Albert Hehn

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Grave of Albert Hehn in the main cemetery Ohlsdorf, Hamburg

Albert Hehn (born December 17, 1908 in Lauda ; † July 29, 1983 in Hamburg ) was a German actor .

biography

Hehn appeared for the first time at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus in Hamburg in 1929 and took on his first major assignment there in 1934 as Ferdinand in Schiller's Kabale und Liebe . On October 1, 1936, he acted in the play Die Räuber at the Volksbühne in Berlin, directed by Eugen Klöpfer .

In 1938 he got his first film role in the propaganda film Comrades at Sea , after which he was repeatedly used as an exemplary Wehrmacht officer. In Casilla's sensational trial (1939) he played a German who was wrongly accused abroad, in Jungens (1941) a teacher and Hitler Youth leader, in the Buchholz family (1944) a painter.

In 1946, Hehn received an engagement at the Passauer Kammerspiele and made guest appearances in numerous other cities. Hehn was also often seen in the cinema, often wearing a uniform. In It happened on July 20, he played Major Otto Ernst Remer, who was loyal to Hitler . In the sixties and seventies he took part in television series, such as in 1966 in the 7th part of the SF series Raumpatrouille , where he commanded the GSD cruiser Tau as Commander Lindley and toured Germany in the role of the guard in the musical Anatevka .

Albert Hehn's first wife in the thirties was Annemarie Gresitza, with whom he had a daughter, she was called Nina. In 1943 he married the Austrian actress Elfriede Datzig , mother of his son Michael Christopher Datzig-Hehn. After Datzig's death in 1946, the actress Jeanette Schultze became his third wife, the mother of his daughter Jeannette-Micheline Hehn, who was born in 1949. In 1953 he married Miss Bayern Gardy Artinger. One of the four children together is the later famous actor Sascha Hehn . Albert Hehn was most recently married to his fifth wife Ursula Seeger (used clothes). Albert Hehn's grave is located in the main cemetery in Ohlsdorf in Hamburg.

Filmography

Audio books and radio plays (selection)

Web links