
Actor
Born January 16, 1923 in Essen, Germany
Gordon Sterne was a German-born English actor with a prolific career spanning over five decades in film, television, and theater. He is perhaps most widely recognized for his role as Mr. Kessler in the horror-comedy classic An American Werewolf in London (1981), where his character famously meets a gruesome end while watching The Muppet Show in a dream sequence. He left his native Nazi-dominated birth country in 1941 and became a native of Windsor, Ontario with a father who worked in the tobacco business and mother, who was supportive of his theatre aspirations. Sterne studied economics at the University of Western Ontario before volunteering for the Canadian Army in 1944, serving in the infantry as a sergeant. Heading to New York in 1945, he trained and graduated from the Dramatic Workshop under the tutelage of its founder Erwin Piscator, at the same time as Rod Steiger, Bea Arthur, Walter Matthau, Tony Curtis and Harry Belafonte. Sterne then began his acting career in America, working on radio and TV, in summer stock and off-Broadway.

The Tudors
Bishop Tunstall

Screaming Blue Murder
Jack Rammer

Laws of Attraction
Judge Baker

Four Play
Actor in Color of My Life

Melissa
Davy Crockett

Merlin

Jeeves and Wooster
Diner

Highlander
Dr Willis Kenderly

John and Yoko: A Love Story
New York Critic

The Razor's Edge
Doctor

Reilly: Ace of Spies
Ford

American Playhouse
Louis Lefkowitz

An American Werewolf in London
Mr. Kessler

The New Avengers
Professor Vasil

Sex Play
Randolph O'Hara

The Gangster Show: The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui
Grocer

The Protectors
Barman

UFO
German Delegate

Doctor Who: The Ambassadors of Death
Heldorf

A Promise of Bed
Producer

The Adding Machine
Yard guard

The Assassination Bureau
Corporal

The Prisoner
Bystander

The Vulture
Edward Stroud

Doctor Who
Heldorf

Espionage
Aide to US Ambassador

The Saint
Vopos

Out of This World
Journalist

Taste of Fear
Policeman (uncredited)

The Millionairess
Second Secretary

Libel
Maddox

The Child and the Killer
Sergeant

The Great Van Robbery
Robledo

Battle of the V-1
Margraaf

Armchair Theatre
Harry

Hancock's Half Hour