Wilhelm von Homburg
Quick Facts
Biography
Norbert Papen Grupe (August 25, 1940 – March 10, 2004), better known outside Germany by his stage name Wilhelm von Homburg, was a German wrestler, boxer, and actor, best known for his portrayal of Vigo the Carpathian in the film Ghostbusters II.
Wrestling
Homburg was born in Berlin in 1940. As Allied air raids were occurring in Berlin, his family soon chose to move into what became West Germany. Over time, Homburg developed a muscular body, and his father Richard, who was a baker by profession, introduced him to wrestling. His father was a Nazi soldier during World War II and worked at the infamous Buchenwald death camp. Homburg lived with his father and never talked to his mother who had been a passing fling, leading to a difficult childhood before he and Richard moved to California in the 1950s. The pair worked as a wrestling tag team and young Norbert changed his name to von Homburg, a move he later regretted because he worried it made him sound like a Nazi nobleman. Most disturbingly, he was also later accused by his father of raping his step-mother, a crime he was never investigated for, the result of which may have meant he was actually the father of the girl he considered his half-sister.
Boxing
He became interested in boxing after Emile Griffith's fateful third bout with Benny Paret. Homburg made his professional boxing debut on 20 July 1962, drawing (tying) over four rounds with Sam Wyatt in Los Angeles. Over the span of eight years, he had 46 bouts with 29 wins in the light heavyweight and heavy weight classes. Homburg adopted the nickname "Prinz" ("Prince"), in order to create an aura of royalty around himself in a similar manner later adopted by British boxer Prince Naseem Hamed.
Homburg's first boxing victory came on 16 September 1962, when he knocked out Bob Brown in the third round at San Diego. On 25 October he lost for the first time, being knocked out in round three by Freeman Harding in the third round at Los Angeles. Eight victories followed, including two over Clifford Gray, before he drew against Tommy Merrill on 1 June 1963 in Las Vegas. Homburg won three of his next five fights, then returned home with a record of 17-3-2. He settled in the city of Hamburg and was managed by Willi Zeller in Germany. Homburg held his German professional boxing debut on 8 May 1964, when he was held to a ten round draw by Ulli Ritter. However, he went on to win seven of his next ten bouts, being described by German press at the time as a "promising newcomer" and using his fight earnings to move to the Hamburg neighborhood of St. Pauli. During this period he and his lifelong friend, Texas heavyweight fighter Buddy Turman, shared billing on several occasions in Germany and Austria, until Turman's retirement in 1967.
Homburg got his first championship try on 19 November 1966, when he contested Piero del Papa for the EBU regional Light Heavyweight title in Berlin. Homburg was defeated by an eleventh round disqualification against Del Papa, who later lost by a first round knockout to Vicente Rondon in a challenge for the WBA World Light Heavyweight title.
For his part, Homburg returned to winning on 9 December, only three weeks after his defeat against Del Papa, knocking out Archie McBride in nine rounds at Frankfurt. After winning three more fights, losing one and drawing one, he faced the well respected Gerard Zech, who sported a 33-8-3 record, in an eliminator for the German Light Heavyweight championship. That fight was held on 8 November 1968. Initially declared a loser by a ten round decision, Homburg nevertheless had his hands raised as winner of the contest when it was discovered that the referee, who also acted as official judge, had made a mathematical mistake when he tabulated his scorecard after the bout had finished, and he actually had Homburg, not Zech, as the fight's winner.
Homburg next faced Guido Rinaldi, who lost a fifteen round decision to Archie Moore for the world Light Heavyweight title, three times in 1969, beating him in their first fight by a fifth round knockout, losing a ten round decision and winning their third clash, by an eighth round knockout. The latter would turn to be his last victory.
Homburg went on boxing, but he lost his next four fights, including defeats at the hands of Oscar Bonavena and Jürgen Blin. On 11 December 1970 he held his last fight, losing by a ten round decision to Rudiger Schmidtke in Cologne. Homburg retired from boxing with a record of 29 wins, 11 losses and 6 draws in 46 bouts, with 24 wins coming by knockout.
Film career
Thinking of a future after boxing, he launched a career as an actor. He had a featured role as 'Otto' a Dutch boxer in an episode of the television series Gunsmoke entitled "The Promoter" (1964). On film he started with a small role in the World War II related film Morituri (1965) starring Marlon Brando, and around the same time a bit part in the Hitchcock political thriller Torn Curtain (1966), with Paul Newman in the lead role.
Played Tony in episode 1 of the television series T.H.E. Cat.
After being defeated in the boxing ring by Oscar Bonavena in 1969, Homburg made an appearance on German TV the next day. After the reporter Rainer Günzler had made some snide remarks about his boxing career and his flamboyant lifestyle, Homburg sat through the 10-minute live interview not answering any of Günzler's questions, only putting on a sarcastic smile that he later used in the film Ghostbusters II (1989).
