Dramatic portrayals of Reinhard Heydrich
Dramatic portrayals of Reinhard Heydrich number among the more numerous of any
Film and television

The first known portrayal of Reinhard Heydrich was in the 1943 Hollywood film Hangmen Also Die!, in which Heydrich was played by Hans Heinrich von Twardowski. The same year, he was the subject of the feature Hitler's Madman, starring John Carradine. Further works produced during World War II were The Hitler Gang, with Peter Pohlenz portraying Heydrich, and Air Raid Wardens in which he was played by Don Costello.
Later, on US television, Heydrich was portrayed by Alvin Epstein in a 1960 episode of the series Armstrong Circle Theatre, entitled "Engineer of Death: The Eichmann Story"; and by Kurt Kreuger in a two-part episode of GE True in 1963. Heydrich was portrayed by David Warner in the 1978 miniseries Holocaust. Warner would again play the character in the 1980s television production Hitler's SS: Portrait in Evil. Warner's performance was rated as "cunning and chilling", with the Holocaust miniseries receiving several television awards.[2]
Within West German productions, Heydrich was portrayed by Martin Held in the 1954 film Canaris (renamed Deadly Decision in the US). Malte Petzel played Heydrich in the 1963 television miniseries Das Kriminalgericht and again in the 1966 telemovie Der Fall der Generale. Heydrich was also played by Siegfried Loyda in the 1964 film Atentát; and by Martin Benrath in the 1967 telemovie, Heydrich in Prag.
Anton Diffring portrayed Heydrich in the 1965 television series Interpol (in the episode titled "Geld, Geld, Geld"). Diffring portrayed Heydrich again a decade later, in Operation Daybreak, a US film focused on the assassination of Heydrich in Prague and filmed on location in Czechoslovakia. It is adapted from the book Seven Men at Daybreak by Alan Burgess.[3] Atentát and Operation Daybreak set the standard for the procedural-style rundown of the assassination itself, which the mainstream of later films follow.[4]
Heydrich appeared as a character in the 1977 West German television production Manager des Terrors (1977) where he was portrayed by Dietrich Mattausch. Mattausch's performance was viewed as "cold and stunning",[5] and he reprised the role of Heydrich in the acclaimed 1984 West German telemovie The Wannsee Conference. The Wannsee Conference would inspire the remake Conspiracy (2001), with British actor Kenneth Branagh, whose performance was described as a "chilling portrayal" of Heydrich.[4] Philipp Hochmair stars as Heydrich in the 2022 German TV docudrama Die Wannseekonferenz, about the same conference.
Within
In 2009, the character of Heydrich briefly appeared, played by Ondřej Matějka as a non-speaking extra, in the
In 2011, Czech director Petr Nikolaev finished his drama film Lidice, with Heydrich portrayed by German actor Detlef Bothe. Bothe had portrayed Heydrich before – he appeared briefly in two episodes of the BBC documentary series Auschwitz: The Nazis and the 'Final Solution' (2005). He played Heydrich for the third time in the 2016 British-Czech-French thriller Anthropoid.[11][12] Bothe has been described as a "dead ringer" of Heydrich.[4] The following year saw the release of the war thriller film The Man with the Iron Heart based on Laurent Binet's novel HHhH (The Man with the Iron Heart is the name of another novel about Heydrich), with Heydrich portrayed by Australian actor Jason Clarke.[4]
In the 2015
Novels
In
In
In
In
Other media
The story of the 1942 assassination was narrated in a short Czech comic book titled Atentát ("The Assassination"), created in 1976 by brothers Jan Saudek and Kája Saudek. It was published in 1976 in the Polish comic book magazine Relax, as "Zamach" ("The Assassination").
A fictional iteration of Reinhard Heydrich is one of the chief characters in Takashi Masada's popular
In the Manga Hellsing (and it's anime adaptation Hellsing Ultimate) the Major names one of his Zeppelins for Heydrich.
References
- ^ "Heydrich: Gestapo Executioner". Time. 23 February 1942.
- ^ "Der Judenmord bewegt die Deutschen". (29 January 1979). Der Spiegel.
- ^ Gilbert, Lewis (29 February 1976). "Operation: Daybreak". Howard R. Schuster, American Allied Pictures, Ceskoslovenský Filmexport.
- ^ a b c d Pirodsky, Jason. "Movie Review: The Butcher of Prague Gets His Due in 'The Man with the Iron Heart' (aka 'HHhH')". The Prague Reporter. Retrieved 16 July 2017.
- ^ Frankfurter Zeitung (Nov 1977)
- ^ Šiander, Hana Rebeka (27 May 2012). "Filmy, které nám připomenou atentát na Reinharda Heydricha". iDnes.cz. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
- ^ Pirodsky, Jason (15 November 2010). "DVD Review: Protektor. A look at Marek Najbrt's Czech Lion award winner". expats.cz. Archived from the original on 23 August 2017. Retrieved 16 July 2017.
- ^ "Protektor – Closing credits" (PDF). Česká televize. Retrieved 16 July 2017.
- ^ "Heydrich – konečné řešení". CSFD.cz. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
- ^ "Heydrich – konečné řešení". FDb.cz. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
- ^ Keating, Stuart (6 October 2016). "Anthropoid (2016): Film review". TEA BREAK. Retrieved 7 June 2017.
- ^ Nowak, Ricarda (20 November 2015). "Ein Mann in fieser Mission". MAZ-Online.de (in German). Märkische Allgemeine Zeitung. Retrieved 6 March 2018.