Anne-Marie Blanc

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Anne-Marie Blanc (born September 2, 1919 in Vevey ; † February 5, 2009 in Zurich ) was a Swiss actress and reciter .

Life

Anne-Marie Blanc graduated from primary school and the humanistic grammar school in Bern . She received her acting training from Ernst Ginsberg and Wolfgang Heinz . She made her stage debut in 1932 at the Stadttheater Bern , and from 1938 to 1952 she was part of the ensemble at the Schauspielhaus Zurich .

She then made guest appearances at the Stadttheater and at the Komödie Basel , at the Stadttheater Luzern and especially at the Ateliertheater in Bern. Anne-Marie Blanc also played on German and Austrian theaters in Stuttgart, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Munich, Berlin, Vienna and Innsbruck as well as at festivals.

With the title role in Gilberte de Courgenay , she became a Swiss film star in 1941. Anne-Marie Blanc played a leading role in the 1943 film Matura-Reise alongside Leslie Dossenbach , Annemarie Wydler , Blanchette Aubry and Marion Chebuliez .

Anne-Marie Blanc starred in the Falk Harnack film Roman einer Frauenarzt with Rudolf Prack and Winnie Markus in 1954 , as well as in TV plays on ZDF , ARD and DRS . Her first foreign film was On ne meurt pas comme ça (1946), with Erich von Stroheim .

In total, she played in over 250 theater, film and media roles. She was married to the film producer and founder of Condor Film AG Heinrich Fueter and the mother of three sons, including the film producer Peter-Christian Fueter .

Anne-Marie Blanc died in February 2009 at the age of 89 in the Zurich-Enge retirement home . The abdication ceremony took place on February 14, 2009 in St. Peter's Church in Zurich.

Filmography

Awards

  • 1981: Armin Ziegler Prize, as the first actress
  • 1986: Hans Reinhart-Ring
  • 1989: Golden needle of the Zurich Schauspielhaus
  • 1996: Honorary Prix ​​Walo
  • 1997: "Maschera d'oro" ( Italy )
  • 2004: Medal of recognition from the city of Zurich for cultural merit

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. 1943. Group photo. Matura trip. Schweizer Film = Film Suisse: official organ of Switzerland, accessed on June 21, 2020 .
  2. Anne-Marie Blanc died at the age of 89. In: derStandard.at. February 6, 2009, accessed December 7, 2017 .