Barbara Morawiecz

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Barbara Morawiecz (born March 14, 1938 in Berlin ; † August 3, 2017 there ) was a German theater and film actress .

Life

Barbara Morawiecz initially received training at the Berlin University of Fine Arts in the subjects of goldsmithing and metal sculpture and at the Hilde Körber drama school in Berlin.

This was followed by engagements with the Junge Ensemble in the Kongresshalle, the Schillertheater , the Freie Volksbühne and the Schaubühne am Halleschen Ufer , all in Berlin. In addition, they performed guest engagements a. a. to the Schauspiel Frankfurt am Main , the Oper Frankfurt am Main and the Staatstheater Mainz .

Barbara Morawiecz had her first role in 1958 in Thomas Harlan's I myself and no angel - Chronicle from the Warsaw Ghetto , directed by Konrad Swinarski with the Junge Ensemble. In 1964 she played a singer in the legendary world premiere of Peter Weiss ' The Persecution and Murder of Jean Paul Marat, presented by the acting group of the Hospice in Charenton under the guidance of Mr de Sade at the Schillertheater Berlin, also under Konrad Swinarski. In Klaus Michael Grüber's 1981 production of Six People Looking for an Author by Luigi Pirandello at the Freie Volksbühne Berlin, she was seen in the role of mother. In 1990 she played Germania in Heiner Müller's Germania Tod in Berlin at the Freie Volksbühne, directed by BK Tragelehn .

Barbara Morawiecz has worked in numerous television and film productions, including leading roles a. a. in Die Judenbuche by Rainer Horbelt and in Hitchcock and Frau Wernicke from the series Tatort . In the television series Liebling Kreuzberg , she played the judge Schnake in eight episodes.

Barbara Morawiecz lived in Croatia for a long time .

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Die Irren by Charenton Walter M. Herrmann in Hamburger Abendblatt of May 4, 1964 p. 16; available from google viewer accessed on January 15, 2011
  2. ^ Klaus Michael Grüber: Passages and Transformations by Klaus Dermutz p. 166; available from google books accessed on January 15, 2011
  3. The Eternal Masons for the Mighty of this World New Germany of December 10, 1990 online at berliner-schauspielschule.de, accessed on January 16, 2011