Christian Seeler

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Christian Seeler (born November 27, 1958 in Hamburg ) is a German actor and artistic director .

biography

Seeler is the son of the politician Ingrid Seeler (SPD) and the Oberkirchenrat and Senator Hans-Joachim Seeler (SPD). The ex-board member of Lloyd Fonds AG and Hamburg parliamentarian Joachim Seeler (SPD) is his brother. He is also related to the soccer player Uwe Seeler . The family originally lived in Bramfeld, then in Hamburg- Barmbek and moved back to Hamburg-Bramfeld in 1962 .

After graduating from high school, Seeler completed a commercial apprenticeship at the Alfred C. Toepfer trading company . In his spare time he played theater.
Since 1982 he has appeared as an actor in the Ohnsorg Theater . From 1984 to 1992 he was commercial director of the theater. There he co-founded the touring theater Nordtour , which organizes, among other things, the tours of the Ohnsorg Theater. From 1992 to 1996 he switched to the private sector.

From 1996 to 2017, Seeler was director of the Ohnsorg Theater as the successor to Walter Ruppel and Thomas Bayer . During his time in 2011, after 75 years in the Große Bleichen, the Ohnsorg Theater moved to the new, larger location in the Bieberhaus , Heidi-Kabel-Platz , at the north exit of Hamburg's main train station .

Seeler is married to the psychologist Bärbel Seeler; the couple has three children.

Honors

Radio plays

  • 1999: Twee Minschenkinner - Director: Frank Grupe
  • 2001: Amrum in love (16th and 18th episodes) - Director: Frank Grupe
  • 2010: Wilma un Karl - För mien Mudder, de veel opschreven un preserve hett - Director: Hans Helge Ott
  • 2013: Düsse Petersens (12th episode: Üm de Eck) - author and director: Hans-Helge Ott
  • 2014: Düsse Petersens (13th episode: Salt of Life) - Director: Hans Helge Ott
  • 2014: Düsse Petersens (15th episode: soul mate) - director: Hans Helge Ott

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Verified by birth certificate in the OTRS
  2. Der Spiegel No. 15/1966 of April 4, 1966.
  3. ohnsorg.de
  4. ^ A b Jan Carsten Graf: Hamburg says "Bye" to the Ohnsorg director. In: ndr.de . July 5, 2017. Retrieved July 6, 2017.
  5. Bye, Christian Seeler. In: welt.de. July 6, 2017, accessed August 28, 2019.