Elisabeth Panknin

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Elisabeth Panknin (left) at the "Cologne Congress 2017" on March 11, 2017 in Cologne

Elisabeth Panknin (* 1948 in Jena ) is a German theater and audio dramaturge .

Life

Elisabeth Panknin graduated from 1967 to 1972 at the Berlin Humboldt University studying German and English literature , from which she graduated with a degree in philology. She then worked as an assistant director and dramaturge at the Deutsches Theater Berlin until 1974 . This was followed by a position as a dramaturge at the Meininger Theater until 1977 . From 1979 Panknin worked for radio, first until 1989 as a dramaturge for radio plays for children in the GDR radio , then for radio plays in the Funkhaus Berlin , for DS Kultur and finally for Deutschlandradio . From 1995 to 2014 she was Jürgen Becker's successor and headed the radio play department at Deutschlandfunk . She is a member of the German Academy of Performing Arts .

Elisabeth Panknin has written children's radio plays and from 1993 also directed radio plays. Many of the pieces that she edited and dramaturgically supervised have received national and international awards, including the prestigious 2008 war blind radio play award for Karl Marx: Das Kapital first volume by Rimini Protokoll and in 2013 for Oops, wrong planet! by Gesine Schmidt . In 2015 Elisabeth Panknin was on the jury of the 6th Berlin Radio Play Festival. Elisabeth Panknin has been working with directing students at the Ernst Busch Academy of Dramatic Art since 2013, developing and producing radio play projects with them in cooperation with Deutschlandfunk. She is the daughter of the soil scientist Ernst Ehwald .

Radio plays

As an author

  • 1987: Bad times for Delphin , director: Karlheinz Liefers (also as a speaker), radio of the GDR
  • 1988: The crane and the heron , director: Werner Grunow , Rundfunk der DDR
  • 1989: Mausefellchen , director: Norbert Speer , Rundfunk der DDR

As a director

As a processor (word)

As a dramaturge (selection)

Individual evidence

  1. Biography on the website of the Berlin Radio Play Festival , accessed on June 8, 2016