Ingmar Zeisberg

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Ingmar Zeisberg (born Muhes , born February 25, 1933 in Danzig ) is a German film actress and author .

Youth and beginnings of the career

In 1939, after the outbreak of World War II , she and her widowed mother fled to Denmark , where they lived in an internment camp for two years. In 1946 she moved to Berlin . From 1950 Ingmar Zeisberg studied at the Max Reinhardt Drama School of the German Theater . She made her stage debut with a supporting role in a production of Goethe's Faust at the Deutsches Theater.

After completing his studies, Zeisberg worked as a theater and film critic for the Kölnische Rundschau . She also worked for the radio play department of the NWDR and wrote scripts.

Movie and TV

Ingmar Zeisberg began her film career in 1954 in the feature film The Confession of Ina Kahr . She achieved her breakthrough in the popular homeland film Where the torrent rushes, shot in 1956 , as the housewife Agnes at Walter Richter's side . In the 1960s she was seen in several Edgar Wallace film adaptations. But even at this time, Ingmar Zeisberg was seen more and more often in TV productions, for example in the 1964 classic, Flight in Danger, which is still repeated on television today . By 1990 she appeared in seven crime scene episodes . Zeisberg also appeared in the television play Von Mäusen und Menschen (1968), which received various awards.

Ingmar Zeisberg was also successful as an author. For example, she wrote scripts for the television series Our Son Nicki (1966) and Timo (1971).

Private

Ingmar Zeisberg was married to the jazz pianist Rolf Zeisberg; this was followed by three more marriages: with the director Rolf Hädrich , the producer Klaus Stapenhorst and with the director Wolfgang Staudte . Since 1972 she was the second wife of the architect and urban planner Albert Speer Jr. , with whom she lived in Frankfurt am Main until his death in 2017 .

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wilhelm Kosch: Zedler - Zysset . In: German Theater Lexicon . tape 38 . Walter de Gruyter, Berlin 2011, ISBN 978-3-11-026901-7 , p. 3726 ( limited preview in Google Book search).