Homburg appeared in small roles in several films such as The Wrecking Crew (1969) with Sharon Tate and Dean Martin, in which Homburg plays the character Gregor. He appeared as a villainous pimp in the Werner Herzog film Stroszek (1977).
After 1977, Homburg's career in movies was in abeyance for a decade as he was given a prison sentence of two years and three months for "physical injury" (possibly assault) and "activities in prostitution". It has been reported that Homburg spent about five years behind bars during his life.
Homburg made his big screen return in the action thriller Die Hard, (1988) with Alan Rickman and Andreas Wisniewski. Homburg plays James, a member of the German group that plans to rob the Nakatomi Tower, meeting his demise courtesy of a DIY bomb from John McClane (Bruce Willis). From there, Homburg appeared in the movie sequel Ghostbusters II (1989) playing Vigo the Carpathian, a 16th Century Eastern European tyrant (based loosely on Vlad Ţepeş), the role for which Homburg is possibly best known (though he was dubbed by Max von Sydow). Homburg appeared in several films over the next few years, including Diggstown (1992), and as Simon in John Carpenter's In the Mouth of Madness (1994), with Sam Neill.
Lifestyle
Homburg led a very public life. Because of this, many of his affairs became scandalous.
Homburg was at various times nicknamed "the boxer Beatle" (because of the long hair he sported during his fights) and "the German answer to Muhammad Ali" (because of his takes on 1960s' issues). His smoking habit was widely known; he entered rings with a cigar in his mouth many times, and smoking is unusual for professional boxers.
Homburg was a rebellious person, and he moved to St. Pauli's red district, becoming involved with drugs and sex. Homburg was constantly followed by papparazzi, who documented his life hanging out with drug dealers, pimps, and a local Hells Angels chapter.
Homburg was accused of a number of crimes, such as extortion, pimping and drug dealing. He was also guilty of and admitted to raping his father's young wife, Ursula, leading to the question of whether or not he was actually the father of his sister, Rona. (A later DNA test proved he was not.) He was also bisexual. Far from the German limelight, Homburg tried to remake his life, restarting his career as an actor. He enjoyed the company of dogs and horse riding at the famed Griffith Park. In Los Angeles, he lived in an apartment which he decorated with mementos from his boxing career.
Last years
In his later years Homburg reportedly toured the surrounding area of Los Angeles with his dog in an old VW camper van. On 10 March 2004, after a brief stay with retired boxer Buddy Turman in Longview, Texas, a destitute Homburg died in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, of prostate cancer, only a few years after German filmmaker Gerd Kroske produced a prize-winning documentary on Homburg's life called The Boxing Prince (Der Boxprinz) which was released in 2002.
Professional boxing record
30 Wins (24 knockouts, 6 decisions), 11 Losses (2 knockouts, 8 decisions, 1 DQ), 6 Draws [1] | |||||||
Result | Record | Opponent | Type | Round | Date | Location | Notes |
Loss | 30-11-6 | Rudiger Schmidtke | PTS | 10 | 11/12/1970 | Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia | |
Loss | 30-10-6 | Juergen Blin | PTS | 10 | 12/12/1969 | Sporthalle, Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia | |
Loss | 30-9-6 | Rudiger Schmidtke | PTS | 10 | 14/11/1969 | Festhalle Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Hesse | |
Loss | 30-8-6 | Oscar Bonavena | TKO | 3 | 20/06/1969 | Sportpalast, Schoeneberg, Berlin | |
Win | 30-7-6 | Giulio Rinaldi | TKO | 7 | 02/04/1969 | Sportpalast, Schoeneberg, Berlin | |
Loss | 29-7-6 | Giulio Rinaldi | PTS | 10 | 14/02/1969 | Ernst Merck Halle, Hamburg | |
Win | 29-6-6 | Giulio Rinaldi | TKO | 5 | 03/01/1969 | Sportpalast, Schoeneberg, Berlin | |
Win | 28-6-6 | Gerhard Zech | PTS | 10 | 08/11/1968 | Ernst Merck Halle, Hamburg | Germany BDB Heavyweight Title Eliminator. |
Win | 27-6-6 | Franklin Arrindel | KO | 3 | 18/09/1968 | Hohe Warte Stadium, Vienna | |
