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Max Krause
Max Krause
from Wikipedia

Max Joseph Krause (April 5, 1909 – July 11, 1984) was an American football running back in the National Football League (NFL) for the New York Giants and the Washington Redskins.

Key Information

High school career

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Krause played high school football at Gonzaga Preparatory School[3] in Spokane, Washington, where he starred as an all-city running back and linebacker.[4] He won 14 letters in four high school sports and in basketball he made the all-city second-team as a guard. In baseball, Krause played outfield, and in track he participated in the broad jump and ran the 220 yard low hurdles.[5]

College career

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Krause stayed in Spokane for his college years, graduating from Gonzaga University with a B.A. degree in Philosophy. As fullback and halfback for the Bulldogs.[a] Krause led the varsity backfield for three years.

Krause punting for Gonzaga

Reporter Abe Kemp described sophomore Krause in his first varsity year at Gonzaga during a game on October 12, 1930, against St. Ignatius (now the University of San Francisco). It was a close game that included a 70-yard scoring run from scrimmage by Krause:

"They said Krause was good.... He was better than good; he was immense. Whether he ran, kicked, passed or tackled, there was a deadly and skilled earnestness about him that won the sympathy of the crowd and even the partisans."[6]

In the buildup to the 1932 cross-state matchup between Gonzaga and the University of Washington, Clarence Dirks wrote that "A coach couldn’t ask for a better back than stocky Max Krause. He kicks, passes, tackles viciously and in an open field is as illusive as a cemetery shadow."[7]

During his senior year (1932 season), Krause was the leading scorer on the West Coast with 88 points and 1044 yards (130.5 yards/game from scrimmage, averaging 8.5 yards per carry). He scored four touchdowns in his final college game, a 56–13 win over the University of Montana.

Krause was named 1st team All-West Coast fullback, and first choice Little All-American halfback. In the annual East–West Shrine Game, Krause started for the West at left halfback. Babe Hollingbery, famed Washington State coach and co-coach of the victorious West squad, described Krause as the "hardest-hitting back on the field" in the Shrine game.[8]

Professional career

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Krause with Redskins

After college, Krause played professional football for four seasons with the New York Giants. In his initial year with the Giants he had the distinction of scoring the first rushing touchdown in the NFL's first title game, the 1933 NFL Championship Game.[9]

In 1937, Krause moved to the Washington Redskins for an additional four seasons. Coach Ray Flaherty of the Redskins, former Gonzaga star himself, invited Krause along with other former Zags to Washington, including Ed Justice and George Karamatic.[10]

During his first year with the Redskins, the 1937 championship season, Krause was mainly a substitute and blocking back for the running back, Cliff Battles. After Battles retired in 1938 over a salary dispute, Krause started in the season opener in Philadelphia's Municipal Stadium, as described by Shirley Povich of the Washington Post:

"But the hero of the Redskins’ victory was not Sammy Baugh. It was short, stocky, swarthy chap who was given the fullback job in the absence of Cliff Battles, and his name is Max Krause. Krause it was who made three of the four Redskin touchdowns. It was Krause throwing panic into the Eagles' defense, Krause taking long passes and short passes, Krause bursting through the Eagles’ line for a 48-yard touchdown gallop in the second quarter, Krause tearing loose with a 71-yard sprint over the goal line in the third period. He was something to see today, Krause was. He had a day such as Cliff Battles, his illustrious predecessor, would have had at his best. The flying form of Krause galloping goalward was an agonizing sight before the eyes of the Eagles all afternoon."[11]

For the 1938 season, Krause finished second in the NFL in total yards rushing (averaging 8.6 yards per carry), behind Byron "Whizzer" White of the Pittsburgh Pirates (now Steelers). For many years, Krause also held the record for the longest kickoff return for a touchdown in an NFL championship game.[12]

The last game of Krause's Redskins and NFL career was the 1940 NFL Championship Game, when the visiting Chicago Bears beat Washington 73-0. Krause provided perhaps the only bright spot for Redskins fans on that dismal day when he ran a kickoff back for a 62-yard return (albeit not for a touchdown.)

Life after football

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A knee injury ended Krause's football career in 1940. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, Krause joined the United States Navy and fought in World War II.[13] Later he established himself in the brewery business. From 1956–1983 he owned Spokane Distributors, Inc., a wholesale liquor warehouse for beer and wine.

On April 24, 1981, Krause was inducted into the Inland Northwest Sports Hall of Fame.[1] In 1989, he was inducted into the Gonzaga Hall of Fame.[2]

Krause died in Spokane on July 11, 1984, at the age of 75, and was interred in Holy Cross Cemetery. His wife of 42 years, Eleanor (Olson) Krause, died two years later. Their only child, Mike Krause, (b. 1954) lives and works in western Washington.[14]

Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
''Max Krause'' is a German actor known for his work in television, film, and theater, particularly in German-speaking productions. Born in 1993 in Germany, he trained at the Otto Falckenberg School in Munich, collaborating with directors such as Stefan Pucher, Ulrich Rasche, and Susanne Kennedy during and after his studies. Krause has appeared in numerous German television series, including roles in Tatort, Marnow Murders, Police Call 110, and Spreewaldkrimi. He is a member of the #ActOut initiative since 2021, supporting greater visibility for LGBTQ+ actors in the German entertainment industry. His career reflects a blend of stage experience from collaborations at venues like the Münchner Kammerspiele and Schauspielhaus Bochum, alongside screen credits in crime dramas.

