Charles Puffy


Charles Puffy was a Hungarian film actor.

Biography

Hochstein appeared in more than 130 films between 1914 and 1938. He was the only slapstick star in Hungary's silent film era, appearing under the name "Pufi" and Carlie Puffy in the United States for Universal Studios. His other stage names were Károly Huszár or Pufi Huszár. Besides his work on films, he frequently appeared on stage, mostly in comical roles.
Later, he worked in films in both Germany and the United States, including such classics as Fritz Lang's Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler and Josef von Sternberg's Der blaue Engel . He used the names "Karl Huszar", "Karl Huszar-Puffy" or "Charles Puffy". In the sound era, he returned to his native Hungary, where he was featured in smaller roles in a number of films.
Puffy was Jewish, and decided to flee Hungary when the Holocaust started. He and his wife tried to get away to the United States, but Puffy died mid-way, in Tokyo, Japan. Other sources say that he and his wife were captured by the Red Army and imprisoned in a Gulag in Karaganda, Kazakhstan. Puffy participated in the camp's amateur acting company, but after one year in capture, he died of diphtheria.

Partial filmography

Tavasz a télben Az Ezredes aka The ColonelSt. Peter's Umbrella Lili The Three Aunts About the Son The Convict of Cayenne The Earl of Essex Open All Night The Great Unknown The Love Thief The Mystery Club A Man's Past The Private Life of Helen of Troy Love Me and the World Is Mine The Man Who Laughs Yellow Lily My Heart is a Jazz Band The Hero of Every Girl's Dream Land Without Women My Sister and I Father and Son My Daughter's Tutor Ich küsse Ihre Hand, Madame The Great Longing Next, Please! The King of Paris The Adventurer of Tunis A Crafty Youth The Yellow House of Rio My Cousin from Warsaw Twice Married The Mad Bomberg Five from the Jazz Band Scandal in Budapest The Rakoczi March Miss Iza Romance in Budapest Little Mother Help, I'm an Heiress