Annegret Golding

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Annegret Golding (born November 26, 1930 in Schwerin ) is a German actress , radio play speaker and doctor .

Life

Annegret Golding was already playing at the age of 16 on the Low German stage in her hometown , which was part of the Mecklenburg State Theater in Schwerin , and took her first steps in the Schwerin broadcasting house . After attending the Schwerin drama school with Lucie Höflich , she got her first engagement at the theater in Wismar . From there she went to the Salzlandtheater Bernburg , where she had to pass her first tests with Friedrich Schiller's Luise in Kabale und Liebe , the clever viola in Was ihr wollt , and in Lope de Vegas Kluge Färrin. In 1953 she was seen here by Fritz Wisten and immediately engaged at the Berlin theater on Schiffbauerdamm . He took her to the recently reopened Volksbühne Berlin , where she celebrated her first major success in Berlin in 1954 as the cheeky Bianca in William Shakespeare's play The Taming of the Shrew . Almost at the same time she got her first roles at DEFA and as a radio play speaker on radio in the GDR . As early as 1956 she moved to the Maxim-Gorki-Theater in Berlin , and the roles offered by the German television network became more and more frequent.

At the age of 36, Annette Golding began studying medicine and became a doctor. The actress Marion van de Kamp justified it in an interview with the fact that the acting profession can degenerate into psychological torture and she understands anyone who cannot endure this burden and who draws the consequences. After completing her medical degree, Anette Golding worked at the Berlin hospital in Köpenick and, after the fall of the Wall, dared to start over with her own practice on Arkonaplatz in Berlin-Mitte . Although she has given up acting, she still delighted her listeners with her readings.

Annette Golding was / is (?) Married to the writer and director Hans-Albert Pederzani .

Filmography

theatre

Radio plays

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Neues Deutschland from June 29, 1959, p. 3
  2. ^ Annegret Golding at Ost-Film
  3. Marion van de Kamp in Neues Deutschland from November 15, 1999
  4. ^ Annegret Golding in the Berlin telephone directory