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1:14 pm - 02/26/2013

Christoph Waltz’s Oscar Spurs Debate: Austrian or German?


FRANKFURT – Christoph Waltz’s second Academy Award has once again launched a very serious debate in Europe – is he Austrian or German?

Both nations have laid claim to the 56-year-old actor, who won best supporting actor Oscars for his portrayals of a Nazi soldier in “Inglourious Basterds,” as well as a German bounty hunter in “Django Unchained.”

The debate concerning Mr. Waltz stems from a long, contentious history in which Austria and Germany argue over which famous German-speaking figures belong to which country, the borders of which have historically often been blurred. For example, Austria tries to lay claim to Ludwig van Beethoven – born in Bonn, Germany, but who arguably came into musical greatness in Austria. Germans cling to the fact that Adolf Hitler was Austrian.

Mr. Waltz’s father had German citizenship, as does he. But he was born and grew up in Vienna, and the country quickly moved to offer him Austrian citizenship after his first Oscar win in 2010. He now holds both German and Austrian passports.

“I was born in Vienna, I grew up in Vienna, I went to school in Vienna, I took my university entrance exams in Vienna, I studied in Vienna, I began my professional career in Vienna, I had my first theater role in Vienna, I filmed for the first time in Vienna, and there are a few more Vienna specifics. How much more Austrian could you be?” Mr. Waltz has said, according to Austria’s ORF broadcaster.

Mr. Waltz was not immediately available for comment Monday.

The German media politely labeled him “German-Austrian” in their coverage of his win Monday, while the Austrian media celebrated the dual wins of their Austrians – Mr. Waltz and the success of director Michael Haneke for his foreign film prize for “Amour.” Austrian politicians issued congratulatory press statements, seemingly reveling in Mr. Waltz’s now official status.

Mr. Waltz weighed in on the cultural differences between the two nations on Conan O’Brien’s talk show in 2011, with the edge going to Austria. He said Austrians tend to be polite without meaning it; Germans are more direct and confrontational.

“The difference between Austrians and Germans is like the difference between a battleship and a waltz,” Mr. Waltz said.

Mr. O’Brien asked about the cliché that Germans have no sense of humor.

“That’s not a cliché,” said Mr. Waltz, smiling.




Christoph Waltz took home the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor at this year's Oscars for his role as a dentist-turned-bounty-hunter in Django Unchained.

But prior to becoming the charming, Oscar-snagging performer he is today — Waltz won the same award in 2009 for Inglorious Basterds — the Austrian actor dabbled in song.

The video above, taken from a 1977 episode of the Austrian children's show At the Dam, shows a 21-year-old Waltz's more theatrical (and undeniably fashionable) side of performing. Striped leotard aside, he's still pretty charming.

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miwa201 26th-Feb-2013 01:13 pm (UTC)
PSH was robbed. Still amazed he won for the same role he played two (?) years ago. Fucking Weinstein.
champagnexdream 26th-Feb-2013 01:23 pm (UTC)
The same role? Are you srs though?
wickedground 26th-Feb-2013 01:24 pm (UTC)
MTE. Totally different character, wtf.
quizblorg 26th-Feb-2013 01:28 pm (UTC)
I can see why people would say it, because there are superficial similarities - but in their cores, the characters are diametrical opposites.
melns 26th-Feb-2013 01:29 pm (UTC)
character was different but he played it exactly the same
miwa201 26th-Feb-2013 01:27 pm (UTC)
Not the same role per se, clearly, but he acted it in the same way. There was no difference in the acting.
quizblorg 26th-Feb-2013 01:31 pm (UTC)
IA that the mannerisms are similar, but Schultz has a moral centre that Landa obviously hasn't, and the difference comes through in the acting.
champagnexdream 26th-Feb-2013 01:32 pm (UTC)
Not really. He has a very strong accent and that was the only similarity I really saw, aside from Tarantino's writing style. Watch Water for Elephants - completely different.
bloolikejazz 26th-Feb-2013 03:53 pm (UTC)
i agree. it was academy award winning acting both times
in_suburb 26th-Feb-2013 01:42 pm (UTC)
don't worry. PSH gets nominated every 3 years.
goddlesssinner 26th-Feb-2013 01:48 pm (UTC)
Besides of being category fraud for both, Christoph ANd PSH, it was a bad year for SA
fraubluecher 26th-Feb-2013 02:12 pm (UTC)
Idk There's no denying that Django is the main character in Django. Don't second leads usually get supporting, unless they are a different gender than the main lead, of course.
goddlesssinner 26th-Feb-2013 02:28 pm (UTC)
yeah, but a movie can have two male leads though they just wanted to put Christoph in supporting so he could get nominated
vehiclesshockme 26th-Feb-2013 05:19 pm (UTC)
I was surprised by Christoph because the role did seem very similar to me. However I don't think that PSH was robbed. I really wasn't crazy about anyone in The Master to be honest.

That category was a clusterfuck though. Arkin shouldn't have been nominated.
evawhimsy 27th-Feb-2013 07:40 pm (UTC)
arkin keeps being nominated for shit, and it baffles me. little miss sunshine? his acting was so basic cranky quirky old man in it, ugh.
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