
John Hollis
Biography
John Hollis was an English actor. He played the role of Lobot in Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back and the German porter at the chateau in The Dirty Dozen. He appeared in the classic 1978 film Superman as one of the Elders of Krypton, and reprised his role in the 1980 theatrical version of Superman II. He also played the role of Ernst Stavro Blofeld in the cold open of the 1981 James Bond film For Your Eyes Only, going uncredited due to the controversy over the film rights and characters of Thunderball. In this sequence, his character was famously lifted from a wheelchair and dropped to his death down a chimney stack by Bond after he had attempted to kill Bond by using a remote control link to Bond's MI6 helicopter. Hollis also took the role of Sondergaard in the Jon Pertwee era of Doctor Who in the story The Mutants, and appeared in The Avengers episode The Cybernauts as a sensei and also in The Tomorrow People. John Hollis was a versatile character actor for BBC Radio. Notable roles include Magwitch in Great Expectations, Leonard Bast in Howards End, Conan Doyle's Inspector Lestrade and Shakespeare's Bardolph.
Also Known As
Movie Appearances

The Empire Strikes Back
as Lando's Aide
1980

Esther
as Harbona
1999
The Great Kandinsky
as Cannonball
1995

The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother
as Moriarty's Gunman
1975

Doctor Who: The Mutants
as Sondergaard
1972

Freelance
as Hartley
1970

Low Water
as Narrator
1966

Ghost in the Noonday Sun
as Kanaris
1973

The Dirty Dozen
as German Porter at Chateau (uncredited)
1967

Creatures the World Forgot
as Masked Attacker
1971

Superman
as 4th Elder
1978

Superman II
as Krypton Elder
1980

Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter
as Barman
1973

Valhalla
as Hymer (voice)
1986

Superman IV: The Quest for Peace
as Russian General 3 (Kremlin)
1987

Flash Gordon
as Klytus Observer No. 2
1980

Detective Waiting
as Blond
1971

For Your Eyes Only
as Ernst Stavro Blofeld
1981

Casino Royale
as Fred (uncredited)
1967

The Adventures Of Don Quixote
as 1st Prisoner
1973










