
Heino Mandri
Biography
Heino Mandri (September 11, 1922 – December 3, 1990) was an Estonian film and stage actor. Heino Mandri was born in Kohtla-Järve, but his family moved to Tallinn when Mandri was two years old. In 1946, Mandri graduated in the only class of the short-lived Tallinn Theatre School (1942–1946) set up during the German occupation to carry on the work of the former State School of Performing Arts which had been liquidated during the Soviet occupation in 1940. In 1948, Mandri was accused in anti-Soviet activities and sentenced for seven years of forced labor. From 1948 to 1954 he served the sentence in the Viatlag prison camp, Lesnoy, Kirov Oblast in Northern Russia. Mandri was released in 1954 and returned to Estonia, where the Soviet authorities forbade him to get closer than 101 km to Tallinn under the 101st kilometre rule. Mandri settled in Viljandi and worked in Ugala theatre. In 1956 Mandri wrote a personal letter to the Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet Kliment Voroshilov, after which he got his sentence retroactively shortened to five years allowing him to enter Tallinn again. During the 1970s and 1980s, Heino Mandri casually appeared on Estonian national TV delivering his lines with impeccable command of the Estonian language. In Soviet films, Heino Mandri was usually cast as characters who were officers of the Wehrmacht, German businessmen, or American spies. Heino Mandri was acquitted of all political charges and fully rehabilitated in his rights only shortly before his death in 1990.
Also Known As
Movie Appearances

Liberation: The Fire Bulge
1970

Hills Like White Elephants
1963

Liberation: Breakthrough
1970

Arabella, the Pirate's Daughter
as Warship Captain
1983

The Dead Season
1968

The Joys of Midlife
as Uncle Raul
1987

Chicherin
as (as H. Mandri)
1986

Entrance to Labyrinth
as Zigmund Khyutter
1990

We Were Eighteen
as Trossi
1965

Nazis and Blondes
as (archive footage)
2008

The Lark
as Standartenfuhrer
1964

Inimeste maja
as Narrator
1974

In One Hundred Years in May
as President of the Court Martial
1987
Faulty Brides
as Mart
1989

European Story
1984

Pedestrians
as Narrator
1971

Diamonds for the Dictatorship of the Proletariat
as Iurla
1976

Spring in the Forest
as Forester
1974

Doctor Stockmann
as Aslaksen
1989

The Pastor of Reigi
as Judge
1978

