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Biography for
Eric Braeden More at IMDbPro »

Date of Birth
3 April 1941, Kiel, Germany

Birth Name
Hans Jörg Gudegast

Nickname
The Black Knight

Height
6' 1" (1.85 m)

Mini Biography

German actor in America who began his career playing Nazis and eventually became a star of daytime soap operas. Born Hans Gudegast in Kiel, Germany, during the Second World War, he was a superb athlete who excelled in track-and-field events. As a teenager he immigrated to the USA and worked in Texas and Montana as a translator, a cowhand, and a lumber millhand. His athleticism won him a scholarship to Montana State University. While attending college, he and friend Bob McKinnon made a film, The Riverbusters, about their successful attempt to be the first men to take a boat from the source to the mouth of the Salmon river and back again. He traveled to Los Angeles in hopes of finding a distributor for the documentary, but instead found that his handsome visage and accented English made him a valuable commodity as an actor. He appeared in small parts under his real name before landing the leading role of the antagonist, Captain Hans Dietrich, on the World War II TV series "The Rat Patrol" (1966). The series was a hit, and Gudegast's sympathetic German officer was very popular. He appeared in a few movies and television films thereafter in supporting roles, then was given the lead in Universal's science-fiction computer thriller Colossus: The Forbin Project (1970). His delight at this huge career boost was muted by the studio's insistence that he change his name. With extreme reluctance, he agreed and became known subsequently as Eric Braeden. Braeden worked continuously in television movies for the next decade. He also worked on Broadway and in Los Angeles area theatre. In 1980 he reluctantly accepted a role in a daytime drama, "The Young and the Restless", and gained a stardom in this medium that had just eluded him in film and primetime TV. As lead Victor Newman, Braeden brought a gravity and a strong center to the program. Amazingly handsome and athletic into his sixties, Braeden maintained the charisma that first brought him notice in "The Rat Patrol." His infrequent film work during his nearly quarter century on "The Young and the Restless" included a prominent role as John Jacob Astor in Titanic (1997). A five-time Emmy nominee for his "Y&R" role (he won in 1998), he was also nominated eleven times for the Soap Opera Digest Outstanding Leading Actor Award, winning three times. He was appointed, in 1987, along with Henry Kissinger, Paul Volker, Steffi Graf, Alexander Haig, and Katherine Graham, to the German-American Advisory Board, and in 1991 received the Federal Medal of Honor from the president of his native land, Germany. He married his college sweetheart Dale Russell in 1966. Their son, Christian Gudegast is a screenwriter.

IMDb Mini Biography By: Jim Beaver <jumblejim@prodigy.net>

Spouse
Dale Russell (8 October 1966 - present) 1 child

Trivia

In addition to "The Rat Patrol" (1966) created by Tom Gries Braeden also had roles in the movie 100 Rifles (1969), written and directed by Tom Gries and in the movie Lady Ice (1973), produced and directed by Tom Gries.

He became a naturalized citizen while in college.

Was awarded the Federal Medal of Honor by the president of Germany for promoting a "positive, realistic image of Germans in America."

Father of Christian Gudegast.

His Victor character from "Y&R", over the years, has been known as the Black Knight by soap opera fans.

He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on July 20, 2007. Many of his "The Young and the Restless" co-stars were present for the occasion.

Brother-in-law of Bob Crane.

Brother-in-law of Sigrid Valdis.

Interviewed in Tom Weaver's book "I Talked with a Zombie" (McFarland & Co., 2008).



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