Alma Leiberg

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Alma Leiberg (* 1980 in Dresden ) is a German film actress .

Life

Alma Leiberg is the daughter of the painter Helge Leiberg and the spokeswoman Angela Leiberg. In 1984 the family left for West Berlin. In her childhood Alma Leiberg spoke children's radio plays and dubbed children's films.

Alma Leiberg has been in front of the camera since she was 19. She began her career as a big sister in the teen comedy Big Girl's Don't Cry by Maria von Heland . She played in many short films and ran in 2008 with Lea von Steffi Niederzoll in the section Perspektive Deutsches Kino at the Berlinale. She won the 2011 New Wave International Film Festival in Los Angeles for the best supporting actress with the short film Elaborate Silence .

Leiberg mostly plays in national film and television productions, in German series such as Tatort, SOKO, Last Trace Berlin, Criminal Permanent Service. She became known to a wider audience through her role as Miriam Lehmann in the third part of the award-winning docu-drama Die Wölfe by Friedemann Fromm . With the police call Cassandra's warning from Dominik Graf , Alma Leiberg asserted herself as a character actress. With her role as Katharina the Great in the ZDF docudrama Women Who Make History , she is part of the teaching program at schools.

In 2004 she played the lead role in the music video 7 Years and 50 Days for the band Groove Coverage . Alma Leiberg's voice can be heard in audio productions such as The Blue Sheep by Bodo Traber, a WDR production from 2011.

Private

Alma Leiberg lives with her husband and two children in Berlin and Rome.

Filmography (selection)

Radio plays

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Berlinale annual archive 2008. Berlinale.de, accessed on February 21, 2020 .
  2. Beautiful Alma is the killer from the "Tatort" thriller. t-online.de, January 19, 2015, accessed on February 21, 2020 .
  3. 7 Years & 50 Days from Groove Coverage on YouTube