Carla Hagen

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Carla Hagen , actually Carla-Maria Hagen (born September 11, 1931 in Hamburg ) is a German stage and film actress .

Life

After training as an actor with Eduard Marks at the University of Music and Performing Arts in Hamburg from 1950 to 1952, the daughter of a family of merchants first worked in the literary cabaret "Die Globetrotter". From 1955 to 1958 she was one of the busiest film actresses. Sometimes she was committed to half a dozen films in a year. She played leading roles and mostly comical supporting roles .

In 1959 she worked in Berlin on the comedy on Kurfürstendamm . In 1960 she brought Boleslaw Barlog into the ensemble of the Staatliche Schauspielbühnen Berlin . Some time later she met her husband, the director Hans Lietzau (1913–1991), and from then on, apart from a few television appearances, played almost exclusively stage roles, often with her husband as a director. She performed mainly in Berlin, but also mainly in Munich, but also in Stuttgart, Hamburg, Vienna and Zurich. At times, Hagen belongs to the ensemble of the Vienna Burgtheater and was a member of the Münchner Kammerspiele until 1994 . Her repertoire included roles in plays from William Shakespeare to Bertolt Brecht . As in her film roles, Carla Hagen demonstrated a special talent as a comedian.

She also participated in Lietzau's last directorial work, The Blue Boll by Ernst Barlach in 1991 at the Münchner Kammerspiele. After the death of her husband, Hagen retired from acting. Three years later, in 1996, she played 65-year-old at the Kammerspiele of the Deutsches Theater in the play The presidents of Werner Schwab . In 1998 Hagen handed over her husband's estate in the form of diaries, notes and photos to the Academy of Arts in Berlin.

Filmography

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The piece has the style . In: Berliner Zeitung , September 25, 1998