
Though born in Czechoslovakia, actor Karel Stepanek was generally regarded as a German actor due to his extensive film work in Germany (as Karl Stepanek) in the years before World War II. Stepanek fled to England in 1940, where, like many European refugee actors, he specialized in portraying Teutonic villains. He tried to stay away from out-and-out Nazi roles, but his predilection for wearing black uniforms and barking out guttural commands left little doubt as to the political preferences of Stepanek's screen characters. One of his most typical characterizations could be found in the 1946 POW drama, The Captive Heart; Stepanek also registered well as a friendlier foreigner in The Fallen Idol (1949). Commuting between London and Hollywood, Karel Stepanek continued to fight World War II, usually on the wrong side, into such '60s films as Sink the Bismarck! (1960), I Aim at the Stars (1960) and Operation Crossbow (1965).

The Third Man
1949 · as Actor at Josefstadt Theater (uncredited)

The Heroes of Telemark
1965 · as Hartmuller

Sink the Bismarck!
1960 · as Admiral Lutjens - 'Bismarck'

Operation Crossbow
1965 · as Prof. Hoffer

Anastasia
1956 · as Mikhail Vlados

The Fallen Idol
1948 · as First Secretary

State Secret
1950 · as Dr. Revo

Conspirator
1949 · as Radek

No Highway in the Sky
1951

Our Man in Havana
1960 · as Dr. Braun

Affair in Trinidad
1952 · as Walters

The Cockleshell Heroes
1955 · as Assistant Gestapo Officer

Never Let Me Go
1953 · as Commissar

The Frozen Dead
1966 · as General Lubeck

Brainwashed
1960 · as Baranow

Secret Mission
1942 · as Major Lang

The Traitor
1957 · as Friederich Suderman

Operation Amsterdam
1959 · as Diamond Merchant