Anna Brüggemann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anna Brüggemann, 2019

Anna Brüggemann (born March 24, 1981 in Munich ) is a German actress and screenwriter .

Life

Anna Brüggemann grew up in South Africa , Stuttgart and Regensburg . She first appeared in front of the camera in 1996 in the television thriller Virus X. This was followed by leading roles in various television and cinema films, such as A Village Is Looking For Its Murderer (Director Markus Imboden ), Polizeiruf 110: Resturlaub (Director Hannu Salonen ), Kleinruppin forever (Director Carsten Fiebeler ), Oktoberfest (Director Johannes Brunner ) and Berlin by the sea (directed by Wolfgang Eissler).

Brüggemann's brother is the filmmaker Dietrich Brüggemann , who, together with her, wrote the scripts for his feature films nine scenes , run when you can and 3 rooms / kitchen / bathroom , in which she also plays the female lead. The script for the feature film Kreuzweg , also written jointly, was awarded the Silver Bear at the 2014 Berlinale .

Brüggemann and other supporters of the Nobody's Doll campaign on the red carpet of the Berlinale 2018.

In the context of the #MeToo movement , Brüggemann initiated an action under the name Nobody's doll in 2018 that is directed against traditional role models at events with red carpets . As part of the Berlinale , she and other supporters appeared demonstratively without the usual high heels and uncomfortable revealing clothes.

In 2019 she was involved as a screenwriter on When Hitler Stole the Pink Rabbit .

Brüggemann lives in Berlin. She is a member of the German Film Academy .

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Anna Brüggemann and her brother Dietrich at the Berlinale 2014
Commons : Anna Brüggemann  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. Florian Schairer: Berlinale 2018: Get dressed comfortably at last - #nobodysdoll fights against high heels on the red carpet. In: BR.de. Bayerischer Rundfunk, January 30, 2018, archived from the original on June 22, 2018 .;
  2. Anna Brüggemann. In: deutsche-filmakademie.de. German Film Academy , accessed on March 16, 2019 .