Bettina Dieterle

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Bettina Dieterle (born September 6, 1965 in Basel ) is a Swiss actress and cabaret artist .

Life

Bettina Dieterle was born in Basel in 1965. As a teenager she worked in various rock bands and in the Basel youth theater. From 1986 to 1988 she trained as a movement actress at the comart theater school in Zurich . After that she received several guest contracts as a mime and movement actress at the Zurich Opera House until 1994 and played in fairy tale productions at the Bernhard Theater . In 1989 she belonged to the Covergirls cabaret group , which would later become the Acapickels . In 1990 she attended the European Film Actor School in Zurich for two years , after which she did a vocal training. With the Acapickels , Bettina Dieterle appeared on television and radio as well as on stages in Switzerland and Germany before leaving in 1993. Earlier still it was in 1992 a member of the cabaret group in Friends , the Sketch- Einspieler for the entertainment show Benissimo produced.

Between 1994 and 1996 Bettina Dieterle played and sang in a youth play at the Bruchstein Theater in Zurich. In between, she went on a four-month Egypt tour with her own piece for children. In 1996 she was involved in the founding of the cabaret trio touche ma bouche , with which she completed a tour of Switzerland. While she had repeatedly taken on small roles in television productions over the years, she played her first leading role on television from 1997 in the sitcom Mannezimmer, which ran until 2001 . In 1999 she was able to host the Arosa Humor Festival for Swiss television . From 2003 she played in the television series Flamingo , in films on Swiss television, appeared in Genial next to it and received a role in the satirical program Café Bâle . She also continued to appear in various theaters and cabaret programs. As a director, Bettina Dieterle has staged plays, dance pieces and fashion shows since 1989.

Individual evidence

  1. a b biography on Bettina Dieterle's website , accessed on May 22, 2010
  2. acapickels.ch: 1989-2008 , accessed on May 22, 2010

literature

Web links