he sported the designer's signature sleek ponytail. In a six-part series called Kaiser Karl, the Spanish-German actress Daniel César Martn Brühl Gonzagalez Domingo will portray the legendary German fashion designer.
Daniel Bruhl Instagram Photos