Beatrice Frey

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Beatrice Frey (born July 24, 1951 in Thun am Thunersee ) is a Swiss - Austrian actress .

Life

Beatrice Frey was born to the Austrian actress Valerie Rückert and a Swiss diplomat and grew up in Thun, Cologne and Washington, DC . After the family moved to Vienna , she became Austrian junior champion in show jumping in 1968 . From 1972 to 1975 she studied acting at the Mozarteum in Salzburg.

From 1976 she worked with the director Hans Gratzer, among other things, at the workshop in the Neues Theater am Kärntnertor in the world premiere of Elisabeth one by Paul Foster . In 1978 she was involved in the founding of the Schauspielhaus Wien together with Gratzer , where she was permanently engaged until 1984 and from 2002 to 2004 and embodied the role of Janet Weiss in the Austrian premiere of the Rocky Horror Show in 1983, staged by Michael Schottenberg . She was also seen there as viola in Was ihr wollt and as Ophelia in Hamlet , as Pauline in Nestroy's protégé , as Oi in Mercedes by Thomas Brasch , in the title role in Lilith by Colin Spencer and in the servant of two masters . From 1985 to 1987 she played her program 1, 2, 3 at the Schauspielhaus with her own texts and the music of Peter Kaizar.

In 1987 she founded together with Karl Welunschek , Andrea Brown Steiner and Michael Zerz the theater group Vienna Ensemble and thus stood as Flora in Talisman of Nestroy and in your Werdt's you still remember Vienna by Helmut Qualtinger on stage.

From 1986 she worked at the Vienna Volkstheater , for example as Marguerite in The Red Noses by Peter Barnes or in the role of Aase in Peer Gynt , in the 2005/06 season, for example, in the world premiere of Spiegelgrund by Johann Kresnik , in Before Retirement by Thomas Bernhard and the city ​​without Jews by Hugo Bettauer and in 2006/07 as a local judge in Ödön von Horváths Glaube Liebe Hoffnung .

Guest performances have taken her to the Schauspiel Frankfurt and the Raimund Theater in Vienna , for example . From 1996 to 1998 she was at the Castle Theater Berlin hired in 1998 she staged there the refugee talks of Bertolt Brecht . In the seasons 2009/10 to 2018/19 she was a member of the ensemble at the Hanover Theater , where she performed as Else in the stage version of Das Fest by Thomas Vinterberg , as Doktor im Woyzeck , as Frau von Luber im Silbersee by Georg Kaiser , in the Stage version of Adams Apples by Anders Thomas Jensen and in Der goldene Drache by Roland Schimmelpfennig . In January 2020 she premiered at the Schauspielhaus Graz with the drama Vögel by Wajdi Mouawad , directed by Sandy Lopičić as Eitan Zimmermann's grandmother Leah Kimhi, in Vernon Subutex, based on the novel by Virginie Despentes , she played the role of in a production by Alexander Eisenach Véro.

On ORF she had roles in the television series Tohuwabohu , as Geli in Dolce Vita & Co , in Julia - An Unusual Woman as Ilse Hutter and in Trautmann , where she played Hilde Grünsteidl.

Frey was married to Mario Terzic in his first marriage, and to the set designer Michael Zerz in his second marriage.

Awards

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Julia Danielczyk: Beatrice Frey . In: Andreas Kotte (Ed.): Theater Lexikon der Schweiz . Volume 1, Chronos, Zurich 2005, ISBN 3-0340-0715-9 , p. 635 f.
  2. orf.at - Berner Rösti - just like in Switzerland! . Retrieved October 22, 2016.
  3. ^ Orf.at - Faith, love, hope: Ödön von Horvath at the Vienna Volkstheater . Article dated February 18, 2007, accessed October 22, 2016.
  4. a b c Viennese award for Beatrice Frey and Houchang Allahyari . City hall correspondence of October 10, 2012, accessed on October 21, 2016.
  5. orf.at - Beatrice Frey as guest: Volkstheater actress in the artist room . Article dated March 19, 2006, accessed October 22, 2016.
  6. ^ DerStandard.at - Michael Schottenberg's first Volkstheater program 2005/06 . Article dated April 6, 2005, accessed October 22, 2016.
  7. a b State Theater Hanover: Beatrice Frey . Retrieved October 22, 2016.
  8. ↑ Saying goodbye to "Little Red Riding Hood". Retrieved June 20, 2019 .
  9. ^ "Birds" in the Graz playhouse: consolation instead of hope. In: VOL.at . February 1, 2020, accessed February 1, 2020 .
  10. ^ Schauspielhaus Graz: Beatrice Frey. In: schauspielhaus-graz.com. Accessed February 1, 2020 .
  11. ^ Volkstheater: Karl Skraup Prize 2007/08 ( Memento from October 22, 2016 in the Internet Archive ). Retrieved October 22, 2016.