Win | 26-6-6 | Rudolf Nehring | TKO | 8 | 30/08/1968 | Sportpalast, Schoeneberg, Berlin | |
Loss | 25-6-6 | David E. Bailey | PTS | 10 | 11/04/1968 | Sportpalast, Schoeneberg, Berlin | |
Win | 25-5-6 | Paul Roux | KO | 5 | 15/12/1967 | Circus Krone Building, Munich, Bavaria | |
Draw | 24-5-6 | Ray Patterson | PTS | 10 | 03/05/1967 | Westfalenhallen, Dortmund, North Rhine-Westphalia | |
Win | 24-5-5 | Archie McBride | KO | 9 | 09/12/1966 | Festhalle Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Hesse | |
Loss | 23-5-5 | Piero Del Papa | DQ | 11 | 19/11/1966 | Deutschlandhalle, Charlottenburg, Berlin | EBU Light Heavyweight Title. |
Draw | 23-4-5 | Erich Schoppner | PTS | 10 | 14/05/1966 | Westfalenhallen, Dortmund, North Rhine-Westphalia | |
Draw | 23-4-4 | Archie McBride | PTS | 10 | 28/05/1965 | Deutschlandhalle, Charlottenburg, Berlin | |
Win | 23-4-3 | Bas van Duivenbode | KO | 4 | 29/04/1965 | Neue Sporthalle, Hannover, Lower Saxony | |
Win | 22-4-3 | Jose Angel Manzur | TKO | 8 | 02/04/1965 | Stadthalle, Vienna | |
Win | 21-4-3 | Ulli Ritter | TKO | 6 | 20/02/1965 | Ostseehalle, Kiel, Schleswig-Holstein | |
Loss | 20-4-3 | Piero Tomasoni | PTS | 10 | 16/01/1965 | Westfalenhallen, Dortmund, North Rhine-Westphalia | |
Win | 20-3-3 | Joseph Syoz | TKO | 10 | 05/12/1964 | Sporthalle, Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia | |
Win | 19-3-3 | Paul Kraus | KO | 3 | 27/11/1964 | Ostseehalle, Kiel, Schleswig-Holstein | |
Win | 18-3-3 | Lars Olaf Norling | TKO | 9 | 06/11/1964 | Ernst Merck Halle, Hamburg | |
Win | 17-3-3 | Jean Huiban | KO | 6 | 29/05/1964 | Weser-Ems Halle, Oldenburg, Lower Saxony | |
Draw | 16-3-3 | Ulli Ritter | PTS | 10 | 08/05/1964 | Ernst Merck Halle, Hamburg | |
Win | 16-3-2 | Roy Crear | KO | 5 | 07/04/1964 | Stockyards Coliseum, Oklahoma City | |
Win | 15-3-2 | Bob McKinney | TKO | 9 | 06/01/1964 | New York Coliseum, Bronx, New York | |
Win | 14-3-2 | Monroe Ratliff | SD | 10 | 18/11/1963 | Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, Santa Monica, California | 7-3, 8-1, 3-6. |
Loss | 13-3-2 | Billy Stephan | PTS | 10 | 19/09/1963 | Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California | 4-7. |
Loss | 13-2-2 | Chuck Leslie | PTS | 10 | 23/07/1963 | San Diego Coliseum, San Diego, California | |
Win | 13-1-2 | Bobby Sand | TKO | 9 | 24/06/1963 | Moulin Rouge, Hollywood, California | Referee stopped the bout at 1:09 of the ninth round. |
Draw | 12-1-2 | Tommy Merrill | PTS | 6 | 01/06/1963 | Las Vegas Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada | |
Win | 12-1-1 | Bobby Sand | TKO | 9 | 20/05/1963 | Moulin Rouge, Hollywood, California | Referee stopped the bout at 2:29 of the ninth round. |
Win | 11-1-1 | Pete Gonzales | KO | 3 | 25/03/1963 | Moulin Rouge, Hollywood, California | |
Win | 10-1-1 | Gus Calf Robe | KO | 6 | 25/02/1963 | Moulin Rouge, Hollywood, California | |
Win | 9-1-1 | Clifford Gray | TKO | 1 | 19/02/1963 | San Diego Coliseum, San Diego, California | Referee stopped the bout at 2:35 of the first round. |
Win | 8-1-1 | Bob Mumford | KO | 6 | 15/02/1963 | Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California | |
Win | 7-1-1 | Yancy D Smith | UD | 8 | 22/01/1963 | San Diego Coliseum, San Diego, California | 5-2, 5-2, 6-2. |
Win | 6-1-1 | Yancy D Smith | PTS | 8 | 15/01/1963 | San Diego Coliseum, San Diego, California | 6-3. |
Win | 5-1-1 | Clifford Gray | PTS | 6 | 18/12/1962 | San Diego Coliseum, San Diego, California | |
Win | 4-1-1 | John L Davey | PTS | 6 | 14/12/1962 | Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California | |
Loss | 3-1-1 | Freeman Hardin | KO | 3 | 25/10/1962 | Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California | |
Win | 3-0-1 | Al Cummings | KO | 3 | 21/09/1962 | Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California | |
Win | 2-0-1 | Tony Fern | KO | 3 | 24/08/1962 | Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California | |
Win | 1-0-1 | Bob Brown | KO | 2 | 16/08/1962 | San Diego Coliseum, San Diego, California | |
Draw | 0-0-1 | Sam Wyatt | PTS | 4 | 20/07/1962 | Los Angeles Sports Arena, Los Angeles, California |