Sami Frey had one of the toughest starts in life imaginable. When he was young and living in German occupied France, he couldn't even speak while hiding out, because of his thick Yiddish accent would've given away that he was Jewish. Both his parents died in Auschwitz during World War II, and he was raised by his grandmother. But somehow Sami rose from this incredibly difficult lot in life to become a star in the acting world, and now the world knows his voice. Sami was in his first movie at the tender age of 18, when he landed a tiny part in Napoleon (1955), and his fame only skyrocketed from there. He was Francois in The Seven Deadly Sins (1962), and famously played Franz in Jean-Luc Goddard's teen robbery drama Band of Outsiders (1964). Sami spent the seventies doing about a movie a year, including playing David on Cesar & Rosalie (1972) and El Macho in the pageant queen marries a tycoon drama Sweet Movie (1974). But our favorite era of Sami's cinematic ventures was when he starred in the Federal investigator chasing a possibly murderous gold digger. We really dug that flick because we caught a sweet glimpse of his butt and balls while he's making out with some lucky girl in the pool. Splish splash, the scene in the pool will make you drool! If only we'd gotten to see his baguette! Sami hit the small screen in War and Remembrance, then played Aramis in Revenge of the Musketeers (1994). But after appearing in the female CEO flick Number One (2017), we haven't seen Sami on screen. We wish all our movies came with a side of Sami Frey!