Angelika Zielcke

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Angelika Zielcke (* 1945 in Königsberg , East Prussia ) is a German actress .

Life

Angelika Zielcke's father came from an old military family; her mother was a lawyer . Shortly before the end of the Second World War, her mother fled East Prussia to the west alone with the three children . After their escape, the family lived in Ansbach in Central Franconia for some time , and later in Stuttgart . A family friend piqued her interest in the theater as a child.

She began her acting training at the age of 17 (according to her own statements at 19) at the Westphalian Drama School in Bochum . She then received her first stage engagement at the Schauspielhaus Bochum under the direction of Hans Schalla . Further stations were the Münchner Kammerspiele (under August Everding ), the Schauspiel Köln (directing work with Roberto Ciulli and Hansgünther Heyme ), the Schauspiel Bonn (under the directorship of Peter Eschberg ) and the Frankfurter Schauspielhaus .

Zielcke's most important stage roles included a. Beatrice in The Servant of Two Lords (director: Roberto Ciulli), Jelena in Uncle Wanja (director: Jürgen Flimm , Schauspiel Köln, premiere: March 1980), Magda Goebbels in Beyond Good and Evil or the last few days in the Reich Chancellery by Hartmut Lange , Hippolita in Shame That She Was a Whore by John Ford (Director: Jérôme Savary , Schauspiel Bonn 1982), the Grand Duchess in Die Gerechten (Director: Peter Palitzsch , Schauspiel Bonn 1987) and the cancer-sick literature professor Vivien in the play Geist von Margaret Edson (director: Margit Rogall , Mainfranken Theater Würzburg, premiere: 2002/03 season), with whom she also appeared at the Bayerische Theatertage in Hof in 2003 .

From 2001, Zielcke was a permanent member of the ensemble at the Mainfranken Theater in Würzburg , where she had been hired by the then acting director Hanfried Schüttler . Under Schüttler's direction she played a. a. Martha in The Misunderstanding and Ariel the Air Spirit in Shakespeare's late work The Tempest . In the summer of 2003, she played the role of everyone's mother at the side of Hans Kitzbichler as the eponymous hero in the Schönbornhalle of the Mainfränkisches Museum . In the 2003/04 season she was the oldest sister Olga in Chekhov's Three Sisters at the Mainfrankentheater Würzburg .

2010 she read together with Wanja Mues in home port Neukölln The Love Letters of Albert Ramsdell Gurney .

In addition to her theater work, Zielcke occasionally also worked for television. In the 1970s she had several guest appearances in the ZDF crime series Der Kommissar , for example in the 24th episode (September 1970) as the resolute wife of a small crook at Harald Juhnke's side and in the 29th episode (January 1971) as a secretary and Single woman in search of happiness, where she was able to prove her art of representation in several flashbacks. She later had roles in the TV series Westerdeich , Stadtklinik , SK Kölsch and lawyer Abel .

Zielcke also worked as a radio play speaker. In 1997, Zielcke recorded the audio book for the play Britting by Anna Cron together with the actor Werner Wölbern .

Zielcke, who temporarily lived in Berlin , volunteered there in hospice work . She now lives in Hanover . Her daughter Marie Zielcke is also an actress.

Filmography

  • 1970: The Commissioner : A Bullet for the Commissioner (TV series, an episode)
  • 1971: The Commissioner : The Moor Murderer (TV series, an episode)
  • 1971–1972: The Aeneid (TV series)
  • 1975: The Commissioner : A Murder by the Clock (TV series, episode)
  • 1993: Kahlschlag (TV movie)
  • 1995: City Clinic : Last Hope (TV series, an episode)
  • 1999: SK Kölsch : A hot woman (TV series, an episode)
  • 2000: Lawyer Abel : The Voyeur and the Girl (TV series, an episode)

Radio plays

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Angelika Zielcke . Entry at vollfilm.com. Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  2. a b c d e f g h Career start in wooden clogs . Portrait of Angelika Zielcke. In: Mainpost of June 10, 2003. Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  3. Flucht / Ucieczka - The theater “The Last Gem” travels with its theater train through Poland and Germany Escape from the fronts . Performance review at Nachtkritik.de from August 3, 2016 (comments). Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  4. ↑ A tightrope walk under the vault . In: Mainpost of June 19, 2003. Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  5. The little funny doesn't make the tragic easier . Performance review. In: Mainpost from May 14, 2004. Retrieved from the website of the actor Andreas Anke .
  6. a b Love Letters in the home port . Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  7. Episode 29: THE MOOR MURDERER (1971) . Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  8. ^ "The Moor Murderer" (first broadcast on January 8, 1971) . Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  9. Britting . Official website of the author Anna Cron. Retrieved January 11, 2019.