Dietmar Mössmer

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Dietmar Mössmer (born August 10, 1955 in Zams , Tyrol ) is an Austrian actor .

Life

In 1979 he was on the stage of the theater at Landhausplatz in Innsbruck with the play What does love mean here from Rote Grütze Berlin. In 1980 Mössmer then decided to study acting at the Tiroler Landestheater Innsbruck . There he got his first engagement from 1980 to 1982. He played Paul in Viktor E. Frankl's metaphysical conference synchronization in Birkenwald .

Ruth Drexel brought him to the newly founded Volkstheater in Munich in 1983 , where he made his debut in the role of Unteregger with Belief and Home from Karl Schönherr. This was followed by roles such as Kalabuschkin in Nikolai Erdman's Der Suicide or Kammerherr Soup in Thomas Strittmatter's variation of Carlo Gozzi's fairy tale The Love of the Three Oranges . Mössmer stayed at the Munich Volkstheater until 1986.

In 1987 a season at the theater in the Künstlerhaus Vienna followed . There he interpreted the role of the priest Nailer in Howard Barker's Das Castell .

From 1988 to 1991 Mössmer was engaged again at the Munich Volkstheater, where he co-founded the theater Much Ado About Nothing in Pasing . There he played Don John and Antonio in a double role in the Shakespeare play of the same name.

In the summer months from 1982 to 1990 Mössmer took part in the Tyrolean Volksschauspiele in Telfs , including as Norg in Felix Mitterer's Dragon Thirst .

From 2000 to 2019 Mössmer played the role of Sergente Alvise in the Commissario Brunetti crime novels in the television series Donna Leon .

In the summer of 2014 Mössmer played at the Luisenburg Festival in Wunsiedel in the play Glaube und Heimat .

Parallel to his stage work, Mössmer was and is a speaker in radio play productions for the ORF .

He got his first film role in 1984 in the film Raffl by Christian Berger . This was followed by films such as Ludwig 1881 , Himmelsheim , Der Fluch , Schön Was Die Zeit , The Parrot , Prinzenbad , Kinder der Landstrasse , Three Gentlemen , Holiday , Three Star Red , Elementary Particles , Lulu and Jimi , Men's Hearts II .

Filmography (selection)

Awards

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g biography on the website of Dietmar Mössmer . Accessed December 31, 2016
  2. ^ A b Daniel Schwarz: Dietmar Mössmer: A Landecker celebrates "40 years of actors". meinviertel.at, 23 August 2019, accessed on 4 April 2020 .
  3. 2014 seasons on the website of the Luisenburg Festival in Wunsiedel . Accessed December 31, 2016