Early life and education

Early years

Max Krause was born on March 3, 1993, in Germany. He grew up in Düsseldorf before pursuing formal acting training.

Acting education

Max Krause completed his acting training from 2014 to 2018 at the Otto Falckenberg School in Munich. During this time, he appeared on stage in productions at the Münchner Kammerspiele, including school events and productions in cooperation with the theater. He also appeared in numerous short films created during his studies. Krause graduated in 2018 as an alumnus of the Otto Falckenberg School. Before beginning his studies, he had already taken part in stage productions.

Theatre career

Debut and early stage work

Max Krause made his stage debut in 2013 appearing in the production take your stage at the Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus. This engagement marked his earliest documented theatre experience and occurred prior to the start of his formal acting training. During his subsequent studies at the Otto Falckenberg Schule in Munich, he gained additional early stage experience through student performances at the Münchner Kammerspiele.

Professional theatre engagements

Following his graduation from the Otto-Falckenberg-Schule in Munich in 2018, Max Krause received professional engagements at Kampnagel in Hamburg and the Schauspielhaus Bochum. These early post-training engagements established his entry into the professional theatre scene in Germany. At the Schauspielhaus Bochum, Krause participated in productions including Séance de travail, a collaborative work by choreographer Trajal Harrell that premiered on April 3, 2019, where he appeared as part of the ensemble alongside other performers. Details on specific roles and further productions at these venues remain limited in available sources.

Screen career

Short films

Max Krause has appeared in a number of short films, beginning with his role in Ioana (2015), where he played Adrian, a young Romanian hustler in Zurich striving to bring his sister to Switzerland. Directed by Simon Pfister, the film explores themes of migration and survival in the underground sex trade. The short later gained wider exposure as the segment "Ioana" in the 2021 anthology Boys Feels: Desire in the Dark. He continued his work in shorts with The Tender Spot (2018/2019), starring as Julian in the student film directed by Michael Mews. In 2022, Krause featured in multiple short projects, including Das ist das letzte Mal, dass ich das mache, where he portrayed Matthias, as well as The Age of Innocence and Daniel, in which he played Nils. These roles reflect his ongoing involvement in German-language independent short filmmaking.

Television and streaming roles

Max Krause has built a substantial presence in German television and streaming, primarily in crime dramas and procedural series, while achieving international visibility through a high-profile Netflix role. His work in this medium often features supporting or guest appearances in long-running formats popular in German-speaking audiences. He gained international recognition for portraying Arthur Levertov, a chess grandmaster and friend of Benny Watts, in two episodes of the Netflix miniseries The Queen's Gambit (2020). This role represented his most prominent English-language exposure and introduced him to global viewers through the acclaimed limited series. Krause's German television credits began prominently with the crime anthology Tatort, where he appeared in two episodes in 2020: "Unklare Lage" as Maik Scheuer and "Das perfekte Verbrechen" as Wolfram Liere. He also played Goretzka in the 2019 series Das Quartett. Subsequent roles included Benedict Schack in Ein starkes Team (2021), an appearance in Morden im Norden (2021), Daniel Gerke in Marnow Murders (2021), Mark Nowak in Jenseits der Spree (2022), Alexander Gruber in Der Staatsanwalt (2022), Marc Wiegand in Police Call 110 (2023), Marc Pötschke in Spreewaldkrimi (2024), and Ludwig Linnewever in the upcoming Dünentod - Ein Nordsee-Krimi (2025). He appeared as Adrian in the segment "Ioana" of the streaming anthology Boys Feels: Desire in the Dark (2021). This segment connects to his separate short film involvement.

Feature films

Max Krause achieved his breakthrough in feature films with his first leading role in the coming-of-age drama Golden Twenties (2019), directed by Sophie Kluge, where he portrayed Jonas, a theater actor who becomes a guiding figure for a young woman navigating uncertainty after college. This marked Krause's debut as a lead in a cinematic release, noted for its portrayal of a tentative romantic dynamic amid personal reinvention. In 2023, Krause appeared in the biographical historical drama Stella: A Life, assuming the role of Abrahamsohn in the film directed by Kilian Riedhof.

Assistant directing

Credits and roles

Max Krause's credits as assistant director are limited to short films, where he supported directors in coordinating production elements and on-set operations. He served as assistant director on the short film Bruxelles (2020). Krause also served as assistant director on the short film Daniel (2022). He additionally had an acting role in Daniel (2022), detailed in the short films section.

Personal life

Identity and activism

Max Krause is a signatory of the #ActOut initiative, a public manifesto and visibility campaign launched in February 2021 by actors and performers in the German-speaking film, theater, and television industry. The campaign seeks to end the practice of concealing sexual orientation or gender identity to protect careers, promote greater diversity in the performing arts, and demonstrate solidarity with others facing discrimination. Krause joined #ActOut in spring 2021 as one of the initial 185 signatories who identify as lesbian, gay, bi, trans*, queer, inter, non-binary, or holding other queer identities. He is listed among the participants on the official roster, reflecting his public affiliation with the collective coming-out action.
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