Frank Rehfeldt

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Frank Rehfeldt (born September 4, 1914 in Güsten , Saxony-Anhalt ; † December 16, 1994 in Germany ) was a German stage and film actor .

Live and act

Rehfeldt received his artistic training at the Folkwang School in Essen from 1933 to 1935 after graduating from the secondary school . He then took, only interrupted by a short military service (1944/45) and subsequent imprisonment (1945), theater engagements in Bochum (1936 to 1941), Strasbourg (during the German occupation 1941 to 1944), again Bochum (1946), Göttingen ( 1947/48), Munich (1949), Kiel (1949 to 1951), Wuppertal (1951 to 1953) and Dortmund (from 1953). Subsequent commitments also took Rehfeldt to the big cities of Hamburg, again Munich and Frankfurt am Main. He also made guest appearances.

In those early years Frank Rehfeldt played the Schäferhanns in Florian Geyer , the Mutschemann in Das kleine Hofkonzert , the pastor Evans in Die Lustigen Frauen von Windsor , the Straker in Mensch und Übermensch , the Fool in King Lear , the Pozzo in Waiting Godot and the Humphrey in The Lady Is Not For The Fire .

From 1962 Rehfeldt was seen with small roles in a number of television games, most recently in series such as Kleinstadtbahnhof and its continuation Neues vom Kleinstadtbahnhof , where he embodied the local pharmacist. It was to be Rehfeldt's last work in front of the camera. After 1973 he disappeared from the public eye.

Filmography

  • 1962: All power on earth
  • 1962: regret, wrongly connected
  • 1963: Two black mice
  • 1964: Under the pear tree
  • 1964: The first legion
  • 1967: The Reichstag fire trial
  • 1969: Question Time
  • 1969: Stewardesses (TV series, episode)
  • 1970: biography - a game
  • 1971: opportunities for advancement
  • 1972: Kleinstadtbahnhof (TV series, continuous role)
  • 1973: News from the Kleinstadtbahnhof (TV series, continuous episodes)

literature

  • Herbert A. Frenzel , Hans Joachim Moser (ed.): Kürschner's biographical theater manual. Drama, opera, film, radio. Germany, Austria, Switzerland. De Gruyter, Berlin 1956, DNB 010075518 , p. 582 f.
  • Who's Who in the Arts, two volumes. 2nd revised edition, Wörthsee 1978. Second volume, p. 91

Web links