Leonid Kinskey(1903-1998)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Leonid Kinskey, originally from St. Petersburg, Russia, performed
across Europe and much of Latin America before his arrival in the
United States. By 1932 he landed a small role as a radical in Ernst
Lubitsch's comedy,
Trouble in Paradise (1932).
The next year he played an agitator in
Duck Soup (1933). He went on to play
small parts, nearly always foreigners and often comedic, in over sixty
films, including Genflou in
Les Misérables (1935), the snake
charmer in the well-known scene from
The Lives of a Bengal Lancer (1935),
an Arab in
The Garden of Allah (1936),
Ivan in
The Big Broadcast of 1938 (1938),
and Pierre in
That Night in Rio (1941). His
final film role was Dominiwski in
The Man with the Golden Arm (1955).
Kinskey's most famous role was as Sascha, the humorous bartender at
Rick's Cafe Americaine, in
Casablanca (1942). The part had
originally been given to Leon Mostovoy; Kinskey replaced him because
(1) he was funnier than Mostovoy, and (2) by his own testimony, he was
a drinking buddy of the star Humphrey Bogart. His contract guaranteed
him two weeks at $750 a week. He died on 8 September 1998, in Fountain
Hills, Arizona, aged 95.