Anneli Granget

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Anneli Granget , (born August 11, 1935 in Königsberg , East Prussia , † April 25, 1971 in Nuremberg ) was a German actress .

biography

She began her stage and film career in the late 1950s. She was a permanent member of the “Nuremberg Ensemble” for eight years, and since 1970 she has only been a guest at her own request. In addition to the Nuremberg theater , she also gave guest performances at numerous other festival halls. She was also seen at the Ruhr Festival in Recklinghausen . Shortly before her death, she wanted to move to the State Theater in Hanover in order to find a new path in her career. She was mainly seen in classic roles, but she also knew her way around the tabloid subject. With her first television role as Svanhild Magnussen in the five-part television series Amgrün Strand der Spree , she became known to a wide audience. In this street sweeper she played a Norwegian girl who helped a German soldier who was sentenced to death to flee to neutral Sweden at the end of World War II . Your partners were u. a. Wolfgang Büttner , Hans Pössenbacher , Utz Richter , Adolf Ziegler and Herwig Walter . In most of the films that followed she was the leading actress. Two years later, directed by Falk Harnack , she played the role of Trudel Baumann with Edith Schultze-Westrum , Alfred Schieske and Hartmut Reck in Everyone dies for himself by Hans Fallada . In 1968 she played the leading role in the 13-part television series Hafenkrankenhaus . Here, as Sister Inge , she was the good spirit of the hospital, who stood by the people in every situation with advice and action. Numerous well-known actors of the time appeared in guest roles, such as Edgar Bessen , Otto Lüthje , Hilde Sicks and Ernst Grabbe from the Hamburg Ohnsorg Theater . In her last television role she was seen in 1970 with Werner Hinz and Cordula Trantow in Gerhart Hauptmann's drama Before Sunset .

Anneli Granget was married to the actor Hannes Riesenberger , with whom she also appeared on stage together. They had a son together. Due to her depressive illness, she committed suicide on April 25, 1971 at the age of 35, completely unexpectedly to relatives and friends.

Filmography

Radio plays

Web links